Entries categorized as ‘Hollywood Series’
“Masonry has and always had a religious creed. It teaches what it deems to be the truth in respect to the nature and attributes of God.” — Albert Pike in the “Legenda for the Nineteenth Degree”.
“Pike confessed that the original meanings of the very symbols he himself was attempting to interpret were irretrievably—lost.” — Manly P Hall – “Rosicrucian and Masonic Origins”.
IT’S A FAIR GUESS that most of you reading this article have – at some time or another – stayed overnight in a one-star motel. These linear marvels of construction dot the American landscape like a vast constellation of segmented hostels, most single-storied, many fading into obscurity as interstate systems replace the narrow highways and byways of the golden age of the automobile.I’ve stayed in my share of such motor hotels. Back in the day when I sang for my supper, such budget-conscious choices offered my weary bones a place to sleep and a hot bath. This considered, isn’t it clever and even nostalgic for the SciFi Channel to offer viewers a twisted peek into motel life — a cleverly written peek that entertains and, for those with ‘eyes to see’ even educates.
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Categories: Film and Television · Hollywood Series
Part III of Hollywood and the Coming Apocalypse: How the various peoples of the Star Trek worlds reflect a growing trend toward genetic ‘enhancement’ and how the ‘collective hive mind’ of a corporate meta-human organism is the natural outgrowth of the politics of Neo-Conversativism.
I am he as you are he,as you are me and we are all together– John Lennon, I Am the Walrus
RESISTANCE IS FUTILE. That’s what we’re told.
If you’re not familiar with The Borg or The Dominion, both of Star Trek fame, I recommend spending a few weekends immersed in Star Trek Next Generation films and episodes.
In short, the Borg are a group — a collective — that assimilates civilzations. This hive mind consists of millions of humanoid beings from different planets — each one enhanced after birth with mechanized appliances that connect to a centralized queen. Borg do not think or reason as individuals. Assimilated races receive nanoprobes that erase all sense of self.
The Borg Queen acts as a central control for the ‘many’. In Star Trek: First Contact, she has the unique ability to act as an individual, even going so far as to travel alone — through time — to interact with and tempt Data. The temptation undergirds the queen’s identity with Satan, especially since she pretends to be God. (She declares that she is “the beginning and the end”, and that she alone can bring “order to chaos”. She might be compared to the Queen of the Night from Mozart’s Masonic opera, The Magic Flute. Her claim to be “the one who is many” reminds one of Mark 5:9, where a group of demons calling themselves Legion — for we are many is forced to depart from a human and go into pigs. (more…)
Categories: Connecting Dots · Film and Television · Hollywood Series · One World Government · Politics · Prophecy
Part II in the series “Hollywood and the Coming Apocalypse”
IT’S CALLED DNA, and it’s both hard science and the ’stuff dreams are made of’. Modernists claim credit for the ‘discovery’ of the germ of humanity, all the while nodding graciously to earlier researchers such as Gregor Mendel. The magical double helix served as a platform for the elevation of Watson and Crick to demi-god status and as the backbone of a brand new branch of science — chimeric cloning (aka ‘transhumanism’).
Mary Shelley imagined a hideous creature — the modern Prometheus — compiled of stitched parts and a humanist soul. Some may call Shelley’s Frankenstein monster a metaphor for government devoid of religion, others a post-apocalyptic picture of evolving mankind in its inevitable chaotic end. No matter how one interprets the story, the 19th century mind of Mary Shelley painted a literary portrait of the true monster we face today — science unbridled. (more…)
Categories: Connecting Dots · Film and Television · Hollywood Series · Paganism · Prophecy
ON February 16, 1967, NBC aired episode #22 of the original Star Trek series. The title of that well-known, ground-breaking episode was “Space Seed”, and it introduced the world to a genetically enhanced super-human known as Khan Noonien Singh.Fifteen years later, Paramount Pictures would re-introduce Singh to a much wider audience in a film called “Star Trek II – The Wrath of Khan”.
Both the original “Space Seed” episode and the subsequent film starred popular Latin-American actor, Ricardo Montalban, as the determined Khan, and while many comedians have lampooned Montalban’s portrayal of an aging superman, the film is considered classic Trek. But is there more to it?
Khan Noonien Singh’s name is interesting for a start. The character, we’re told, came from the Punjab region of northern India. Singh is a Hindi word based on an ancient Sanskrit word Simha which means ‘lion’, and it’s a surname associated with the Sikh religious sect, often given to a male child once he becomes a member. Khan of course reminds of of the infamous Ghengis Khan, who forged a Eurasian empire from blood. As for his middle name, it’s interesting to note that the scientist who invented (some may say ‘created’) Data from the Next Generation series and films, was named Dr. Noonien Soong. Are Trek fans to make a connection that moved from supermen to superandroids? (more…)
Categories: Connecting Dots · Film and Television · Hollywood Series · One World Government · Transhumanism