Sunday, November 15, 2020


The Pandemic Thriller Movie “Songbird” Will Be Pure Predictive Programming




At the moment of writing these lines, the world is entering its ninth month of “pandemic life”, characterized by various degrees of lockdowns, clampdowns on social gatherings, sweeping mask mandates, high tech surveillance, and the establishment of a faceless tyranny based on stats and numbers.

As people are looking for ways to wake up from this nightmarish scenario, Hollywood had a great idea: Let’s make a movie about everything that is happening right now – but worse.

The upcoming movie Songbird is defined as a “pandemic thriller” (is there anything “thrilling” about a pandemic?) taking place in 2024. Directed by Hollywood staple Michael Bay (Transformers, The Purge, A Quiet Place), the movie is about COVID-23 (a mutation of COVID-19) turning America into a dystopian nightmare, complete with quarantine camps. Wikipedia describes the movie’s premise as follows:


In 2024, the SARS-CoV-2 virus has mutated and the world is in its fourth pandemic year. Infected Americans are taken from their homes and forced into quarantine camps called Q-Zones, where some fight back against the brutal restrictions. A motorbike courier, Nico, who has a rare immunity, is in a relationship with Sara, a young artist whose lockdown prohibits them from physical contact. When Sara is believed to have become infected, Nico races across the empty streets of Los Angeles in an attempt to save her.

Songbird was created, shot, and (soon) released in record time. Principal production began on July 8th and wrapped up on August 3rd. It was the first movie to shoot in Los Angeles during the COVID-19 lockdown. Filming was initially halted by SAG-AFTRA (the Screen Actors Guild) but permission to shoot was granted the day after. I guess they understood that this narrative had to be released to the public ASAP.

Speaking of narratives, the movie was created in collaboration with a digital content studio aptly named Invisible Narratives. Founded by Adam Goodman, the former President of Paramount Pictures and Dreamworks SKG, the company describes itself as “disruptive storytelling that fuels culture in partnership with people of influence.” In other words: Occult elite propaganda.

The company’s slogan is also extremely fitting as it also applies to the occult elite as a whole: Hidden in plain sight.

One only needs to watch the official trailer of Songbird to understand what it is truly about: Predictive Programming. Here’s a look at this pieced of supposed “entertainment”.

Songbird‘s trailer begins with a very ironic use of Bob Marley’s song Three Little Birds in which he repeats “every little thing is gonna be all right”. I’m pretty sure that Marley wouldn’t have approved the use of his song in the insanely oppressive context of the movie. However, Hollywood loves to poison wholesome and optimistic content with its soul-crushing agenda of dread and darkness so it paid for the rights of the song and that was the end of it.

One thing is for sure, every little thing is not all right in Songbird. As the song momentarily stops, we hear an announcement saying:

“Curfew is now in effect. All unauthorized citizens must stay indoors.”

As we hear these words, viewers are treated to a series of upsetting landscapes.

Entire highways are closed because people are forbidden from traveling anywhere.

Then, we hear a newscaster talking about the “213th week of lockdown”, which means that the lockdown of 2020 never ended.

In this sad context, millions of infected Americans are detained in quarantine camps. The same concept of quarantine camps was also depicted in Utopia (a bizarrely prophetic series) and Contagion (another piece of predictive programming from 2012).


The words “Let us out!!!” and “Help” strongly imply that people are being held against their will in terrible conditions.

People who are not infected live in heavily controlled and never-ending lockdown. The technology used to control people is far from being “science fiction”. We’re about 80% there in real life.









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