ED: This movie contains even more predictive programming than
1984 or Brave New World! Because I refuse to put money into Zionist coffers, I do not attend movies while in theatres. Eventually, if interested, I might rent the DVD but even that is questionable. And yes, I am possibly the only person on the planet who has not yet seen E.T.! As for these "Hunger Games" I rely on the observations of others whom I trust, my own instincts and knowledge, and reading the books. This is, indeed, predictive programming aimed directly at the hearts and minds of the young.
By
VC
April
5th, 2012
The hit
movie “The Hunger Games” takes place in a dystopian future where the poor and
wretched masses live under the high tech tyranny of a wealthy elite. Is the
movie depicting the kind of society the elite is trying to establish for the
New World Order?
We’ll look
at characteristics of the world presented in “The Hunger Games” and how they
relate to plans for a New World Order.
Pushed by a gigantic marketing
campaign, The Hunger Games did not take long to become a world-wide
sensation, especially among teenagers and young adults. Sometimes referred to
as the new Twilight, The Hunger Games has similar components to
the previous book-to-movie craze (i.e. a young girl torn between two guys) but
takes place in a very different context.
Set in a dystopian future (why is the
future always “dystopian”?), The Hunger Games paints a rather grim
picture of the world of tomorrow, whether it be from a social, economical or
political point of view.
In short, it is a big-brotherish
nightmare where a rich elite thrives on the backs of a starving population.
Meanwhile, the perversity and voyeurism of mass media is taken to absurd levels
and is used by the government as a glue to keep its unjust social order intact.
Is The Hunger Games giving
teenagers a glimpse of a not-too-distant future?
It doesn’t take a crystal ball to see
the elite are trying to take the world in that direction. Is the author Suzanne
Collins communicating a strong anti-NWO message to the youth by showing its
dangers or is it getting the youth used to the idea?
Let’s look at the fictional, yet
possible, future world of The Hunger Games.
Note:
This article is about the movie and not the book series. The movie has been
formatted in a different way and conveys a slightly different message.
THE NWO FOR TEENAGERS
The Hunger Games takes place in a
context that is strikingly on-par with descriptions of the New World Order as
planned by today’s global elite. One of the main characteristics of the New
World Order is the dissolving of regular nation-states to form a single world
government to be ruled by a central power.
In The Hunger Games, this
concept is fully represented as the action takes place in Panem, a totalitarian
nation that encompasses the entire North-American territory. The United States
and Canada have therefore merged into a single entity, a step that many predict
that will happen before the full-on creation of the NWO.
The President of Panem
addressing the Nation.
In Panem, the concepts of democracy and
freedom have disappeared from America to be replaced by a high-tech
dictatorship based on surveillance, monitoring, mass-media indoctrination,
police oppression and a radical division of social classes.
The vast majority of the citizens of
Panem live in third-world country conditions and are constantly subjected
poverty, famine and sickness. These difficult living conditions are apparently
the result of a devastating event that engendered the complete economic
collapse of North America.
In District 12, home of the hero
Katniss Everdeen, the locals live in conditions similar to the pre-industrial
era where families of coal miners lived makeshift in shacks and eat rodents as
meals.
While the masses look as if they are
living in the 1800s, they are nevertheless subjugated to the high-tech rule of
the Capitol, which uses technology to monitor, control and indoctrinate the
masses. Surveillance cameras, RFID chips and 3D holograms are abundantly used
by the government to manipulate the will of a weak and uneducated population
(although there are signs of solidarity and rebelliousness among the peasants).
To preserve the fragile social order,
the Capitol relies on a massive police force that is always ready repress any
kind of uprising. The workers are often rounded up in civilian camps where they
are shown state-sponsored propaganda videos.
Panem is therefore a high-tech police
state ruled by a powerful elite that seeks to keep the masses in poverty and
subjugation.
As we’ve seen in previous articles on this site, all of these concepts are also thoroughly represented in other forms of media as there appears to be a conscious effort to normalize the ideas of a high-tech police state as the only normal evolution of the current political system.
Living in sharp contrast to the
proletariat, the elite in The Hunger Games inhabits the glistening
Capitol city and indulges in all sorts of extravagances and fashion trends.
This upper-echelon of society perceives the rest of the population as an
inferior race to be ridiculed, tamed and controlled.
