lorenhough
Well-Known Member
WHO IS GREATFULL FOR WHOS manufactured DEATH-Head ?
The movie "Dreams" is a post-apocalyptic genocidal typology, about A large nuclear power plant near Mount Fuji not just melting down; but its six reactors explode one by one. The breaches fill the sky with hellish red fumes just like Fukushima; is this predictive programming? Loren
march 15 the eyes of march the death of Caesar the Christ when fuk u shima blows up!
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Predictive programming theory would predict that if such a moive etc. were to arise, people would be less likely to resist it and more likely to accept it based on their exposure to the film in fiction. The fact that the government is portrayed as a villain to be resisted is said to be irrelevant;
under predictive programming theory, mere exposure to a concept induces acquiescence to it.
An idea introduced in a science fiction movie, takes on a surrealistic tinge and, when it is introduced in the real world, it is experienced as not quite real;
to an extent disarming the public from experiencing it as undesirable or something to potentially fight against.
Researcher Alan Watt explains the phenomenon this way:
Things or ideas which would otherwise be seen as bizarre, vulgar, undesirable or impossible are inserted into films in the realm of fantasy. When the viewer watches these films, his/her mind is left open to suggestion and the conditioning process begins.
Loren
I agree - 'Dreams' seems to be the kind of 'prophetical typology' that is always a fingerprint of the 'oligarchs'. The crew that produced it couldn't be more obvious.
Japanese need to wake up.
Joe
Joe Atwill, Tuesday at 5:23 PMReport
#9LikeReply on this form. http://postflaviana.org/community/i...g-on-a-cornflake-decoding-typology.5/#post-27
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Warning from Oysters and Walrus! We're Dying! As the Demon Weeps!
Massive die-off of oysters and scallops in Pacific Northwest: “Millions of shellfish dying” — Never seen anything like it — “By July mortality hit 95 to 100 per cent” . ENENEWS
Diseased Alaska seals tested for radiation have abnormal brain growths, undersized lymph nodes — Environmental cause indicated — Also found in Russia, Canada — Walruses next? ENENEWS
Japanese savings total US$14 trillion, bigger than the gross national products of Europe and the U.S. combined. This pool of capital has the worst return - only 2.5% - over two decades compared with the 19% increase in the Standard& Poor's 500 index.
-2010 45% of Japan's voters will be retired.
What did you Dream, son? It's alright we told you what to Dream.
The Movie "Dreams" comes out on 5-11-90. Fukushima just happens to be on 3-11-11 In the movie Kurosawa Dreams of six reactors exploding one by one. With Mt. Fuji in the foreground.
"Shima" in Japanese means island; fuk u island: What's the odds?
"Fukushima" just happenes to be the only plant with six nuclear power plants. At least 4 blow up one by one, Close enough to Tokyo and Mount Fuji to consider the evacuation of Tokyo. As in the movie.
Why would Dreams "magical" realism film director, Akira Kurosawa, claimed to have had dreamed this repeatedly?
Here is map of all nuclear power plants in Japan:
http://www.nucleartourist.com/…../japan.jpg
Release date May 11, 1990
Dreams - Akira Kurosawa's Dreams) is a 1990 magical realism film based on actual dreams the film's director, Akira Kurosawa, claimed to have had repeatedly. It was the first film where he was the sole author of the script. It was made five years after Ran, with assistance from George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, and Steven Spielberg, and funded by Warner Brothers.
The film does not have a single narrative, but is rather episodic in nature, following the adventures of a "surrogate Kurosawa" (often recognizable by his wearing Kurosawa's trademark hat) through eight different segments, or "dreams", each one titled.
Mount Fuji in Red segment in "Dreams", is about:
A large nuclear power plant near Mount Fuji has begun to melt down; its six reactors explode one by one. The breaches fill the sky with hellish red fumes and send millions of Japanese citizens fleeing in terror towards the ocean. After an unspecified amount of time, two men, a woman, and her two small children are seen alone, left behind on land in broad daylight. Behind them is the sea. The older man (Hisashi Igawa, who appeared in a number of Kurosawa's later movies), explains to the younger man that the rest have drowned themselves in the ocean. He then says that the several colours of the clouds billowing across the now rubbish-strewn, post-apocalyptic landscape signify different radioactive isotopes; according to him, red signifies plutonium-239, a tenth of a microgram of which is enough to cause cancer. He elaborates on how other released isotopes cause leukemia (strontium-90) and birth defects (cesium-137) before wondering at the foolish futility of colour-coding radioactive gases of such lethality.
