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Post by whiterose on May 27, 2007 18:15:15 GMT -5
Folks I may have misstated here, it seems it not only discusses bugs but also mind control. Might be worth a look.
I purchased a scanner darkly which ticked me off, some guy that was put across as thinking he has bugs, and being locked up for being crazy. I spent good money to be insulted. Than when this movie came out I went across the web looking for different takes on it, read a couple bad reviews, which I usually ignore, so my apologies.
This might be a movie to see!
I think sometimes I have my dukes up after being on guard for so long because of this affliction we call morgellons. Followed on the computer, emails--unable to send to certain people having to do with morgellons unless actually through the site, funny noises on the phone that even others comment about.
Being attacked on this board at least every couple weeks as if others don't have a better way to spend their life.
wr
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Post by whiterose on May 27, 2007 19:44:18 GMT -5
here is a right up: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bug_(2007_film)Although they say these folks lives get crazy, isn't it reminiscent of our own, isn't that a part of the affliction. I wonder if it was released on memorial weekend to help show the insanity of what has happened to the guys that fought for our country. How sad, it all is.
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Post by gracebeours on May 29, 2007 12:52:27 GMT -5
So true, so sad.
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Post by 0happyday on Jun 11, 2007 23:28:09 GMT -5
TV Guide had previews of this on the other day and I wanted to throw up!
But the irony of it is when interviewing Ashley she reached her left hand over and scratched her right shoulder.
and The guy was scratching his ear.
Reckon they caught a bug in the making of the movie?
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mondo
New Member
Posts: 32
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Post by mondo on Jun 12, 2007 0:12:22 GMT -5
Have you gond to the website? It is amazing. While the plot pushes the DOP agenda, the website has an interactive page that leads to a page that links Morgellons to the Bilderbergers and the Gulf War. I remember seeing satellite photos of Iraq being sprayed heavy w/ aerosols during the war. Afghanistan too. To back this up, plenty of proof at pnl.gov.
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Post by sarahconnor on Jun 12, 2007 4:38:32 GMT -5
Is the movie Bug on at the cinemas?
I have not heard a thing about that movie on TV in Australia.
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Post by whiterose on Jun 12, 2007 7:58:38 GMT -5
I had a pretty good idea that what the vets were experiencing was at least related in part to what we are experiencing. I read the book Project Day Lily, by Garth Nicholson of the Common Cause Medical Research Foundation, it was a very enlightning read. The lastjournal of degenerative diseases put out by the above mentioned organization highlighted Morgellons Syndrome on page 32.
I cried as I read the experiences of the woman in the story as it resembled mine in many ways and I'm sure most of you would connect with it also.
Thanks Mondo I will check out the links from that Movie, interesting isn't it, they are doing their best to make us look bonkers and than add this link, all so confusing.
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Post by mondo2 on Jan 25, 2008 19:53:08 GMT -5
Hoodoo City[/color][/b] We're seeing some bad hoodoo on the rise. The intrepid Todd Campbell, author of Through The Looking Glass peeringthrough.blogspot.com/, has collated some of the 'best' of these at his blog. And all this comes barely a month since the climax of a riff-like sequence of American and European shootings in which the magic ran so deep you could practically smell it. The black stuff is far from being a uniquely American preserve, however; and here in London we're also in the thick of what can only be described as a magical 'flap.' The autonomy of the Self is not surrendered without considerable psychic trauma; shared even by the most deliriously possessed: witches, like Hillary Rodham Clinton. Buried deep beneath her seemingly complete identification with the Reptilian Overlords lies a wounded, usurped Self... that still seeks reintegration with the Divine. (Yes, it is hard to believe, but it's true.) This chink in the character armouring remains liable to destabilize even the most imperious of egos; a process we are witnessing en masse in the City of London and elsewhere, as we speak. (A process more associated with the aftermath of war, or the end of the reign of a particularly brutal dictator.) According to the Daily Mail: 'Experts warn that increasing numbers of City workers are being referred for psychological treatment in the wake of the credit crunch. Employees are suffering from stress, anxiety and depression and the numbers seeking help could rise as economic instability takes its toll.'
