Tesla_WTC_Solution
26th January 2014, 23:29
Sean Cullen suggested I post this question in another MKULTRA thread... let me know if there is a better thread or forum for this;
we were discussing it today and I didn't see this thread in time..
http://abyss.hubbe.net/gfx/covers/cms/sp03.jpg http://abyss.hubbe.net/gfx/covers/cms/sp01-virgin.jpg http://abyss.hubbe.net/gfx/covers/cms/sp05-virgin.jpg
Wanted to ask you guys a question -- is the "death of a parent" a known "trigger" mechanism for some subjects?
What made me think of this (aside from a weird personal experience in 2007) was a comic book story called "Supreme Power".
Supreme Power is a MAX comics (adult series from Marvel I think? like dark horse or vertigo I guess) story that starts (I have vol 1) with the idea of what would happen in the real world, our politically ugly world here in reality, if a "Super-Man"'s child crash-landed here on Earth and was discovered by the US government.
A couple in a farm truck see the atmospheric entry (flames!) of the object carrying the boy. Long story short, the government takes the baby away from them (!) and finds a pair of agents willing to pose as this boy's parents. Gone in an instant is the hope of a "normal", "Clark Kent" kind of life. It was never meant to be!
The boy has some real trouble, especially when he reaches adolescence. But this isn't because he has a need to harm others or to exploit them. He is simply lonely.
They've kept this super-being so isolated and spiritually desolate by using the TV and the classroom as a weapon against his mind, that he doesn't even understand that he has been led to worship the United States, that the concerns of US security are ingrained in his psyche from before kindergarten. Because the "parents" controlled what he was exposed to. Also they deprived him of pets when there is a bad reaction to a puppy and the animal is incinerated by the boy's psychic feedback. (!!!) He is a firestarter in addition to his other talents.
Toward the end of the 1st volume of Supreme Power, when the subject reaches adulthood, the government makes its move to cement his loyalty to the United States as an asset and slave. The agents stage a fake death via a fishing trip, while their "son" is checking on another "super-soldier-kid" lead (about a boy who runs faster than people can see). The government won't even let the young man live in the old farmhouse -- they pack everything up and force him to live in a high-rise penthouse with a private elevator and no friends. So the isolation continues throughout his entire life, is an aspect of his life, and he has no practical experience with other humans if it is not arranged. So his first real free interactions are seen as negative and frightening and spun that way by the government he seeks to escape.
My own story? I was expecting my first son. I decided to move to where his father lived.
My dad was dead within a week and a half of me leaving the "home base", and my life stopped making sense for a while after that.
I wondered if this was a common thing, or a thing commonly taken advantage of, when you are dealing with children who are government assets or come from a high-security low-income family.
p.s. "Rising Stars" is another good and very weird series about government experiments and control over special kids. They are exposed to a meteor shower or something that makes all the kids in the town who were born in the same year supernaturally gifted.
Also in "Supreme Power", the main character's infant-shuttle releases germs into the earth's atmosphere early in the story, that cause mutations and other "super beings" to arise.
"Super" doesn't meant ultimately invulnerable for everyone in the story. It means simply "above average" in terms of what average humans can do.
Most comics do get ridiculous as the stories progress and get boring.
But these two started well and address things we need to learn.
http://www.empireonline.com/images/uploaded/rising-stars-comic(1).jpg
Also has anyone here seen Heroes? My favorite character in series one was probably the artist who painted the future after he shot up with heroin. lol :(
More: 1983 "American Flagg" #1 (super soldier who hears subliminals via TV)
More: "Captain America" (origins) (super soldier, super loyal to US)
More: Lucifer: the Wolf Beneath the Tree (has a crazy character who sees real visions and can space travel, also the genetically engineered "half angel" Elaine Belloc)
Thank you!
btw I am starting the radio show (it's about an hour and a half?)
Carmody
26th January 2014, 23:59
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armageddon_2001
Published in 1991, and it's follow up:
http://images4.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20080622052111/marvel_dc/images/8/8b/Armageddon_the_Alien_Agenda_1.jpg
"Individual science fiction stories may seem as trivial as ever to the blinder critics and philosophers of today - but the core of science fiction, its essence has become crucial to our salvation if we are to be saved at all."
--Isaac Asimov
Powered by vBulletin™ Version 4.1.1 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.