All valuable resources have been
vacuumed from the people living in the districts to profit the Capitol,
creating a clear and insurmountable divide between Regular People and The
Elite. The concept of an opulent elite ruling over the dumbed-down and
impoverished masses (thus making them easily manageable) is an important aspect
of the New World Order and it is clearly depicted in The Hunger Games.
The government’s reliance on high-tech
surveillance and mass media to keep the population in check is something we are
already seeing and, if we keep going in that direction, the world of The
Hunger Games will soon become reality.
There is another concept important to
the occult elite that is at the heart of The Hunger Games, however:
Blood sacrifices to strike fear and gain power.
BLOOD SACRIFICES FOR THE ELITE
Katniss is selected as
tribute of her district.
The government of Panem created the
Hunger Games in order to remind the masses of the “great treason” they have
committed by engaging in a rebellion. As punishment for their insubordination,
the twelve districts of Panem must offer to the Capitol one boy and one girl
between the ages of 12 and 18 to be part of The Hunger Games.
The teenagers must fight to the death
in an outdoor arena in a Roman Gladiator-like event that is televised across
the nation. The rules of the Games reflect the elite’s contempt and total lack
of respect for the masses. The name of the Games itself is a reminder of the
state of perpetual starvation the lower class is purposely kept in by the
rulers in order to better control it.
The boys and girls that are selected to
take part in The Hunger Games are called “tributes”, a term that usually
describes a payment rendered by a vassal to his lord and thus even reflects the
servitude of the mass to its rulers.
Since time immemorial, blood sacrifices
were considered to be the highest form of “tribute” to gods and, on an occult
level, were said to wield the most potent power to be tapped by rulers and
sorcerers.
The same way ancient Carthaginians
sacrificed infants to the god Moloch, inhabitants of Panem sacrifice their
children to the Capitol. The Hunger Games are therefore a modern version of
these ancient rituals that the masses had to participate in to avoid the wrath
of their superiors.
The entire nation of Panem is forced to
watch the sacrificial ritual that takes place in the Capitol, stirring up fear,
anger and blood lust within them, amplifying the power of the ritual.
We’ve seen in previous articles that
the deaths of specific people (Whitney Houston, Heath Ledger, Amy
Winehouse) become such a media event
that they are, in fact, mega-rituals that entire nations participate in. The
Hunger Games reflect this concept of highly publicized mega-rituals.
"Tributes" for
The Hunger Games become the property of the state and are revoked of all their
rights.
In The Hunger Games, the
ritualistic death of young people chosen from the mass is sold as a sporting event,
a nation-wide celebration that is packaged as a reality show. Not only do the
poor people participate in these demeaning events, they even cheer for their
favorites.
Why do they accept all of this?
One of the reasons is that mass media
can get people to accept anything … if it is entertaining.
APPEALING TO THE BASEST INSTINCTS
The games are broadcast to the nation
in the form of a reality-show, complete with TV hosts who analyze the action,
interview the tributes and judge their performance. The tributes are so
indoctrinated in this culture that they readily accept the rules of the game
and in turn are fully willing to start killing to win the Games.
The masses also actively participate in
the event, cheering for their district’s representatives, even though the
entire event celebrates the sacrifice of their own.
This reflects a sad but true fact
concerning mass media: Any kind of message can reach people if it manages to
capture their attention. There are two things that automatically, almost
irresistibly, grab our attention: Blood and sex, the remnants of our primal
instincts.
The sheer violence of the event grabs
the attention of the masses, who forget that the Games serve as a reminder of
the people’s servitude to its elite. This concept is already well-known and
fully exploited in today’s mass media, as elite-sponsored messages are
constantly sold to consumers as being “entertainment”.
The Hunger Games therefore aptly
portray the role of media in the manipulation of public opinion. Will the movie
help young people realize this fact?
At one point in The Hunger Games, the
death of a little girl shocked the people to a point that it brought a brief
moment of lucidity and solidarity as the kill highlighted the atrocity of the
Games.
The live broadcasting of the death lead
to a violent uprising in her district as the locals realized that they were
willing participants in something terrible. The uprising was quickly quelled
however, by the ever-present police force of the state.