And in an article in Friday's Times2, published on the same day that Vincent Ma caught his final flight from Docklands, Karen Barichievy drew on her many years' experience as a well-groomed bankers' WAG: 'When I first entered my ex-boyfriend's house,' she writes, 'I had the feeling that I'd walked onto the set of American Psycho... When he does well, you'll be swept along on a tide of champagne and adrenalin. But when things go wrong- and they usually go spectacularly wrong- you will find yourself in a darkened room, murmuring soothing words while he fights off a nervous breakdown.' (Her article is accompanied by an illustration of an archetypal City Boy's mate, perched in a penthouse with a perfect view of the Gherkin.) Very rarely indeed, however, do things go quite so spectacularly wrong as they did for Alberto Izaga, formerly the global head of the Life & Health Products Unit at Swiss Re Group. Of all the sad stories covered in this report, this one is without a doubt the most disturbing. I derive no pleasure in seeing any man brought low, unless that man be Anthony Charles Blair, nor in the needless suffering inflicted on an innocent. Nonetheless, as the culmination of the City's ritual 'flap'- and therefore its most potent expression- the facts of the case need to be put before you and amplified. Izaga rose to notoriety when, in June last year, the 36 year-old member of the Swiss Re board battered his two year-old daughter to death in the living room of the Thameside apartment he shared with his wife, Ligia. The public's appetite for moral panic having been well and truly stoked by the disappearance of Madeleine McCann exactly a month earlier, the story could not have broken at a better time for the tabloid press. Amidst the usual hypocrisy, a few choice nuggets of pure ignorance: Allison Pearson, writing in the Daily Mail, conjured the bizarre theory that Yanire had been murdered for disturbing Izaga's 'Sunday lie-in with his wife.' In fact, Izaga had been awake for at least four hours before the attack, having woken at around 4.30am, and the violence was the culmination of a series of events which makes this particular story one of the most harrowing examples of transdimensional possession imaginable. According to journalist Dan Newling: 'In the weeks before the attack, Mr Izaga experienced two events that may have influenced his mental state. The first was during a trip to New York, when Mr Izaga and his wife went to a cinema to find the only seats available were for the horror film Bug, directed by William Friedkin.(Note: From the minute I saw the trailer to "Bug", I knew it had to do with pre-programming or brainwashing the public into believing that Morgellons is actually psychosomatic. I find this interesting tid-bit written at filmstew.comwww.filmstew.com/showBlog.aspx?blog_id=1079 Don't make the mistake of taking your younger teenage children to see the hard R-rated Bug. Since this is more of a psychological thriller, they'll be hard pressed to connect to it, just as it will be difficult for you to casually let them appreciate the vast amounts of nudity. On a base level, neither star Ashley Judd nor Michael Shannon (the heroic marine in World Trade Center) look bad in the buff. But the dialogue, so intensely and vulnerably delivered in the altogether, will stay with you for days after seeing the film.
The plot, adapted from a popular and successful off-Broadway play written by actor Trevor Letts, involves Judd playing a lonely, Oklahoma waitress, living in a ramshackle motel room. Harry Connick, Jr. plays her ex-con, ex-husband, and Shannon plays a disturbed Gulf War veteran who is convinced that the military has bugged him, by injecting insects, as well as tracking devices, into his blood stream. Appearing at first with a sort of awe shucks country boy charm, you almost like him and want to believe him, but when the extreme conspiracy theory jargon starts spewing from his mouth, and the imaginary insects start creeping and crawling about and biting, it sends a shiver up your spine and an itch around your entire body. I dare anyone to watch the movie without scratching at least five times.
One of Bug's most fascinating aspects is the rousing controversy it has caused among people who claim to be suffering from a condition known as Morgellons. The Morgellons Research Foundation, a "non-profit organization dedicated to conquering a newly emerging infectious disease," claims it's a parasite-like infection. "Most individuals with this disease report disturbing symptoms such as crawling, stinging and biting sensations, as well as non-healing skin lesions which are associated with highly unusual structures…. In addition, many sufferers also report symptoms of disabling fatigue, severe mental confusion, short-term memory loss, joint pain, sharp decline in vision, and serious neurological disorders."
Other members of the medical community claim that Morgellons is actually Delusions of Parasites, or DOP, which can develop from a variety of physical conditions, including nutritional deficiencies, dehydration, or prescription or illegal drug side effects. They add that DOP can be triggered from diseases-disorders of the adrenal glands, the thyroid gland, the pituitary gland, the pancreas, the liver, the kidneys, the circulatory system - actually, any health condition that's gone un-checked and under-treated, or un-treated - even postpartum depression. Still, they believe it's a mental condition triggered by a biological one.
Those who believe they have Morgellons, however, claim that it's not all psychosomatic, or in their heads. They claim there truly are bugs living within them, and go to great lengths to attempt to cure themselves, since the standard medical community embraces psychological, rather than biological treatment. All the controversy adds to the already high creepiness factor of Bug.
