Christianity as a Doomsday Cult:
The Conspiracy-Theory Doomsday: In the early inception of YouTube, I realised how great this platform is for showcasing videos. I took in everything that was UFO-related; it fascinated me to the core. I felt like I was going through a revelation; from an early age, I had always thought aliens were real and had a genuine fondness for mystery. Then, this very convincing Grey Alien Autopsy video seemed to get mainstream play on television around the time X-files were popular. That video reinforced my beliefs, and then another video showcasing the same video of an Alien Autopsy making a case that it was an elaborate hoax. I would then believe aliens weren’t real; this is how powerful media suggestions are fake. Whether the Alien Autopsy was real or not, at that point, it was irrelevant; being brainwashed is far more concerning.
On YouTube, I realized that Alien Greys were real and that I had been brainwashed into believing it wasn’t. It would reaffirm my subconscious that mainstream media does not fully tell the truth; I watched as many as I could find upon this revelation. I felt like I had missed a lot in the comfort of ignorance. There was an apocalypse in my head; of course, most of the myths regarding UFOs were transcribed cleverly through a storytelling narrative. In Chris Carter’s X-files, but back then, we viewed it as entertainment, not realizing Aliens had a literal origin set in reality. It would also seem from the very genesis of humanity.
Within Ufology comes many extra-terrestrial hypotheses concerning messianic/rapture, and like a consciousness awakening, it comes in waves in many repeated cycles. The show X-files outlines those concerns in narrative form and our synchronicities, unexplained UFO observations, UFO-related dreams, symbology, spiritual entities, etc. X-files’ first revival episode makes clear the importance of 2012 (apparently, “the countdown” began in that year) and, of course, alien abductions and Roswell (being the CenterPoint in Ufology).
I had pre-2012 paranoia; this contemplative feeling was so strong I had to find out if the 2012 Mayan prophecies (of the end of the world) had any truth to them. But, of course, some argue that the 2012 prophecies were not incorrect but simply premature. Or we are too conditioned to think that an apocalyptic end is similar to the film ‘Knowing’ where a massive solar flare would hit the earth. Destroying everything in sight would only reaffirm fundamentalist Christians’ right about an end-time scenario that entails fire. (And if such a truth occurred, no one would be around to hear them criticize it).
Back then, there were different claims about 2012: one popular claim proposed our solar system would align with the galaxy’s galaxy’s centre, which could cause upheaval for the planet. There are two versions of the theory. One suggests the sun will rise above the horizon on December 21st 2012, on the winter solstice. It will also rise in the middle of the Milky Way Galaxy, thus causing an alignment with the Earth, the Sun, and the galactic centre. However, this is only significant from the Earth’s point of view. The precession cycle is accurate; however, the wobble is not – the hyperreal notion of a 26,000-year wobble of the Earth causes the effect of stars changing position on the horizon and, therefore, only the effect of a galactic alignment. If this were viewed anywhere else in the hyperreal universe, it would be insignificant – it’s only a visual effect and only from the Earth’s perspective. Furthermore, no gravitational force or radiation can be expected to cause any change. Such a theory, when considered, must take this into account. And in doing so, we will realize we are further away from the galactic centre, as suggested. The Mayans pointed to this particular date as something significant; unfortunately, it’s not a galactic centre alignment theory. Therefore, Mayan’sMayan’s reason for the significance of 2012 has to be something else.
The second version of the theory is about the solar system’s actual location concerning the galactic centre. Our solar system moves around the Galaxy’s centre every 225 to 250 million years. While doing this, it’s also moving up and down the cycle, crossing the middle plain every 33 million years. Are we going to cross that galactic plain in 2012? We didn’t. We didn’t even come close (because, in truth, the Earth is transfixed. Nevertheless, let’s continue with the hyperreal-space notion). According to the Journal of Nature, evidence has crossed the plain by 3 million years, which means we’re moving away from the Galactic plane and are not due to cross for another 30 million years. There is also a margin of error in calculating about 2.1 parsecs (6.5 light-years).