Furthermore, in order to prevent further
social trouble, the producers of the show introduced a new element to the show:
Love between Katniss Everdeen and Peeta Mellark, the girl and the boy from
District 12. By introducing love (and, by extension, sex) into the show, the
producers managed to quell the masses and brought them back to their usual
state of silent stupor.
This part of the movie reflects how
mass media is used by the powers that be today. The worldwide reach of The
Hunger Games series itself proves that stories that cleverly feature the
ingredients of sex and violence are bound to get people hooked. And, even
though The Hunger Games seems to be denouncing the perversity of
violence in mass media, it sure brings more of it into movie theatres.
DESENSITIZING TO A NEW TYPE OF VIOLENCE
While there is no shortage of violence
in Hollywood, The Hunger Games movie crosses a boundary that is rarely
seen in movies: Violence by minors and towards minors.
In this PG-13 movie we see kids aged
between 12 and 18 violently stabbing, slashing, strangling, shooting and
breaking the necks of other children ~ scenes that are seldom seen in Hollywood
movies.
While it is surely a way for the movie
the grab the attention of the movie’s target audience (which happens to be
teenagers aged 12 to 18) The Hunger Games brings to the forefront a new
form of violence that was previously deemed too disturbing to portray in
movies. But in the particular kill-or-be-killed scenario of The Hunger Games,
the viewers easily go beyond this psychological barrier and find themselves
yelling stuff at the movie like “Come on, Katniss, take your bow and shoot that
vicious little f**cker in the head!”.
IN CONCLUSION
The Hunger Games is set in world that
is exactly what is described to be the New World Order: A rich and powerful
elite, an exploited and dumbed-down mass of people, the dissolving of
democracies into a police state entities, high-tech surveillance, mass media
used for propaganda and a whole lot of blood rituals.
There is indeed nothing optimistic in
the dystopian future described in The Hunger Games. Even human dignity
is revoked as the masses are forced to watch their own children killing each
other as if they were caged animals.
That being said, there is little to no
difference between movie goers who watch the movie The Hunger Games and
the masses in the movie that witness the cruelty of the Games. Both are willing
participants in an event that portrays the sacrifice of their own under the
amused eye of the elite.
Furthermore, one can argue that the
movie accomplishes the same functions as the Games in the movie: Distracting
the masses with blood and sex while reminding it of the elite’s power.
Is The Hunger Games attempting
to warn an apathetic youth of the danger of allowing the current system to
devolve into a totalitarian nightmare?
Or is it simply programming it to
perceive the coming of a New World Order as an inevitability?
That question is up for debate. But
reading what is being said in the mass media about The Hunger Games, it
seems there is an even more important question up for debate: Are you Team
Peeta or Team Gale?
I had the priviledge of watching this twisted movie and everything you said is exactly what I aso was thinking. The poor people who live like they are in the 1800s go along with this event because they have been brainwashed into thinking this is the way life is for them. They have been left helpless to the superiorty of the elite whose techonology outweighs anything they may have to fight back. What i found interesting about this though is no mention of God even when they are on deaths doorway. I suppose the elite in this future scenario has finally extinguised all memory of God from the earth. This is another reason the people do not fight back since they have no knowledge that earthly life is only temporary while the soul is eternal and lives on. The reason I think they used children is the same reason that people in power abuse children in our present time. Children are innocent and normal people would be up in arms if they knew what goes on. And this is why they do it to show they are like gods and above any law of the land. It serves the same purpose of showing their power that they could take away children for slaughter and nothing will be done to them. The reason this movie is so popular is because the book was made part of school literature which probably was on purpose. Well I am not sure if this sounds right since its very late and i m deliours but I had to write it. It blows my mind how we are being descentisized towards violence by all the continous news coverage of tragedy along with the movies, shows and video games showing it. I hope people wake up and start repenting because the world is becoming like the days of Noah before the flood.
ReplyDeleteLOL
ReplyDeleteI have not seen ET nor Star wars. Nor Harry Potter. etc.
I watched about 20 minutes of Madagascar II with my daughter yesterday (I was never so glad as to see a kid take a nap).
OMG we are soulmates! I have not seen any of those movies either! And I am PROUD of my cultural ignorance as a result.
ReplyDeleteSometimes I think that not watching some of that mind washing blah is why I have a tendency to see things differently. Or, did I see things differently and then not want to see them?