Movies in the last 80 years or so have been documenting history and demonstrating the way the general population has been supposed to be hypnotized, conditioned, and prepared for believing in future lies.
Please, help me out with the following conundrum:
Since the early 1970s the latest, but quite often before that, too, ALL movies, including foreign ones that have been allowed for distribution in the USA, contain the following sentence:
“Are you all right?”
Sometimes, the distributors are a bit flexible and
“Are you okay?” is acceptable.
Now, this is obviously a signal, but WTF does this sentence indicate?
1. Is it a seal of approval by those who now attempt to take over and own the world, getting rid of the “useless eaters”?
2. If yes, it is also a sign of submission.
However, it gets more complicated, because there are another two sentences that are there, nearly everywhere:
1. “OMG!” by people, who do not believe in God.
2. “Everything’s gonna be all right!”
What’s in common among the three?
They all expect you to believe that you are not responsible for your life and you MUST depend on the “authorities,” whatever they might be.
As all three sentences appear several times in many movies, I kept wondering if they indicate something according to numerology (the minute/second, when they are in the movies and how many times), but I haven’t been able to find significant correlations, although it’s quite safe to assume, there are some.
All ideas are welcome.
My most recent theory is that the three sentences might have to be marks of the three-tier distribution system; when one tier is not present, the sentence is not in the movie.
Interesting. I've wondered not long ago, why, when a sophomore in High School, the Sophomore class was handed permission slips for parents to sign to go on a field trip to the downtown movie theater to watch: Alien.
I saw it at that time it came out. Now imagine what has been injected now. Alien today has two schools of thought:
It's demonic......or it's from the outer galaxy foreign species.
.....I thought now: Why in the world would the school be interested in exposing young teens to this movie?....It's haunting and thought provoking.