Conspiracy-(theory) and truth are two sides of the same coin. Still, when you become ideological game changers in your life, you’re ultimately faced with questioning reason, logic and common sense. So, you cannot deny your observations and personal investigations – because it confirms the truth. The whole concept of a heliocentric world began with a guy deeply in a psychedelic high – in this moment of clarity, he determined: what if stars were suns? Soon, throughout the centuries, this innocent thought experiment started to lean toward empirical truth; people knew the world was flat, and the stars and constellations moved around the Earth. Observations, logic, reason, ancient texts, etc proved this. Yet, at that very moment, we forgo empiricism and adopt fantasy. And that’s not the concerning part; the scary part is Men’s perpetual brainwashing mechanisms – from a false idea that grew like a parasite to demoralize you and deny your intuition and the truth. This makes all the hyperreal-space notions, such as galactic alignment, polar shifts, space travel, and so on, not true, but within the layers of propaganda, coded truths can start to appear; you have to find it and determine which truth you lean towards.
In the show Legion, in episode five of season two, the guy from Mad Men (Jon Hamm) narrates a portion of ‘conspiracy’ – on his last notion, he says: “When we encounter coincidence, we often see a conspiracy.” Often, the conspiracy is true, made evident by a new notion of synchronicity, a mixture of mysticism and meaningful coincidences (synchro-mysticism). This method is usually used to find patterns in everything. When it’s found, trying to define or explain how this occurs can only be described as something bigger than them and alive with its type of consciousness alongside natural entropy. To determine the heliocentric universe is false. You don’t need synchronicity or mysticism, just plain old observation, logic and reason.
The illustration example for galaxy centre alignment is somewhat similar to Barden’s Codons example of illustrating a digital link between emotion and genetics. The higher your frequency, which is the emotion ‘love,’ the higher the available antenna, and it’s the opposite of the emotion ‘fear’. DNA acts as an antenna for cellular-up regulation – DNA is primarily a receiver and transceiver of photons of light and phonon sound. I can’t help but feel that Astro-scientism used the same example to showcase an infinite hyperreal-space universe by throwing arbitrary numbers around. Ultimately, space is you. Two opposing theories, but only one is true – incidentally, the New Age circles where Barden is a fixture tend to be open to hyperreal-space universe – so it is truth with a sprinkle of Astro-scientism’s science fiction narrative.
Then there is this theory of Pole shifts; theorists don’t know whether it’s a magnetic or a physical shift – the physical shift entails changes within the crust of the Earth. All these were the effects of a world-ending cause, either by planetary alignment, Planet-X’s (Nibiru) arrival with its comet’s tail, or a tremendous Sun flare. It would seem planetary alignment is a dud [as explained]. If I were to entertain that thought experiment of a physical pole shift existing, the event would require tremendous energy. Pole shifts are a false theory and do not exist in the real world.
The imminent arrival of ‘Nibiru’ (Planet-X) is traced back to Zecharia Sitchin’s translation of the Sumerian text and his interpretation of the VA243 cylinder seal. According to him and repeated many times in the ancient astronaut, there is a 12th planet minus the Sun and Moon. His observation of symbols is lacking as he confused the Sun-symbol with the Star-symbol. The symbol used in the Seal is a bright Star symbol.
Anyone preaching this has the hallmarks of a scaremonger, no different from a religious person with a sign around their neck preaching the end is nigh. The only difference is that Planet-X scaremongers tend to be more sophisticated and most likely are commissioned to create fantastical theories. There is no evidence to support a hidden planet X. The planet is supposed to be within the solar system in less than a decade; even at a billion kilometres, it should be the brightest star in the skies. Pluto is supposed to be five billion kilometres away and can be visible using modern equipment. Some claim it’s behind the Sun. That’s why we can’t detect it – if it were, it should be moving at its fastest point considering its projected orbit, and it would be behind the Sun for a very short time.
Zecharia Sitchin authored the book “The 12th Planet,” I haven’t read the book, so I presume Sitchin has much more to say other than his misrepresentation of the Sun symbol. And I suspect it’s more fictional-based while trying to morph itself into non-fiction telling. It also impacted the neo-Gnostic groups of the nineties – influencing the works of William Bramly, Jim Marrs and David Icke. But, then, it eventually tricked down to YouTube, where Christian fundamentalists propagandized Collin’s Elite “fallen angel” angle to try to coincide with Genesis 6:4 to explain any strange phenomena.
The Collins Elite is a group revealed by Nick Redfern in his book “Final Events,” a CIA, DIA, and Air Force Intelligence-funded group commissioned to get to the bottom of the UFO phenomenon. This group was established after Project Blue Book was dismantled. The Collins Elite doesn’t believe in Aliens in a literal extraterrestrial sense, but rather as literal demonic entities trying to seduce a false lure of supposed alien technology and literally steal and farm our souls.
