Also, consider the imagery and messaging potential of the hippy vs. the EDM scene. In the 60s you had lyrics and album covers as prominently featured and regarded as the music itself. In EDM, on the other hand, album covers and imagery are pretty much irrelevant (who buys albums of electronic music? - not to mention that people now mostly just buy singles, if that). Finally, EDM essentially has no lyrics or specific message. It also just has not taken off in the same huge way as hippy music did.
That opening scene where they are going through the trash, find something recycleable and then assault the house ....not to funny...yet I laugh...I was just outside placing the recycled items on the corner. Allan is an agent...this way they can say they publicly warned us...same thing with Bill Cooper...they usually have a fake death and are wisked away like JESUS...lol...same pattern lol..
I keep thinking that the 90s rave culture was another drug experiment using X and lsd plus the "trance" and other drum based music to subvert the younger generation and get them into sex and drugs and partying and not to think about reality and the world. but so many who went to raves just say how fun and awesome they were they can't think that maybe all those drugs were being provided for them to waste time.I wonder about the mental effects of such repetitive music. Any thoughts?
@gracistabu From my personal experience I've been into the music for nearly 10 years and have experimented with altering my conscious through all sorts of natural hallucinations as well. I became interested in how the world ran and started studying books by those at the top and formed personal opinions based off of factual information. I started this at the age of 16 (now 23) and still listening to the music partially, it has in no way interrupted my need to learn and expose corruption.
@lnternetperson Thanks for your response. I have met several people who are really aware from that time but also many who are totally asleep. I guess that is true of any kind of music/drug use. I was just wondering if some of trance specifically could have more mental effects than other genres. Some ppl at the Icke forum have a thread saying that the later rave years had a different vibe and the music changed and felt like it was trying to numb/take over their minds.
there will come a time when people will know there is no need for governments, all religions , and no laws they will realize these were only foolish beliefs told to people to make them in to slave .they will realize school are nothing more then mind control and turns science in to a false religion history in to a beliefs do you not understand rulers say the strong will rule the weak but they bread the weak make them dependent on them false eduction false economy .laws to protect rulers
@gracistabu As someone who loves electronic music to death and has gone to a few raves, I strongly disagree. This is an underground culture. At the very least, the music part of it is, in no way, manufactured from the top. But even with drugs - it's far easier to synthesize massive amounts of LSD than ecstasy. The logistics of manufacturing the 2 drugs are just too different. I can see this argument being made for the 60s, but it doesn't hold well for the 90s and 00s, in my opinion.
@zeppelin0110 Thanks for responding but I'm still not convinced. And after a study of occult imagery on rave culture/music posters/album art I'm even more convinced of my initial hypothesis. The hippies thought their culture was underground and to me it seems harder to fake the music/culture of the 60s than electronic music since it is itself synthetic and computer generated. Not to mention the extra research time on electronic mind control. Have you seen the work of Dave McGowan on the LC?
@gracistabu I have not seen it, but I'll definitely check it out. In any case, if you consider electronic music, it's really quite different from pop/rock in how it originates. There are far more little artists with far fewer tracks per each one in the electronic dance music scene than with the hippy music scene. Also, think about the scene - it IS way more underground, especially back in its heyday (90s), taking place in warehouses (that's why you have a 'house' music EDM subgenre).
I do believe that the current model we are living under is unsustainable, but the elite are going about the problem in the wrong way, instead of love and example they are using brute force and terrorism.
Also, consider the imagery and messaging potential of the hippy vs. the EDM scene. In the 60s you had lyrics and album covers as prominently featured and regarded as the music itself. In EDM, on the other hand, album covers and imagery are pretty much irrelevant (who buys albums of electronic music? - not to mention that people now mostly just buy singles, if that). Finally, EDM essentially has no lyrics or specific message. It also just has not taken off in the same huge way as hippy music did.
zeppelin0110 3 months ago
That opening scene where they are going through the trash, find something recycleable and then assault the house ....not to funny...yet I laugh...I was just outside placing the recycled items on the corner. Allan is an agent...this way they can say they publicly warned us...same thing with Bill Cooper...they usually have a fake death and are wisked away like JESUS...lol...same pattern lol..
attilaclark 9 months ago
I keep thinking that the 90s rave culture was another drug experiment using X and lsd plus the "trance" and other drum based music to subvert the younger generation and get them into sex and drugs and partying and not to think about reality and the world. but so many who went to raves just say how fun and awesome they were they can't think that maybe all those drugs were being provided for them to waste time.I wonder about the mental effects of such repetitive music. Any thoughts?
gracistabu 1 year ago 8
@gracistabu From my personal experience I've been into the music for nearly 10 years and have experimented with altering my conscious through all sorts of natural hallucinations as well. I became interested in how the world ran and started studying books by those at the top and formed personal opinions based off of factual information. I started this at the age of 16 (now 23) and still listening to the music partially, it has in no way interrupted my need to learn and expose corruption.
lnternetperson 11 months ago
@lnternetperson Thanks for your response. I have met several people who are really aware from that time but also many who are totally asleep. I guess that is true of any kind of music/drug use. I was just wondering if some of trance specifically could have more mental effects than other genres. Some ppl at the Icke forum have a thread saying that the later rave years had a different vibe and the music changed and felt like it was trying to numb/take over their minds.
gracistabu 10 months ago
there will come a time when people will know there is no need for governments, all religions , and no laws they will realize these were only foolish beliefs told to people to make them in to slave .they will realize school are nothing more then mind control and turns science in to a false religion history in to a beliefs do you not understand rulers say the strong will rule the weak but they bread the weak make them dependent on them false eduction false economy .laws to protect rulers
greenearthnazi20204u 10 months ago
@gracistabu
Well, I raved through the 90s, those were the days!
However... here I am , watching the video, never watching TV, thinking for my self.
Do not worry about the mental effects of trance music.
When young people grow up, they become thinking adults.
MrWHun 7 months ago
@gracistabu As someone who loves electronic music to death and has gone to a few raves, I strongly disagree. This is an underground culture. At the very least, the music part of it is, in no way, manufactured from the top. But even with drugs - it's far easier to synthesize massive amounts of LSD than ecstasy. The logistics of manufacturing the 2 drugs are just too different. I can see this argument being made for the 60s, but it doesn't hold well for the 90s and 00s, in my opinion.
zeppelin0110 3 months ago
@zeppelin0110 Thanks for responding but I'm still not convinced. And after a study of occult imagery on rave culture/music posters/album art I'm even more convinced of my initial hypothesis. The hippies thought their culture was underground and to me it seems harder to fake the music/culture of the 60s than electronic music since it is itself synthetic and computer generated. Not to mention the extra research time on electronic mind control. Have you seen the work of Dave McGowan on the LC?
gracistabu 3 months ago
@gracistabu I have not seen it, but I'll definitely check it out. In any case, if you consider electronic music, it's really quite different from pop/rock in how it originates. There are far more little artists with far fewer tracks per each one in the electronic dance music scene than with the hippy music scene. Also, think about the scene - it IS way more underground, especially back in its heyday (90s), taking place in warehouses (that's why you have a 'house' music EDM subgenre).
zeppelin0110 3 months ago
We all need each other.
Leo Buscaglia
BrainwashedHumanity 1 year ago
@MikeFromTheUK1
Yes. I have also watched his many videos. He talks straight and never flip flops. He is a great researcher.
kkbose 1 year ago
I do believe that the current model we are living under is unsustainable, but the elite are going about the problem in the wrong way, instead of love and example they are using brute force and terrorism.
karlkarlkarl1234 1 year ago