The 'shooting' event is one that hosts use as a blanket, diversion. The media will focus on one shooting for days and weeks, and in that time many shootings could have happened. While people are talking about that, and dramatising the killings with actors etc, people have been killed in shops, or in domestic violence which doesn't get attention because it doesn't have that epic shootout wild west cowboy factor. Maybe they should do the re-enactments dressed like cowboys, that'll get it back into the spotlight.
There's some 70's I think cartoon version of Hansel and Gretel, except I think it was German, and instead of a witch it had a wizard, who could appear very tall it was a play on the children being small, as they were leaving the house / castle the two statues of cats moved. The cats were like lynxes, I think, black, I can't find it anywhere, even with Google search 'cartoon lynx'. They were like lynxes but the camera angle was low and pointed upwards. Closest comparison is the shots of Godzilla used in the cartoons. It's one of those recurrent memory things like 'lost keys' I look for it every once in a while. The wizard wanted to use the children in his experiments, it's probably a Mengele reference, it seemed like a good interpretation of the story. There's another one, I think it's by MGM Metro Goldwyn Mayer, where a man falls asleep at the beginning, next to a chemistry set. He dreams he's going through the chemistry set, whirling around, there's a beaker with a bunsen underneath he avoids falling into. He gets crushed and ground into little versions of him which remind me of Homer, running around, then gets rebuilt. There's an old woman in the background, cackling. I found it, it's called The Chemist, I was probably looking for 'The Alchemist'.
Anything connected to Mengele or World War 2 mind control would be taken off by those neurotic Jews which of course blocks any chance of therapy, you go Jews! Of course the cowardly lion is a metaphor for the hero in so many movies. Probably why MGM used the post-cowardly lion as their mascot.
Jesus Christ too, when he 'guts up' and takes the cross. The cross, it's a mark, like a marked man. A way to draw attention to him (or her), a focal point for fecal matter. Sins are transferred onto the Christ during crucifixion, that's why s/he's a redeemer, a mess'iah ('mess I ah' clear up). Karmic justice through proxy 'he died for our sins'.
Gatchaman II is finally crawling out of the shadow of the first series by episode 22. That wasn't Ken's daddy waddy in that other episode, but a pair of space aliens who were actually Galactor agents one wearing a space alien skins and the other in a wheelchair wearing his own daddie's skin, the other Galactor agent was the one who led Ken there 'I can't take this anymore' he said before firing, I assume he was talking about the episodes' plot. At Stonehenge, Leader X's pencil is seen, or spotted. Maybe Leader X's pen is spotted.
'Jenny Kealey. 'Face stuck in wet cement, that's how I likes it' Glen may have said.'
The letter Q is the equivalent of the letter X in Japanese.
Ultra Q - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ultra Q (ウルトラQ Urutora Kyū) is a tokusatsu science fiction/kaiju series made in the tradition of Toho's many tokusatsu sci-fi/horror films. Produced in black and white by Tokyo Broadcasting System/Tsuburaya Productions, this is actually the first of the long-running Ultra Series, and was broadcast on Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) from January 2 to July 3, 1966 (the final episode was preempted until December 14, 1967), with a total of 28 episodes. This series was followed two weeks later by the more popular Ultraman (Urutoraman, 1966), the second Ultra Series.Q is leader X? Who(q;que francais) is leader X. Q from Star Trek the next generation is the Americanised or Romanised X. Q is also a maggot emerging from the divine feminine.
In Australia, Gatchaman is sold as 'Earth is under siege from the alien menace known only by the name Cybercon and its legion of android forces, the Vorak. '.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_Riders
Eagle Riders (also known as Saban's Eagle Riders) is an American animated television adaptation of the Japanese anime series Gatchaman II and Gatchaman Fighter, which have been combined together.[1]The rights to the English-language version of Eagle Riders is owned by Saban Entertainment.[2][3] All 65 episodes aired in Australia on Network Ten; but in the United States, only 13 episodes were aired.[4]...
Earth is under siege from the alien menace known only by the name Cybercon and its legion of android forces, the Vorak. The Global Security Council convenes to address this problem, and calls upon Dr. Thaddeus Keane for assistance. They remember the aid they had received from Keane's special force, the Eagle Riders, in years past. Keane assures them that the Eagle Riders are still together, still strong, and armed with brand new weapons.
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