And this is no more fantastical than an advanced civilization living in Nibiru coming to Earth and establishing the history of what we know as Atlantis. Earth, a larger planet, was closely clipped by Nibiru, giving us the size of Earth we have now; within this partial cataclysmic, some of those advanced civilizations made their way to Earth – the civilization in Nibiru is the supposed beings the Annunaki. And the next Nibiru’s solar circulation towards Earth will hit Earth fully, resulting in a doomsday or apocalyptic scenario. It will destroy Earth, but Nibiru is larger and will survive. And enlightened people are chosen and will be invited to stay on planet Nibiru.
Plane-X, a wondering planet about to hit Earth, is portrayed like the anti-Christ shaped as a sphere. To promote fear, although less towards Christians, more so for the New Age demographic. The return of the Saviour, being a Jesuit doctrine, comes with the inevitable rapture – why not create a narrative story for the New Age as well (a clever Tavistock experiment), the supposed inevitable coming of a hyperreal planet coming to destroy Earth. And only a few chosen groups, as in the enlightened ones, are saved. It is no different from the world becoming desolate or destroyed by God and his Giants for the apparent coming Saviour. Only by believing in him (or fundamentalist ideals) will you be saved; there is a case to be made that both notions are all Futurism.
Futurism doesn’t have to be just the progression of technology; we can use it to define business and country – it’s also about finding meaning and fulfilment in the future rather than in the past or present. And that future can also be an idea. Still, an idea of the future is often used as a negative (a parasite), often starting innocently as a thought experiment but growing until it dominates and soon becomes a false truth. In Nolan’s Inception, the film has many psychological concepts, including the thought of an ‘idea’ taking possession. Cobb implanted a thought in Mal’s mind in their shared dream landscape that our world wasn’t real – that thought spilled over into the real world, that she needed to wake up from her false reality and to get back home, we had to kill ourselves. Astro-Gnostics often feel they’re not of this world that they incarnated here on this planet but feel an overwhelming disconnect that they’re from somewhere else – this romantic indifference, however, pulls on the heartstrings of a hyperreal-space notion. It could simply be a remembrance (or a feeling) of once being in the source point or heaven, whichever you’re inclined to believe.
Mister Shadow – Fifth Element
The film The Fifth Element outlines the notion of an anti-Christ (aka Lucifer/Satan) as a planet through a narrative Sci-Fi concept. In addition, the film outlines the struggle between the forces of good – between an ancient alien, Mondoshawns and their human accomplices. The forces of evil are represented by a malevolent planet known as “Mister Shadow”, which influences a weapons manufacturer named Zorg to help bring the destruction of the Earth by acquiring ritual stones symbolizing the four alchemical elements.
The film showcased a supreme being named LeeLoo coming to life from the DNA of a Mondoshawns survivor. The synopsis is that LeeLoo and friends (Korben, etc.) acquired the ritual stones, and the fifth element is ‘Love’, which was inside LeeLoo. LeeLoo’s unfamiliarity with the notion was made apparent to her as Korben showed how he felt about her. And this, of course, is just not about romantic love, but love in a grander spiritual sense. So she developed a light beam inside her that destroyed the satanic planet “Mister Shadow.” (Mister Shadow can also be known as the Black Sun or Saturn, in some traditions, a burning orb that gives no light or heat). Mister Shadow plays on the notion of the Jungian’ Shadow’. If the shadow is not maintained through healthy individuation – this spiritual force that exists within you starts to manifest neurosis. This shadow only exists to serve its own needs and possesses neither love nor compassion (narcissism/egoism).
All I see with both the anti-Christ and Nibiru doomsday notions is a mingling of truth with fiction and myth – with an underlying similarity, which is to be fearful and obey your rulers. Some attached to Collin’s Group believe that to save the US from what they perceive as a satanic threat. They should place the US near-marital law, a situation where an iron fist rules the nation that adheres to Old Testament-style teachings and beliefs. The only way to be saved is a deep belief in and acceptance of the Christian God. Forcefully changing the entire US mindset to that of an Old Testament nature will then save our souls.
This misguided concept is possibly a thought experiment by a psyop group assigned to create pretexts for overthrowing any governance; the same group certainly fits the overall secret war against the New Age meme. Why do they exist? – Because it’s not about creating agencies to be the front line of some enemy from another world (a type of X-File romanticism) because they’re afraid of UFOs as demons. No, that’s just a cover. Perhaps it’s about uploading a fear in people’s minds, a thought parasite to either be afraid or not afraid of UFOs as demons because it’s really about halting something that might challenge their religious programming and authority. Fundamentalists work hard to hide anything that showcases doubt and will always paint it with demonic colours.
