New Netflix Movie Warns of Coming Cyber Attack – Former Freemason Wall Street Manager Explains How the Banks Will Soon Take Your Money

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by Brian Shilhavy, Health Impact News:

Netflix recently released a new fictional film titled “Leave the World Behind” which dramatizes what could happen with a cyber attack against the U.S. I watched this film yesterday, since online comments about it were all over the place in trying to interpret it.

I am recommending everyone to watch this film. There is a lot of cussing and use of the “F” word, so be forewarned about that. If you are not subscribed to Netflix, you can purchase a 1-month membership just to watch the film and then cancel your subscription. There are also probably bootleg copies online as well.

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Because the film was (at least partially) funded by the Obamas, the Right Wing Alternative Media is interpreting this film through the lens of Conservatism with partisan views, which makes them completely miss what is so clearly being communicated in this film.

I have read comments, for example, stating that this film was anti-White people and anti-humanity. This is absurd, as the two families portrayed in this film, a White family with a mother and father and two children, and a Black father with his young daughter, actually overcome their racial biases in this film, and learn that their shared humanity makes them far more similar as they are facing the same problems together in an apocalypse scenario like a cyber attack.

I captured a screenshot of the White mother and the Black daughter holding hands as they watch New York City being bombed from a rural area on Long Island, which clearly shows how these Right-wing biased reviews completely miss the point due to their own biases.

There is most certainly a lot of symbolism and hidden meanings throughout the film, and you will not like the ending which is intentional, but I encourage you to watch it for yourself rather than reading what other people think about it, including me.

If you cannot imagine what a cyber attack and other resulting types of attacks, such as EMP attacks, would look like if they happened, I do think this film is probably an accurate portrayal of what that could look like.

Many are claiming that this film is “Predictive Programming” in helping the public get ready for this actually happening in real life.

I don’t necessarily disagree with that, but one has to understand that pretty much EVERYTHING you watch that is produced by the Corporate Entertainment industry is “predictive programming,” and has been that way since TV and the Big Screen movie industry started after World War 2, in the 1950s, which (non)coincidentally is also just after the time frame for when the CIA was formed.

And this film is anything but an “Independent” film, as the credits clearly show that it was produced under the influence of the Freemason Unions that control this industry:

There is a specific message that they want you to believe in this film, so be careful as you watch it, and look for some of the symbols and ideologies they use to get a clue as to what they want you to believe.

Many believe that “predictive programming” means that the Globalists who run the world are giving the public a glimpse into their world, by using fiction. For many years, I believed this myself, thinking that these major productions reflected how the world is actually run.

However, while that is probably partially true, I now believe almost the exact opposite: That the Globalists often first make their plans, and then get the Entertainment Industry to write a script for it to introduce it to the public, to see how they react, BEFORE any of this actually happens.

Or in other words, most of the world’s major events are first conceived and broadcast as fiction in the Entertainment Industry, before they actually happen, so they can see how the public might react to and receive the news when these events occur. If a film is a bust, they probably move on to Plan B, Plan C, etc.

I grew up as a child in the 1960s, long before the Internet and the Digital Age, but at a time where most Americans were beginning to be able to afford to purchase a TV for their homes. I remember how our family participated in the “Nielsen ratings“, where they sent us a booklet that listed all the future TV listings for a coming week, and we had to record what shows we watched as well as our reactions to them.

This was how they collected data on viewer habits before the digital age, and I wouldn’t be surprised at all if the military and intelligence agencies had access to this data even back then. It was probably this data that convinced them that the public was ready for a fake moon landing in 1969.

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