The woman, hearing these descriptions, recoils in horror before angrily cursing those responsible and the pre-disaster assurances of safety they had given. The suited man then displays contrition, suggesting that he is in part responsible for the disaster. The other man, dressed casually, watches the multicoloured radioactive clouds advance upon them. When he turns back towards the others at the shore, he sees the woman weeping: the suit-clad man has leaped to his death. A cloud of red dust reaches them, causing the mother to shrink back in terror. The remaining man attempts to shield the mother and her children by using his jacket to feebly fan away the now-incessant radioactive billows.
Below is a the song in the movie.
The big boys have a song for you. They told you what to dream. They know where you been. They gave you the toys, the songs, the rock gods, (Gods made of rock?) and the movies.
Welcome my son, welcome to the machine.
Where have you been? It's alright we know where you've been.
You've been in the pipeline, filling in time,
provided with toys and Scouting for Boys.
You bought a guitar to punish your ma,
And you didn't like school, and you know you're nobody's fool,
So welcome to the machine.
Welcome my son, welcome to the machine.
What did you dream? It's alright we told you what to dream.
You dreamed of a big star, he played a mean guitar,
He always ate in the Steak Bar. He loved to drive in his Jaguar.
So welcome to the machine.
On the Podcast "Cutting through the Matrix" with Alan Watt: March 11, 2010 coverage of Fukushima, Allen talked about the movie, "Dreams", as predicted programming.
Alan also reminds us that after two weeks there was complete blackout on Fukushima in the news all over the world and they took down online all of the readings of radiation so we could not look them up for ourselves and they just started telling us it was small and tiny with no data. Also raising the standards for what was safe. Remember there is no safe amount of radiation that your body can take internaly.
Kurosawa also made, Throne of Blood, adaptation of William Shakespeare's Macbeth—set, like Seven Samurai, in the Sengoku Era—represented an ambitious transposition of the English work into an Asian context. Ran, another epic in a similar vein. The script, partly based on William Shakespeare's King Lear. .
The movie "Dreams" is a post-apocalyptic genocidal typology, about A large nuclear power plant near Mount Fuji not just melting down; but its six reactors explode one by one. The breaches fill the sky with hellish red fumes just like Fukushima; is this predictive programming? Loren
march 15 the eyes of march the death of Caesar the Christ when fuk u shima blows up!
="
Predictive programming theory would predict that if such a moive etc. were to arise, people would be less likely to resist it and more likely to accept it based on their exposure to the film in fiction. The fact that the government is portrayed as a villain to be resisted is said to be irrelevant;
under predictive programming theory, mere exposure to a concept induces acquiescence to it.
An idea introduced in a science fiction movie, takes on a surrealistic tinge and, when it is introduced in the real world, it is experienced as not quite real;
to an extent disarming the public from experiencing it as undesirable or something to potentially fight against.
Researcher Alan Watt explains the phenomenon this way:
Things or ideas which would otherwise be seen as bizarre, vulgar, undesirable or impossible are inserted into films in the realm of fantasy. When the viewer watches these films, his/her mind is left open to suggestion and the conditioning process begins.
Loren
I agree - 'Dreams' seems to be the kind of 'prophetical typology' that is always a fingerprint of the 'oligarchs'. The crew that produced it couldn't be more obvious.
Japanese need to wake up.
Joe
Joe Atwill, Tuesday at 5:23 PMReport
#9LikeReply on this form. http://postflaviana.org/community/i...g-on-a-cornflake-decoding-typology.5/#post-27
" src="
Warning from Oysters and Walrus! We're Dying! As the Demon Weeps!
Massive die-off of oysters and scallops in Pacific Northwest: “Millions of shellfish dying” — Never seen anything like it — “By July mortality hit 95 to 100 per cent” . ENENEWS
Diseased Alaska seals tested for radiation have abnormal brain growths, undersized lymph nodes — Environmental cause indicated — Also found in Russia, Canada — Walruses next? ENENEWS
Japanese savings total US$14 trillion, bigger than the gross national products of Europe and the U.S. combined. This pool of capital has the worst return - only 2.5% - over two decades compared with the 19% increase in the Standard& Poor's 500 index.
