http://pesn.com/2012/12/01/9602236_Argo_Propagates_Fear/
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1,
2012
Argo Propagates Fear
While the movie is excellent, the timing of release, in a time when the
war drums are beating, will tend to support the propaganda vilifying Iran.
A tie in to Keshe's alleged space technology and the peace they are seeking to
foster.
Six US Diplomats flee the embassy as it comes
under siege. Finding safe harbor in a Canadian diplomat's home, they were
then rescued by Tony Mendez (played by Ben Affleck) under false pretenses of being location scouts
for a bogus Hollywood film, Argo.
(Still shot from trailer)
Last night, at the close of my birthday, my wife and I went to see Argo.
It is "a dramatization of the 1980 joint CIA-Canadian
secret operation to extract six fugitive American diplomatic personnel out of
revolutionary Iran."
I give it 9 out of 10 stars.
I loved the film and the bravery it illustrated of an agent who went to extreme
lengths and great risks, and who even defied orders in order to rescue the six
fugitives. The edge-of-your-seat, in-the-nick-of-time drama reminded me of the
movie 2012. The film also did an excellent job of transporting us back to
1979-1980 time period, mixing historic footage with new filming reenacting that
era.
However, there is one huge thing that I don't like about the film. Its
timing.
We live in a day when the war drums are beating to go against Iran.
This movie will make that a much easier sell, because it portrays Iranians as
voraciously anti-American.
Back in the
1979-1980 time frame, they had good reason to be upset. Against the US State Department's
recommendation, taking the advice of Henry Kissinger and David Rockefeller, the
US was harboring the ailing Iranian Shah at the Mayo Clinic. That Shah had been
on a bloody vendetta in Iran to wipe out anyone who had opposed his previous
administration that fell from power for a time. That is
a large reason why the Iranians stormed the U.S. Embassy and took its occupants
hostage for 444 days. They wanted the Shah back, so they could publicly try and
execute him for his crimes against their country. (Iran
hostage crisis)
The movie has grossed nearly $100 million dollars since its release in
October.
What does this have to do with exotic free energy technologies?
One of the Top 5 runners up is the Keshe
Foundation, which we've been devoting quite a bit of air time to. Mehran
Keshe is an Iranian citizen living in Belgium, and allegedly has trained Iranian
scientists in an advance flying saucer technology, by which they intercepted a
US drone last year and landed it safely, without it being able to engage it's
self-destruct programming to prevent capture.
His purpose in offering this technology to the nations of the world through
their embassies in Belgium is to make war obsolete because offensive measures
are no longer effective due to the ability to intercept any incoming hostile
weapons or craft. He also seeks to create jobs through the deployment of these
new plasma technologies.
From Keshe's vantage point, the US is by far the more vindictive and
dangerous nation than Iran. And he doesn't have friendly sentiments toward
Canada either, as they arrested him last year while he was travelling through
their country, as we reported.
This morning, Keshe sent me a link
to a comment he posted on his forum regarding a boycott of allowing the Canadian
government to have access to his technology. The irony here, was that in the
movie Argo, Canada was the heroic facilitator of the rescue of the 6 US Embassy
fugitives.
I guess this illustrates the maxim: one man's hero is another man's villain.
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"It is harder to crack a prejudice than an atom." // "I'd rather be an optimist and a fool than a pessimist and
right." -- Albert Einstein
ADVISORY: With any
technology, you take a high risk to invest significant time or money
unless (1) independent testing has thoroughly corroborated the
technology, (2) the group involved has intellectual rights to the
technology, and (3) the group has the ability to make a success of
the endeavor.
All
truth passes through three stages:
First, it is ridiculed;
Second, it is violently opposed; and
Third, it is accepted as self-evident.
--
Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)
"When you're one step ahead
of the crowd you're a genius.
When you're two steps ahead,
you're a crackpot."