The brown felt fedora worn by
actor Harrison Ford in the second installment of the Indiana Jones
movies sold for US$630,000 (S$829,000) at auction, film and TV
memorabilia company Propstore announced on Friday (Aug 16).
The hat featured in 1984's Indiana Jones And The Temple of Doom was
expected to fetch between US$250,000 and US$500,000, according to the
item's online description. CNA
US$630,000 for a worn out
hat used by a Hollywood actor in a movie was what a collector paid, for
keepsake or to wait for the next sucker to pay a higher price for it.
Compare the real value of the hat to the millions of pieces of arts,
sculptures, paintings, carvings and porcelain in the Museum of Thieves
in London, called the British Museum....
Every piece of the rare
and exquisite art pieces would definitely worth many times the price of
an actor's hat. The whole loot stolen by the British thieves that
invaded China, burnt down the Summer Palace in 1900 and carted
everything they could laid their hands on to London, were taken for
free.
And the thieves proudly exhibit these stolen art pieces in
London like they belonged to them, without a trace of shame or guilt
that every piece was stolen from China. The Museum of Thieves is one of
the last testament of the evil British Empire, invading countries to rob
them of their wealth, stole everything, bankrupt the countries,
massacred their people, those alive would become subjects aka slaves of
the British Empire. In the case of China, after looting all the artefact
of an ancient civilisation many times more advanced than the marauding
barbarians and savages, the Chinese people were reduced to poverty,
stipped of all signs of civilisation and inventions, and systematically
condemned and demonised as a people with no talent, a pariah people fit
only to be cooks and laundrymen and labourers.
Fortunately the
traces of greatness of an ancient Chinese Civilisation are still intact
in the Museum of Thieves in London, with arts and crafts superiority to
anything available during their respective time.
When would the
British thieves acknowledge their crimes against the Chinese
Civilisation and people and return the stolen art pieces to China and
apologise for their crimes? Every little item in the Museum of Theives
would definitely worth more than the hat of a Hollywood actor with a
history of a handful of years.