... Then, on a business trip to Geneva, Mr Izaga heard a motivational talk by adventurer Mike Horn, who spoke about leaving his family to go on lengthy trips and pushing himself to achieve his goals. The evening after he returned, Mr Izaga was walking to a riverside restaurant with his wife when he started talking to himself and gesticulating wildly. At around 4.30am the following day, he suddenly sat up in bed and started babbling incoherently. [Prosecutor Johnathan Rees] told the court: "He began talking to his wife about the explorer in Geneva and the philosophies of the Jesuits. Referring to his fellow executives at Swiss Re, he appeared to indicate that they were part of a global conspiracy attempting to take over the financial world."Over the next four hours Mr Izaga became increasingly worked up, bursting into tears and shouting about the film, the Devil and death... Sweating and shouting with rage, the 36 year-old millionaire ranted that 'God doesn't exist! The universe doesn't exist! Humanity doesn't exist!' His terrified wife was powerless to stop him as he shook and punched their only child before repeatedly smashing her head against the floor. Neighbours, alerted by the shouting, went to the flat and found Mr Izaga cradling his daughter's bloody body. Yanire died in hospital two days later.' Izaga's 'occult footprint', so broad and overt, recalls the equally puzzling case of Amanda Knox. Her story, too, reads like a veritable 'To Do' list of conspiracy research. Both are affiliated with the overclass: Mr Izaga, with his Swiss Re millions; and Knox, a Committee of 300 descendent, who, with the help of an 'influential uncle' was able to procure a job as an intern in the German Bundestag. ('The Illuminati,' writes Stewart Swerdlow, 'consists of 13 families who control and manipulate all things on Earth, as well as the 300 families who work directly for them.') This would indicate that both are very likely programmed- either directly, through trauma-based projects such as MONARCH; or more discreetly, via one or several alternatives installed for the same purpose. These are the 'Illuminizing' structures described above; and Knox's potted biography is littered with them. (Her Jesuit education at the expensive- $11,800 a year- Seattle Prep certainly qualifies: an affinity she shares with Alberto Izaga, who attended a Jesuit university in his native Spain.) In both cases, however, it seems the trigger role was performed by certain pop cultural memes, raising the curtain on a conflagration as brief as it was bloody. Izaga remains 'profoundly mentally ill', but retains no memory of the attack. Knox, similarly, has given several contradictory accounts of events in Perugia; exactly what we would expect if we are right to suspect that, for as long as it took for the ritual to be performed, neither Knox nor Izaga were in driving seat. Psychiatric opinion, in the Izaga case, is divided; but the trigger has been fingered as Bill Friedkin's Bug. It would, wouldn't it, just have to be Friedkin, the man who gave us the The Exorcist: like LSD and Elvis, one of the most chillingly effective exercises in psychological warfare ever unleashed upon a target population. (Also one of the finest films of the 1970s, in this author's opinion; these very significant concerns notwithstanding.) In following his brief, handed down from the Committee of 300, Friedkin used techniques gleaned from the developing school of Behavioural Science to give the picture what he described 'as a kind of dreamlike state.' This involved the heavy use of subliminal devices: both visual and aural.
Its effects were immediate and astonishing. In the words of writer Mark Kermode: 'Within weeks of the first public screening, reports were flowing in of fainting, vomiting, heart attacks, and at least one miscarriage... The Toronto Medical Post reported that four women had been confined to psychiatric care after seeing the film... In Berkeley, a male patron received injuries when he threw himself at the screen to "get the demon".' Pazazu, who the patron may have been attempting to subdue, is an authentic diety of the Sumerian culture, revived by Lovecraft and in the work of Aleister Crowley. The film's opening scenes, set in Iraq, were filmed on location: at the site of the ancient Assyrian/Babylonian city of Nineveh. And the character of Father Damian Karras is a priest at the (Jesuit) Georgetown University; where William Peter Blatty, the author of the novel on which the film is based, was himself a student. If Bug, like all of Friedkin's post-Exorcist projects, failed to register on the seismograph, it was in part because the latter was so successful in its alchemical aims. Adapted by Tracy Letts from his original stage production, the film draws heavily on conspiratorial and psychological memes; being described as a meditation on the themes of paranoia, love, crystal meth and madness. In the case of Amanda Knox, we see a preference for art which seems, like Gehry's plans for the Hove shoreline, to have been downloaded straight from VALIS. Her taste- or lack of it, well documented on her MySpace page- extended to the Harry Potter mythos; whose hero 'strolled into' the head of J K Rowling 'fully formed', during a train journey from Manchester to Clapham Junction. Paul McCartney 'received' the melody to Yesterday in a dream; Robert Plant has described watching his hand write the first line of the lyrics to Stairway to Heaven and 'almost [leaping] out of my seat' in shock. Spontaneous revelation, I believe, is the hallmark of VALIS; and the art thus produced to be profoundly 'Illuminising.' What the "experts" claim is "delusional". img248.imageshack.us/img248/8006/cotesiacyaniridismesoscxg3.jpg[/img] Does that look like something someone imagined? "The greatest lie the devil ever told was convincing the world he doesn't exist." One of the main symptoms of Morgellons sufferers is the feeling that something is under your gums and destroying your teeth. It is unbearably painful and is constant. For an example of this by an accredited scientist who has removed these "fiber" clumps from under his gum-line, and has run many tests revealing bizarre clumps of groups of microscopic fibers that not even the FBI can diagnose despite having the largest database in the world. Think of that as you check out this pages at carnicom.com and then watch this BUG clip.
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