Re: What are you watching?
Posted: Fri Jun 10, 2022 12:02 pm
People that watch Gaia are those who felt they missed the comet that Marshall Applewhite talked about.
Also, many of the people are known conmen such Billy Carson aka William T. Karlson, but their followers are the types that gloss over criminality and buy toilet paper rolls on their website for $5, which is what he was peddling during Covid. He also copied known fraudulent materials from another conman from the 1950s who published a book claiming to channel Thoth, (which wasn't unique for that time period.)
David Wilcox claimed to be the reincarnation of Edgar Cayce, and claimed to channel the Egyptian god Ra, and was the main attraction for Gaia until he invited his friend along to get in on the sweet Gaia kool-aid money.
The problem with companies like this is that they tend to exploit gullibility and seem to intentionally be deceptive, and even promoted "exclusive" fake content such as with the "alien mummies" (which were real mummies that had parts of the hands chopped off, and covered in plaster.) Companies like this are rarely held accountable, and can often be perpetrated by companies that also sell fraudulent materials, such as Amazon which peddles fake remedies and suppresses reviews that discloses the factual FDA raids on products they sell, or deletes reviews and bans people that disclose the background of the books claiming to cure people by changing their alkalinity (and if "Dr. Sebi" was still alive, I can almost guarantee he would have a spot on Gaia. . .) The program is the continuation of a long line of snake oil salesmen, and it reminds me of the Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs Arkansas that would charge people a lot of money as a hospice care center and extract their tumors, claiming that when they died of cancer that they died of natural causes. . . Cancer in this case is the suspension of good judgment that's exploiting people's desire to escape from situations they feel they have no control over.
Capitalism brings out the best and worst of society.
The above video is one of the best insights on ufo/uap and hypothetical intelligent civilizations that I've heard, and he seems to only moonlight on the topic (he's mostly involved with biotech.)
The NES Karate game was likely based on an idea like this (different levels, different bosses) and resembled Turbografx 'China Warrior' which was really just a Bruce Lee knock off.) Also, Shenmue 3 seems to take a lot of inspiration from some of the movies (or at least, it takes a retro perspective of developing new skills to overcome the opponent. I'm seeing a lot of Asian made movies shown virally on Facebook that tend to get overlooked in the west, and theirs one of an actor pretending to be Bruce Lee while he was still young, that pretends to be a biopic, and they absolutely never refer to what movie it actually comes from, and every one of the videos is speed up by about 1.5x, though I think it's 'The Legend of Bruce Lee' (2008) aka 'Li Xiao Long chuan qi' which is a TV series. (the FB link of him being challenged by a strong Japanese dude https://fb.watch/dzDlLAlAkA/)
Often in Chinese films clearly have a lot of antipathy towards the Japanese, and almost every contest is of some foreign dude acting like an uncouth barbarian, and you would swear it was a propaganda film (which it probably is.) I suppose looking into the Nanking Massacre should probably explain it.