![]() Bobby Gene Smith Philadelphia Phillies #316 1961 Topps Signed Autographed Baseball Card $9.95 WE OFFER A REDUCED SHIPPING CHARGE FROM THE STANDARD AMAZON.COM SHIPPING CHARGE. THE STANDARD SHIPPING CHARGE IS $4.99 PER CARD. WE WILL CHARGE $4.99 TOTAL NO MATTER HOW MANY CARDS YOU PURCHASE IN ANY 24 HOUR PERIOD. AMAZON.COM WILL CHARGE THEIR STANDARD $4.99 PER CARD SHIPPING FEE AND THEN WE WILL IMMEDIATELY REFUND YOUR ACCOUNT EVERYTHING EXCEPT $4.99. We are breaking up a near complete 1961 Topps Baseball Card Set. Of the possible players available to sign, you will find signed cards by all but a few of them. The autographs were obtained by mail. You will receive the exact signed card we have pictured in the scan. This is the personally signed real autograph of this player. We absolutely guarantee the authenticity of the autograph and offer a 100% money back guarantee including shipping charges if one is found not to be authentic by PSA or any other recognized expert. ALL AUTOGRAPHS ARE GUARANTEED AUTHENTIC VINTAGE & ORIGINAL. WE DO NOT SELL REPRINTS, PHOTO COPIES OR ANYTHING ELSE NOT VINTAGE & ORIGINAL. This card is in acceptable condition, it has a light scratch and light stains. This baseball card has no rips, tears, or creases. The autograph has no smears or smudges. This 1961 Topps Original baseball card will be delivered to you in a toploader for protection. We specialize in authentic original vintage advertisement pieces, vintage matted magazines, autographed photos, autographed baseball cards and other memorabilia that are ready for framing or display. ![]() Enemy of the State [Blu-ray] $34.99 The relevance of this film is strikingly frightening today. The unsuspecting John Q Public (Will Smith) is on the run, even stripping down to his boxers to symbolize the insecurity of the average Amercian by the ever-intrusive government sworn to uphold our ineffective Constitutional Rights; highlighting modern technology gone rampant under the guise of protecting our supposedly inherent natural rights. The right to privacy is trampled on by NSA agents (portrayed as young prying clowns)under the command of a nefarious reptile played to a T by Jon Voight. The players in the system of illusory rights hound John Q Public since he unknowingly carries on him evidence of a Congressman's death and it's at this point where things slowly unfold for the naive citizen as he is relentlessly chased by Big Brother via satellites, ATM and tunnel cameras, cell phone signal tracking, bugs, etc. hitting home the film's point: privacy is a thing of the past. It even points out that a natural serene pond view of geese isn't a safe place for some privacy. The film gains steam midway as a paranoidal ex-NSA agent, Brill (Hackman) literally knocks some sense into John Q and shows him the painful truth; the truth that Joe Blow easily dismissed during a scene earlier into the movie. Released almost 3 years prior to 9/11, "Enemy of the State" bombards the senses with quick editing, hyper-action, and loud jolts of sound as if to say, "Wake up!" Orwell has been rolling in his grave for some time now. One reviewer pointed out Brill's birthday of 9/11 in a quick flash scene. If only this was a coincidence and not a confirming nod to those who are privy numerologists, but considering the studio which released this film it should be of no surprise. So sit back, crack open a can of soda and pop open a bag of popcorn and pay witness to one man's life quickly turned upside down by a power hungry, guilt-ridden government seeking safety under its ever-intrusive eye. |
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