-2010 45% of Japan's voters will be retired.
What did you Dream, son? It's alright we told you what to Dream.
The Movie "Dreams" comes out on 5-11-90. Fukushima just happens to be on 3-11-11 In the movie Kurosawa Dreams of six reactors exploding one by one. With Mt. Fuji in the foreground.
"Shima" in Japanese means island; fuk u island: What's the odds?
"Fukushima" just happenes to be the only plant with six nuclear power plants. At least 4 blow up one by one, Close enough to Tokyo and Mount Fuji to consider the evacuation of Tokyo. As in the movie.
Why would Dreams "magical" realism film director, Akira Kurosawa, claimed to have had dreamed this repeatedly?
Here is map of all nuclear power plants in Japan:
http://www.nucleartourist.com/…../japan.jpg

Dreams - Akira Kurosawa's Dreams) is a 1990 magical realism film based on actual dreams the film's director, Akira Kurosawa, claimed to have had repeatedly. It was the first film where he was the sole author of the script. It was made five years after Ran, with assistance from George Lucas, Francis Ford Coppola, and Steven Spielberg, and funded by Warner Brothers.
The film does not have a single narrative, but is rather episodic in nature, following the adventures of a "surrogate Kurosawa" (often recognizable by his wearing Kurosawa's trademark hat) through eight different segments, or "dreams", each one titled.
Mount Fuji in Red segment in "Dreams", is about:
A large nuclear power plant near Mount Fuji has begun to melt down; its six reactors explode one by one. The breaches fill the sky with hellish red fumes and send millions of Japanese citizens fleeing in terror towards the ocean. After an unspecified amount of time, two men, a woman, and her two small children are seen alone, left behind on land in broad daylight. Behind them is the sea. The older man (Hisashi Igawa, who appeared in a number of Kurosawa's later movies), explains to the younger man that the rest have drowned themselves in the ocean. He then says that the several colours of the clouds billowing across the now rubbish-strewn, post-apocalyptic landscape signify different radioactive isotopes; according to him, red signifies plutonium-239, a tenth of a microgram of which is enough to cause cancer. He elaborates on how other released isotopes cause leukemia (strontium-90) and birth defects (cesium-137) before wondering at the foolish futility of colour-coding radioactive gases of such lethality.
The woman, hearing these descriptions, recoils in horror before angrily cursing those responsible and the pre-disaster assurances of safety they had given. The suited man then displays contrition, suggesting that he is in part responsible for the disaster. The other man, dressed casually, watches the multicoloured radioactive clouds advance upon them. When he turns back towards the others at the shore, he sees the woman weeping: the suit-clad man has leaped to his death. A cloud of red dust reaches them, causing the mother to shrink back in terror. The remaining man attempts to shield the mother and her children by using his jacket to feebly fan away the now-incessant radioactive billows.
Below is a the song in the movie.
The big boys have a song for you. They told you what to dream. They know where you been. They gave you the toys, the songs, the rock gods, (Gods made of rock?) and the movies.
Welcome my son, welcome to the machine.
Where have you been? It's alright we know where you've been.
You've been in the pipeline, filling in time,
provided with toys and Scouting for Boys.
You bought a guitar to punish your ma,
And you didn't like school, and you know you're nobody's fool,
So welcome to the machine.
Welcome my son, welcome to the machine.
What did you dream? It's alright we told you what to dream.
You dreamed of a big star, he played a mean guitar,
He always ate in the Steak Bar. He loved to drive in his Jaguar.
So welcome to the machine.
On the Podcast "Cutting through the Matrix" with Alan Watt: March 11, 2010 coverage of Fukushima, Allen talked about the movie, "Dreams", as predicted programming.
Alan also reminds us that after two weeks there was complete blackout on Fukushima in the news all over the world and they took down online all of the readings of radiation so we could not look them up for ourselves and they just started telling us it was small and tiny with no data. Also raising the standards for what was safe. Remember there is no safe amount of radiation that your body can take internaly.
Kurosawa also made, Throne of Blood, adaptation of William Shakespeare's Macbeth—set, like Seven Samurai, in the Sengoku Era—represented an ambitious transposition of the English work into an Asian context. Ran, another epic in a similar vein. The script, partly based on William Shakespeare's King Lear. .
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