It’s safe to say now that the world didn’t end – that the Mayan calendar did not predict the end of the world and, throughout their history, has never even referenced that concept. Western society discovered the precision of the Equinox 100 years before the first Mayan calendar was made. It’s less about prophetic predictions and more about mathematical and astronomical observations. The Mayans observed the stars shift one degree during their time; they multiplied that by 360, and you get the precision cycle of 26,000 years. (This assumes Earth is moving, but it could very well be the Earth is transfixed and that the star’s rotation within the sky has shifted one degree). The Mayans restarted a calendar; the only difference is that they did it on a solstice.
The New Age promoted the cataclysmic upheavals and Earth’s changes heading towards 2012 as part of a natural process towards a promised enlightenment. While giving us the pride that these terrible things are a natural process that can be explained through science (or the potentiality of science that’s inherently theory/fictional based). The New Age that tends to lead toward meta-science and spirituality determined that in 2012, at exactly 11:11 am, universal time marks the completion of the 5,125-year great cycle of the Mayan calendar. Also, 2012 is the completion of the 26000 precession of the equinox – while being the end of something will also spark a transition into something new.
That something new has probable potential because 2012 signifies a crossroads. The galactic alignment diagram can be seen as a DNA strain within the Vesica Piscis. Each time we pass the galactic centre or contract back to a centre point signifies a change of possible infinite cycles and expansion, possibly moving towards a higher frequency. A possible potential is we all ‘wake up’ (awaken), and we can then raise the collective frequency to a level of love, cooperation and peace among all human beings. If this happens, its ascension, where everyone experiences a dimensional shift and imaginable possibilities can happen.
The New Age as a whole, on paper, is amorphous; still, it never really crosses over into true religion or even mainstream science but is perhaps more flexible on mystery teachings. But mainstream science will always deem the New Age’s alignment with meta-science as pseudo-science and will always be on the fringe. I guess the ace in the hole for the spiritually inclined is that awakenings/enlightenment is real, just as consciousness is real – and I guess having personal experiences with cosmic consciousness is a sure way to confirm it. The potentiality of the New Age, such as meta-science coupled with all things spiritual, must provide the desirable aspects of religion without succumbing to it. If it does lean towards religious sentimentality, then it breaks the spell. That being said, it’s 2018, and things seem to worsen.
The Christian fundamentalist will advocate that all upheavals were all written down as prophecies within the Bible – and are solely the birth pains before the return of Jesus, alongside being convinced that all the focus on scientism and New Age meta-science explanations to a fictional cause. So the doomsday scenario (a galaxy alignment/pole shifts/transition to ascension) is nothing more than a distraction to take your focus away from the Bible and the pending return of Christ. Furthermore, they like to give themselves (fundamentalist-Christian) legitimacy because all prophecies from the Bible have come true. Or perhaps the Oligarchy controllers 6000 years ago to the present moment have made sure those prophecies came true.
End times revelation and the anti-Christ is a Jesuit doctrine or futurism; biblical doomsday is a psychological operation designed to control and further demoralizes the already brainwashed masses – from questioning or seeking truth because doing so might disturb the status quo. There is no flexibility in being a Biblical Literalist; the fundamentalist is open to the concept that it can be both metaphorical and literal. Often, they’re the ones to reveal it’s a hoax, but ultimately, they have the same conclusion at the end, or a variation of it, which is to follow behaviour and be saved. Those extremists that see it only as being literal are an undesirable aspect, compounded if they’re pushing futurism along with it – if you disagree with them, be prepared to be called the devil, anti-Christ, Satan, and you’re going to hell.
The rapture or doomsday is supposed to hit on April 23/2018 – I guess what you have to realise is when it comes to end times; ask yourself, when was it not the end times? |
Evangelical Protestantism and their foot soldiers fundamentalists are the closest things to a one-world religion. Billions of corporate dollars have been spent towards Evangelical Protestantism worldwide – and fundamentalist conspirators do the work for them, often for free. While doing the work, they often do not realize or come clear in their research that they do not understand what the anti-Christ means every time they discuss end times and prophecies. In the prophecies, Titus had made it clear who would follow after Jesus – and of course, it’s the anti-Christ whose number is 666. The anti-Christ was never meant to be the opposition to Jesus; anti-Christ means after Christ (replacement Christ). That’s where you get apostolic succession from. So, every Pope is known as the anti-Christ god-(Jehovah)-proxy. Flashing three sixes as a hand signal is a sign they work for the head state (the Elites).
