Predictive programming - Zuckerberg, Eisenberg, and Martial Arts
The story of Mark Zuckerberg's gold and silver medals at his first Brazilian Jiu-jitsu tournament has been in the news recently.
When the story broke, I felt a strong sense of unease which I soon understood had been caused by Predictive Programming. As most anons know, Predictive Programming is theory that the governments and/or other elite groups use fiction such as movies or books as mass mind control tools to soften the public to be more accepting of planned future events. This was first described and proposed by researcher Alan Watt who defines Predictive Programming as “… a subtle form of psychological conditioning provided by the media to acquaint the public with planned societal changes to be implemented by our leaders. If and when these changes are put through, the public will already be familiarized with them and will accept them as natural progressions, thus lessening possible public resistance and commotion.”
In the case of Zuck's martial arts exploits, the Predictive Programming comes from a 2019 movie called The Art of Self-Defense. The plot - one night, bookish nerd Casey, played by Jesse Eisenberg, is attacked by a motorcycle gang. Shortly after, looking to improve himself, Casey stumbles across and then joins a Karate dojo with some deeply unusual customs run by a charismatic and, as we eventually learn, murderous lunatic known only as Sensei. From there, the film gets immensely dark and surreal as, under the guise of learning karate, Casey is brainwashed by Sensei into perpetrating increasingly violent acts before eventually murdering a police officer and finally murdering Sensei and announcing himself head of the dojo. Some critics have compared the movie to Fight Club.
It's easy to make a compelling case that Eisenberg's character in The Art of Self-Defense represents Zuckerberg, especially given the fact that Eisenberg played Zuck in the multiple Academy Award-winning 2010 movie The Social Network. In this anon's opinion, The Social Network was a piece of pure propaganda designed solely to cement the patently false narrative that Zuckerberg built Facebook in his mom's basement, thus giving the world's greatest piece of spying technology a somewhat human face. Of course, Facebook's true face is that of DARPA's Lifelog upon which it is clearly modelled.
In The Art of Self-Defense we have Casey, played by Eisenberg, an obvious analog for Zuck, playing a bullied nerd that gets caught up in a deranged and homicidal cult set against a backdrop of self improvement via martial arts. Does this not sound a lot like Zuck's real life? If Zuck is merely the face of the murderous Military Industrial Complex's spying apparatus might he not have been sucked into something that's way over his head, something he barely comprehends? Doesn't DARPA have some conceptual similarities to the mysterious and bloodthirsty dojo? Might that explain Zuck's vacant, almost petrified stares when questioned by congress?
The sight of Zuck tussling with opponents in his Gi with his yellow belt body-slammed me right back to The Art of Self-Defense. I suspect that the-powers-that-be designed it that way. It showed that Zuck was just a regular human, a guy with a few rough edges. Just like a kid you might have gone to school with, you could imagine him having been bullied and now he's fighting back. It's only natural, right? It's not like he's the brainwashed puppet-head of some murderous cult or anything of that nature. That would be a conspiracy theory and we all know those never turn out to be true.
https://nypost.com/2023/05/08/mark-zuckerberg-spars-with-referee-at-brazilian-jiujitsu-tournament/
These conspiratorial film analyses fall out of my head sometimes. Thanks for reading if you got this far.
God bless
o7