The CDC has just come out with a web comic and a new set of guidelines to survive a "Zombie Apocalypse". (Read Vigilant Citizen's analysis here.)
The US Army Zombie Combat Command has training manuals and everything for the Zombie Apocalypse.
Then there's the Miami face-eater and the flesh-eating virus making the news. What is going on here?
The US Army Zombie Combat Command has training manuals and everything for the Zombie Apocalypse.
Then there's the Miami face-eater and the flesh-eating virus making the news. What is going on here?
Shaun of the Dead-beheading with axes |
If these movies are indeed "predictive" of Illuminati plans, then the zombie and vampire genre could shed with a perplexing question about the Book of Revelation. Revelation 20:4 specifically mentions that the people executed by the New World Order for not receiving the Mark of the Beast would be “slain with axes [beheaded] for witnessing to Jesus”. Why only one specific method of execution?
The predictive programming of zombie and vampire films provides a possible explanation: the only way to kill a zombie or a vampire for sure is to cut off the head, i.e. "behead" or “slay with an axe” or similar implement. In Hollywood lore, both zombies, aliens and vampires have been equated with infection. The only “cure” is decapitation. Could those who resist the Mark be labeled as either infected with a disease, or accused of being evil, undead creatures? This isn’t as far out as it seems. The movie “Legion” specifically portrays Christians, along anyone who does the will of God as hideous zombies that are “possessed by the angels of God”. Only way to kill ‘em? Decapitation.
A Christian zombie in Legion |
Picture this: the government announces there is some disease that makes people into something equivalent to zombies or vampires, quickly creating mayhem. The vaccine or cure is an injection in the forehead or right hand, i.e. the Mark of the Beast. All who don’t get the vaccine are potentially infected and must be decapitated. In most zombie movies, the zombies are easy to pick out from their appearance and behavior, but in other stories, there are “crypto-zombies” who are infected, but seem like ordinary people. Recently I came across an article in one of those grocery store tabloids, talking about how to tell if your neighbor is actually a zombie. All this could lead to a real-life witch hunt for “the infected” who seem outwardly normal, but refuse the vaccine or Mark.
Here’s where it gets weirder….many movies reference the idea of an “army of the dead”. Both vampires and zombies are considered "undead". This “army of the dead” concept occurs in the Mummy series. In the Harry Potter series it is called “the Inferi Curse”. I also noticed it “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” with Nicolas Cage (produced by Saturn Films!). The villain, Morgana LaFey, plans to cast a spell called “the Rising” which brings to life an army of corpses. To do this she must first go to a special tower in New York and create a giant pentagram of magical fire. She is defeated by the technology of Nicola Tesla. I almost fell out of my chair when I watched “Ghostbusters” a few weeks later and noticed the similarities between it and "The Sorcerer's Apprentice". At the end of "Ghostbusters", it's revealed that the “heightened paranormal activity”, unleashes hundreds of ghosts on the city, like an army of the dead, before the coming of the Sumerian gods. In order for the gods to appear, the top of this special NYC tower, built “by a mad doctor” must be used as a temple to invoke them. The nerdy Ghostbuster explains that this tower was built specifically as "a superconductor for spiritual energy".
Tesla technology in The Sorcerer's Apprentice |
Tesla's Wardenclyffe Tower in NYC |
On a side note, Discover magazine ran an article this June on "the internet of things", a futuristic network of RFID chips that would track and catalog all your personal possessions and their whereabouts. The author presented this as a 100% positive development. In the article, he complains about the quality of people online, how most are really "zombie spambots trying to sell hormone pills as diet aides, and zombie humans claiming the President is an alien". How does believing that aliens have infiltrated the White House make you a zombie? Why was this odd remark placed in this particular article?
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