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Insightful White under-study are searching

Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2025 4:12 am
by samiaseo222
I felt that not only did she understand why this matter so worried me, but that she was affected herself. It is difficult for me to believe that she did not examine this matter in much more detail on her own, and mention it to colleagues at the Library of Congress and elsewhere. This was quite a different experience than I have had in Europe, where so many academic people respond like bureaucrats, unfeeling about matters of freedom and tyranny.

In the movie Seven, a wise old Black police lieutenant, and his job function email list less for a serial killer in NYC. The maniac they seek is intelligent and savage, in the genre of Hannibal Lecter in Silence of the Lambs. This murderer sees himself as a messianic angel torturing people for committing the seven deadly sins described vividly in Western Christian literature. This very cultured detective knows literature well, and is the first to recognize the kind of dangerous mind they are dealing with. His partner does not, and falls victim to his own rage, one of the seven deadly sins.

What is significant about this movie is how they identify the serial killer. The old lieutenant has an informal contact who sells him information from secret FBI files. The Black policeman has learned from this agent that the FBI flags certain books borrowed from libraries; he specifically mentions Mein Kampf and books on explosives. The idea is that the FBI searches library computer records of all the books a person borrows when he selects one of the flagged books; the objective is to get a broader picture of what this person's interests are. In the movie, this rouge agent can find the seven deadly sins serial killer because his profile is in the flagged book file of the library-network-FBI joint venture.