Sound of Freedom

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
Because they are the villains.




Funny thing about villains. They don't know they're villains. They think they're the heroes, and everyone else just has the wrong impression, or are evil themselves.
Years ago, and it is probably findable on the Web - I read an article where Pol Pot stated he was just hugely misunderstood - that history would exonerate him and remember him as a great man. Nero's last words - as he failed to commit suicide and needed his secretary to help him - "How great an ARTIST dies in me!".

And yeah, I know THANOS is fictional - but he exhibits this same thing - I'm doing a good thing! The universe is overpopulated, and will be much better when half the universe is gone.

What we don't have - is Bond-like, Harry Potter type villains - who delight in evil, who enjoy torture and twirl their mustaches with glee at human suffering. Most bad guys believe in their goodness. Heck, I thinik it was Goebbels who said - of Hitler - "really the Messiah, or only John?".
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member

Former Pedophile Advocacy Group Spokesman Writes Bloomberg Hit Piece On ‘Sound Of Freedom’


Noah Berlatsky served in 2021 as communications director for Prostasia, a group that calls itself “a new kind of child protection organization,” but works to remove the stigma surrounding “MAPs” or “minor-attracted people.”

On Saturday, Bloomberg published an opinion article authored by Berlatsky, titled “QAnon and ‘Sound of Freedom’ Both Rely on Tired Hollywood Tropes.” The article was reprinted by The Washington Post.

In the article, Berlatsky, who is also a former NBC contributor, bashed “Sound of Freedom,” which has been hailed by conservatives since it premiered last month. The film is about a federal agent who saves a sister and brother from child trafficking and is based on a true story. The movie stars Jim Caviezel and was produced by the same studio that made the faith-based series “The Chosen.”
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member

Child-Trafficking Bust Proves the Left Was Wrong About ‘Sound of Freedom’



While 126 more suspects in child trafficking and child sexual exploitation are eating prison food today, many legacy media outlets are eating crow.

Less than a month after liberal and left-wing media outlets slammed the child sex-trafficking docudrama “Sound of Freedom” for supposedly being a rallying point for “QAnon supporters,” conspiracy theorists, and “Dads with Brainworms,” the FBI announced the arrests of 126 suspects in a massive child-trafficking investigation.

The FBI, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, and state and local law enforcement agencies collaborated in “Operation Cross Country XIII,” resulting in the rescue of “59 actively missing children,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a prepared statement on Aug. 1.

Given the increased prominence of child sex trafficking and exploitation over the past two decades in the United States, a rational individual would think that NPR (which receives government funding and passes itself off as an “independent and unbiased” news source) would mention the 22 times it had covered child sex-trafficking arrests in the past decade, but that’s not the case.
 

glhs837

Power with Control

Child-Trafficking Bust Proves the Left Was Wrong About ‘Sound of Freedom’



While 126 more suspects in child trafficking and child sexual exploitation are eating prison food today, many legacy media outlets are eating crow.

Less than a month after liberal and left-wing media outlets slammed the child sex-trafficking docudrama “Sound of Freedom” for supposedly being a rallying point for “QAnon supporters,” conspiracy theorists, and “Dads with Brainworms,” the FBI announced the arrests of 126 suspects in a massive child-trafficking investigation.

The FBI, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, and state and local law enforcement agencies collaborated in “Operation Cross Country XIII,” resulting in the rescue of “59 actively missing children,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a prepared statement on Aug. 1.

Given the increased prominence of child sex trafficking and exploitation over the past two decades in the United States, a rational individual would think that NPR (which receives government funding and passes itself off as an “independent and unbiased” news source) would mention the 22 times it had covered child sex-trafficking arrests in the past decade, but that’s not the case.
The fact that there have been thirteen of these says a lot.
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
The left-wing media called it a conspiracy flick

The reception was not entirely positive, however, as the left-wing media regularly tied the film to the Q-Anon movement. The Guardian ran an article entitled "Sound of Freedom: the QAnon-adjacent thriller seducing America."

NPR ran a headline stating "QAnon supporters are promoting 'Sound of Freedom.' Here's why." That article took aim at Caviezel, whom the author said "spout QAnon falsehoods."

Vox described the film as merely the latest in a string of motion pictures "tinged with hallmarks of the modern right-wing worldview: moral panic, hints of vast leftist conspiracies, and a sense of persecution." It also parroted the accusation that "Sound of Freedom" pushes "QAnon-adjacent rhetoric."

