>>11984433
>>11984456
Remember when Q pointed out how up is down and down is up?
They invert things endlessly. The stories are still accurate and they're important to understand.
What you need to realize is that there are perspectives to things and that information warfare has been waged for many decades already.
Movies are used to elicit certain perspectives. Who's perspective? The ones making the movies. So, if you're going to break them down and analyze them, you need to account for the perspective.
What [they] are doing is showing the story of Azazel, Lucifer, Prometheus, whatever you want to call it.
This is an example of Thelema - inversion majick invented by Crowley. You aren't supposed to view the limited, dichotomous thinking they desire you to use. Instead, they present it to you with bells and whistles, hoping you aren't able to decode the message.
The story is of a Hero entity, one who comes to the rescue of "everyone", bringing them Light/Knowledge and saving them from Darkness. Every time that Hero archetype is fulfilled, they cast it down, ostracize it, kill it, whatever it takes. Jesus got nailed to a tree, the Serpent was cast out of the Garden, Prometheus was strapped to a stone and a bird was sent to eat his liver over and over again. They key to unraveling this story, though, is the perspective. Who's telling "everyone" this story? Is it the "God" to whom "Jews" devote themselves, their ritual sacrifices (Yom Kippur, for instance)? Is it the "God" of the Garden? Is it the "God" that left a nugget of himself inside all of us via Holy Spirit? What is that "God"? Why would he throw out the Hero archetype that brought Light and Knowledge to the Garden? Why would that same Hero, who reanimated, stole Fire/Knowledge from "the Gods", and got punished for it, do it all again if he knew he'd get punished? Why would he come back again, get made to carry around a big tree, take it up this hill, erect it and let people nail his hands and feet to it, all to bring more Knowledge to the Garden?
Here's an even bigger question: why do they keep shoving this story down your throat, where the good guy always dies at the end?
Maybe, just maybe, it's a message, a message to not fucking do it again.
But, hey, it's probably just another video game, right?