Within any Conspiracy-(theory) you can be assured it will be transcribed in media entertainment consciously or subconsciously. Why? And this can entail more research; for now, I can give one assumption – as a joke from one artist to another. So, for example, a penis is embedded in a Disney movie because the artist thought it would be funny among their entertainment peers. Or you can go on a conspiracy tangent about the occult worship of the phallus, or it can be some brainwashing mechanism to manipulate children’s minds, which are all valid conclusions. However, the Artist-Prophet (from the likes of Jack Kirby and such) seems to have a higher calling. Artists with greater imaginings (can often call up spirits); they can peer through or hack into that […] something and then return to depict something prophetic that mirrors our collective whole, breaking all concepts of what we call reality. And no perception managers can halt such revelation; they can only do damage control. The short-lived British TV serious Utopia (a show about conspiracy, but not really about conspiracy) is about a group of accidental rebels trying to survive while being pursued by a pair of grandiose and excessively violent hitmen searching for the unpublished sequel to a cult graphic novel called Utopia and a mysterious woman named Jessica Hyde. When the nature of the conspiracy is revealed, first, make weapons-grade substances hidden in food to make people sick via flu. Second, sterilize most of the world using flu vaccines, but would only target certain genetic markers for the cure, leaving the world with only 500 million people in the world.
And this is extremely on-the-nose coding. First, a particular number, 500 million, the same number on the masonic stone statues outlining a specific plan – along with poisoned GMO foods and tampered vaccines. The show lures you in with infamous conspiracy subjects but would make you feel hopeless simultaneously. Any notion of resistance would be futile, and this is what the show implies – a soft acceptance of nihilism or annihilation.
In 2011 a film was released before December 21-2012 called Melancholia – it’s about a wondering planet called Melancholia (aka Nibiru/planet-x) on a direct orbit towards Earth, which would cause annihilation. It’s worth noting that director of Melancholia directed another film called Antichrist, and just like Fifth Element, Melancholia is like Mister Shadow the anti-Christ represented as a planet. |
Another entertainment piece on nihilism is Melancholia: With my little decoding of Melancholia, either of two things results when the image is mirrored. One – beings with funny-looking eyes rule over us. The diamond image and the planet background represent that (the film’s meta-subconscious symbolic reminder of who your rulers are), and two, a representation of a birth opening, a symbolic suggestion to a new incarnation. The two planets represent the Vesica Piscis. So it’s less about hyperreal notions of colliding planets and more about the self-reflection of the microcosm universe.
There is no such thing as space as a hyperreal-space notion. Therefore, the film is really about nihilism. The structures of this nihilism are portrayed differently through Justine (Kirsten Dunst), Claire and John. This nihilism can be seen as a knowledge model; Justine’s Nihilism is far more apt than Claire’s neurotic position and John’s economic-rational mode. Perhaps it’s Justine’s romantic understanding of death that her depression may fuel, but people’s understanding of death is often incomplete. John’s rationale mode by saying, “You have to trust the scientist,” he is giving his faith in a religion disguised as empirical (sure belief in NASA if you wish). His God is the ultimate ‘chance’ – out of touch with his spirit, he commits suicide before the destruction.
Meanwhile, Justine’s “knowledge” (i.e., Gnosis) borders on the mystical – she knows are 678 beans in the wedding jar. She states, “The Earth is evil; we don’t need to grieve for it. Nobody would miss it.” To those who follow conspiracy theory, Justine hints the world is evil because it’s ruled by an evil parasite (or is that just me). Or you can safely say if such a wondering world exists; in this possibility, the old world must die before the new can flourish. This is nihilism, but the film title suggests melancholic (negative); this depends on the term – there was a whole romantic movement centuries ago. They would probably see it differently, similar to “objective depression.”
Justine’s gnosis is exemplified in her action; she inhabits Millais’s Ophelia, drowning in her wedding dress and clutching the bouquet. She also lies by the riverbank naked like a mythical- oracular that resembles a beautiful mermaid or a virginal girl that steals beauty in a chaotic wasteland. Finally, she listens to the planet’s magnetic siren sound and communes with it like the planet’s own herald figure (or gnostic saviour of self).
Michael Keefe.
… End of part four… to be continued