Child trafficking busts are on the rise

The FBI's website acknowledges the pervasive nature of human trafficking in the country, stating that "[h]ere in the United States, both U.S. residents and foreign nationals are being bought and sold like modern-day slaves."

"Traffickers use violence, manipulation, or false promises of well-paying jobs or romantic relationships to exploit victims. Victims are forced to work as prostitutes or to take jobs as migrant, domestic, restaurant, or factory workers with little or no pay. Human trafficking is a heinous crime that exploits the most vulnerable in society," it continues.




 

somdwatch

Well-Known Member
While reading over many of the forum posts a thought came to mind.

This is really a battle of Good vs Evil and really points to the lack of a Christian moral compass being ingrained or understood on the participants of the one's espousing the evil deeds.
 

glhs837

Power with Control
The left-wing media called it a conspiracy flick

The reception was not entirely positive, however, as the left-wing media regularly tied the film to the Q-Anon movement. The Guardian ran an article entitled "Sound of Freedom: the QAnon-adjacent thriller seducing America."

NPR ran a headline stating "QAnon supporters are promoting 'Sound of Freedom.' Here's why." That article took aim at Caviezel, whom the author said "spout QAnon falsehoods."

Vox described the film as merely the latest in a string of motion pictures "tinged with hallmarks of the modern right-wing worldview: moral panic, hints of vast leftist conspiracies, and a sense of persecution." It also parroted the accusation that "Sound of Freedom" pushes "QAnon-adjacent rhetoric."

Child trafficking busts are on the rise

The FBI's website acknowledges the pervasive nature of human trafficking in the country, stating that "[h]ere in the United States, both U.S. residents and foreign nationals are being bought and sold like modern-day slaves."

"Traffickers use violence, manipulation, or false promises of well-paying jobs or romantic relationships to exploit victims. Victims are forced to work as prostitutes or to take jobs as migrant, domestic, restaurant, or factory workers with little or no pay. Human trafficking is a heinous crime that exploits the most vulnerable in society," it continues.





Wait, being bought and sold makes them not "like" modern day slaves, it in fact makes them slaves. Not modern day, but slaves.
 

glhs837

Power with Control

Ah, the Aussies are just as stupid about what to do with pedos as we are. Toss'em to the sharks in the reef and they will at least have contributed something to the planet with their death.

Those convicted are set to serve approximately 15 years in the Australian Capital Territory and five years in New South Wales.
 

PJay

Well-Known Member

Liberals Fear Monger Americans Into Not Seeing 'Sound of Freedom,' New Movie Exposing Child Trafficking



CNN host Abby Phillip had Mike Rothschild on so that he can fear monger Americans into not seeing the movie, which he claims is created out of a "moral panic" and "QAnon concepts."

Rothschild accused Jim Caviezel— the story's protagonist depicting DHS agent Tim Ballard— of embracing Q Anon theories. Specifically, a version that maintains the idea that elites drink the blood of children to imbibe the alleged chemical "adrenochrome."

"He's openly using its catchphrases and its concepts. He's speaking at Q Anon conventions. And this film is being marketed to either specific Q Anon believers or people who believe all of the same tenets as Q Anon but claim they don't know what it is," Rothschild said.

Rothschild accused the movie— based on true events— of being created out of "bogus statistics" and fear.

or suicide...


 

LightRoasted

If I may ...
For your consideration ...

or suicide...





Deception. He's already out of the country. Don't know why people, (not you), think these people, that are watched and heavily protected 24/7, are just like us. This is a classic psyop to change perceptions. Because as we all know, to most people, perception is reality.
 

PJay

Well-Known Member
For your consideration ...




Deception. He's already out of the country. Don't know why people, (not you), think these people, that are watched and heavily protected 24/7, are just like us. This is a classic psyop to change perceptions. Because as we all know, to most people, perception is reality.
Hoping medical examiner's report comes soon..
 

gemma_rae

Well-Known Member
The Washington Post not surprisingly did a piece that slightly trashes it on the basis of QAnon conspiracy theories. Frankly, I don't see a huge jump from the fact that children around the world for sex trafficking is a REAL thing, but somehow the idea of ripping them open, harvesting their blood and organs for profit after they've outlived their usefulness - THAT we're supposed to believe is too absurd to be true.

It bears noting that the Washington Post praised "Cuties".
Ahem
 
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