Tuesday 17 September 2024

Independence Day and the Blue Beam Project

The 1997 movie Independence Day has a very interesting story to tell, and today we will analyze some of its messages. We will also get into hidden history and conspiracy theories, so get ready, block your seatbelts and prepare for this new interesting article. 

NPC People Love Aliens

The first half of the movie revolves about some different characters. We have a redneck who claims to have been abducted, a hacker protestor who loves the planet and dislikes people who is played by Jeff Goldblum, a funny black american who is on the military and is played by Will Smith and a president of the United States who actually cares about the United States. 

A series of massive spaceships approach the earth and it is unknown whether they come in peace or with the intention of destroying humanity. This ignorance doesn't prevent people from stacking below the doors of the spaceship and dancing excitedly below them, with the equivalent of "Refugees Welcome" cartels in their hands, begging E.T. to take them to their planet. 

When the establishment has found out the intentions of the spaceships, they warn people to leave, but they are so fascinated by the aliens that they never leave.

And the result? They get smothered by blue lasers and die. 

The moral is that you should not be a pijama person who gets so excited about something new or unexpected and forgets self preservation and situational awareness. Stay away from what the NPC masses do if you do not want to be like the people in this movie. 

América! Woo!

As the movie progressed, I realized it was propaganda for the American people, in favor of the government and military. 

For example, many of the battles are protagonized by very cool pilots riding very cool planes and fighting against evil psychic squid alien demons. The president isn't the Mascot of an evil deep state looking for excuses to abuse its own people and people from overseas, but a highly-likable character, a good father who deeply cares about people and blames himself for not stopping the first invasion.  

Let us not forget that this is the movie where america saves the entirety of the world from an alien invasion; for they are the ones who figure out how to destroy the aliens and their spaceships. The movie is full of patriotic scenes that I actually found hilarious. 

 They are also the ones who inspire the entire world to ignore their differences and get together to stop the greater menace; something that brings us to the next question. 

America bringing forth the New World Order? 

It seems that while for the people this is a fun popcorn movie with destruction, action, tender moments and Will Smith, for the establishment (at least, the establishment of 1997) the story is quite different.

As they prepare to fight against the evil psychic squid conquerors, the president clears his throat and gives as speech, suggesting people should forever ignore their "petty differences" because for one moment they had to unite and fight extraterrestrials. 

This theme is central to the movie: We see different americans all over the country uniting against the treat: the president, the crazy redneck, the military black american (presumably a reference to the so-called right wing) the protestor hacker who does science (a reference to the so-called left), the stripper, the rabbi and the female politician all play the role of representing different americans from all walks of life. 

Later, when America passes the cheat-code to other countries to defeat the aliens, we see countries that fought the United States somewhere in time. I recognized Japan, Russia and Britain. This movie was intended to tell Americans they would be responsible for uniting the whole world under the New World Order. 

Israel makes an appearance too, of course. They probably identify with the aliens a bit too much, as they love smashing buildings, people, and symbolic locations.

It also has a bit of religious ecumenism, for example, when the rabbi guy prays with people of all so-called faith traditions. 

The Blue Beam Project 

This consists on a possible false flag made by the establishment. By faking an alien invasion (presumably, using CGI, directed energy weapons and the media), they could send the people into a panic and force them to accept dictatorial mandates they would never consider otherwise. 

Consider for example, how much the US government tried to hide (or pretended to try to hide) information about UFOs, and extraterrestrials; but in 2021 they suddenly were showing off their footage and driving attention to the topic like if it were very important. 

The mexican government followed suit, of course, with some cheap imitation of a psychological operation.

Some people have suggested too, that some "alien abductions"  have actually been mind control experiments by the government who then blamed it on E.T. This distracts the population and prevents people who suffered the trauma from being taken seriously, because they remember it as an alien abduction and not a government experiment. 

An even scarier Blue Beam project could involve not only extraterrestrials, but interdimensional beings. The reason for this is that movies like Event Horizon and Hellraiser have already presented demons and/or ghost as entities from other dimensions, rather than biological beings from other planets. 

The idea that humans should unite is not bad in itself, it is just that I do not want it to happen by the hand of neocons, Israel or freemasons. Neither do we want it to happen by the hand of the people who would lie to us about an alien invasion. 

The Soulless Remake for Modern Audiences

In 2015 a "sequel" for Independence Day was released, albeit it kind of works like a remake. It is almost like if the directors had a checklist for things that worked in the original movie and just remade them for Independence Day Resurgence. 

+ Funny pilot gets inside Alien spaceship? Check

+ Psychic Alien Squid strangles a man and uses it to communicate its plans to the audience? Check

+ Massive destruction of well-known locations? Check 

+ The cheesy musical theme from the original movie? Check

+ New World Order Message? Check 

+ Ecumenism? Check

+ Area 51? Check

+ Angry military man who needs to sit down? Check

+ A character sacrifices himself to defeat the aliens? Check

Except that this time it falls flat and nobody cares. 

The only thing missing was the cheesy american patriotism that gave me so much cringe and made me laugh so hard. Perhaps the current establishment doesn't like America as much as they used to do.  

The movie actually seems to suggest President Whitner as some sort of antichrist or messianic world leader because after the invasion of the last movie, they reverse engineered the alien spaceships and used them to improve their technology. There had been no sign of wars or division since the last alien invasion, meaning President Whitner actually managed to unite the whole world and bring some sort of an utopia. 

Eventually he sacrifices himself. Will they resurrect him on a sequel soon?  

There is also a white sphere who speaks like a female and is a member of a different alien species. It is a transhumanist thing that transferred its conscience to a computer. She explains she is holding a "resistance" against the squid people and she might consider humans to join them. There is some cheap teasing for a sequel and the movie ends without shame or glory. 

Conclusion

Independence Day is a new world order movie that doesn't care if people accuse it of being propaganda. In fact, it is a masterpiece on propaganda, something that isn't hidden but doesn't prevent you from having fun. 

If you disagree with my interpretation of the movie, come and tell me your own opinion. Just make sure to avoid CGI deceptions anyways, whether they come from "the right" or "the left". 

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