Predictive Programming and Foil Hat Empowerment
It is now 2024, an election year, and that can only mean we are in for more shenanigans. Depending upon which circles you run in, you’ve heard some strange predictions; needless to say, conspiracy theorists like me are mighty busy these days. Our correct predictions during COVID have made us foil hatters popular, and our ranks are swelling quickly as a result.
More tin foil means more souls fighting the good fight. This is both a good and a bad thing. It’s good because it means that more people are waking up. It’s bad because the wealth of information can seem overwhelming to newcomers.
So, I have decided to dedicate my next few blogs to all things “conspiracy.” I will be summarizing various theories and helping “normies” with the terminology us foil hatters use. I’ll start with the phrase “Predictive Programming.”
The best way to think about Predictive Programming is to recall the cartoons you watched as a kid, specifically superhero cartoons. Every superhero series had at least one episode where the hero had been captured and was tied up in front of the arch villain. The villain then proceeded to laugh maniacally and reveal their evil plans.
The reason this scene appeared so often in so many different shows is because there is an element of truth to it. Evil must brag; it can’t help itself! It is so proud it wants everyone to know what it is up to!
Predictive Programming is like that-the theory says the American public is the “captured hero” and the elites are the supervillains telling us what they are going to do before they do it.
How are they doing this?
Through our entertainment, of course!
Sounds crazy, doesn’t it? Well, consider this example. We’ve had many pieces of entertainment prior to the COVID pandemic that dealt with viral outbreaks: Outbreak (1995), 28 Days Later (2005), 28 Weeks Later (2007) I Am Legend (2007), Quarantine (2008), Contagion (2012), World War Z (2013), a 1993 Simpsons Episode, and countless medical dramas. (Speaking of the Simpsons, the animated series has predicted the future no less than seventeen times!)
Now these could all be coincidences, but even if they are not, it stands to reason that not everything out of Hollywood is Predictive Programming. Some of it is propaganda, and some of it is simply entertainment designed to turn a profit.
Knowing which is which requires wisdom and a spiritual intelligence only God can give. I’m not sure what your 2024 goals are, but acquiring more of these will be mine in the coming year.
More tin foil means more souls fighting the good fight. This is both a good and a bad thing. It’s good because it means that more people are waking up. It’s bad because the wealth of information can seem overwhelming to newcomers.
So, I have decided to dedicate my next few blogs to all things “conspiracy.” I will be summarizing various theories and helping “normies” with the terminology us foil hatters use. I’ll start with the phrase “Predictive Programming.”
The best way to think about Predictive Programming is to recall the cartoons you watched as a kid, specifically superhero cartoons. Every superhero series had at least one episode where the hero had been captured and was tied up in front of the arch villain. The villain then proceeded to laugh maniacally and reveal their evil plans.
The reason this scene appeared so often in so many different shows is because there is an element of truth to it. Evil must brag; it can’t help itself! It is so proud it wants everyone to know what it is up to!
Predictive Programming is like that-the theory says the American public is the “captured hero” and the elites are the supervillains telling us what they are going to do before they do it.
How are they doing this?
Through our entertainment, of course!
Sounds crazy, doesn’t it? Well, consider this example. We’ve had many pieces of entertainment prior to the COVID pandemic that dealt with viral outbreaks: Outbreak (1995), 28 Days Later (2005), 28 Weeks Later (2007) I Am Legend (2007), Quarantine (2008), Contagion (2012), World War Z (2013), a 1993 Simpsons Episode, and countless medical dramas. (Speaking of the Simpsons, the animated series has predicted the future no less than seventeen times!)
Now these could all be coincidences, but even if they are not, it stands to reason that not everything out of Hollywood is Predictive Programming. Some of it is propaganda, and some of it is simply entertainment designed to turn a profit.
Knowing which is which requires wisdom and a spiritual intelligence only God can give. I’m not sure what your 2024 goals are, but acquiring more of these will be mine in the coming year.
Published on January 02, 2024 03:50
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Tags:
conspiracytheories, hollywood, predictive-programming
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You Can Only Do So Much
Thoughts on our current situation as Americans and what literature can teach us about our limitations over current affairs.
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