Raising Hell Here on Earth

Most people probably don’t spend much time hung up on eschatological questions. However, if they haven’t already this would be a pretty appropriate juncture. Statistically, it would appear people are concerning themselves with them less than ever in American history and yet there’s also a great deal of pessimism pertaining to the question of whether or not our troubles are terminal.

It strikes me as a bizarre paradox, but then again I’m a “white supremacist, right wing conspiracy theorist, domestic extremist, Christian fundamentalist.” They’re the “normal” ones, whatever that means these days. Still, everybody likes movies, so I’d recommended they watch Hellraiser (I and II, the rest were awful). I thought both were great, but I’m also a connoisseur of 80s movies. There’s also a remake I haven’t bothered watching.

Go to Hell” – Kirsty “We can’t, not alone” – Cenobite

Whether they’re into this genre or not, the purpose of watching is to get them thinking. The premise is that there’s a group of demons who will take you to Hell for unbearable torture if you open this puzzle box to summon them. The demons themselves used to be humans who were warped by their traumatic experiences and now sport the evidence of their own torture. They can’t even remember back when they were healthy dwellers of the Earth.

The underlying theme is that evil doesn’t procreate, it merely warps what is good. Tolkien had a similar theme on the origins of the orcs in The Lord of the Rings. He was an academic expert on Christian theology and Norse culture. It’s long been known that this is the nature of evil and that these identities being marketed to us now as organic are essentially the products of torture.

“But this is what you wanted, what you wanted to see…. It wanted souls, and I brought you.”

The plot was the product of the mind of a homosexual, Clive Barker. Here’s an interesting quote: “Being gay does provide an interesting tension,” Barker says. “Part of me wants to say that I am just a regular guy, but another part of me says that there is a gay sensibility. This isn’t just about acts performed in the bedroom – it alters your point of view, your aesthetic.”

If you’ve ever seen the movie American Psycho, it was also the product a homosexual. It’s based on a novel by Bret Easton Ellis, and it’ll probably be the most disturbing one you ever read. Although the protagonist is a heterosexual who despises a homosexual in his firm, the stuff in there is so extreme it could never be put it in a movie (even today).

A straight man couldn’t come up with a scene like this.

Anyways, back to Hellraiser. I’d challenge anyone to screen the two films mentioned above and then claim that this is not exactly the premise of what they’re doing to the youth of this nation with the tranny stuff. I recently came across a story about how they’re trying to produce babies with trannies. It’s right out of a horror movie:

The Wellcome Trust, a private non-profit openly aligned with the Clinton Foundation and a regular participant in the Clinton Global Initiative, funded a study to determine if a donated cadaver uterus can be surgically transplanted into the body of a biological male.

Maybe you already heard of this, the study was published back in 2018. These people have cooked up a Hell-on-Earth scenario. As far as I know, the first person to openly attempt this was Magnus Hirschfeld who was himself a homosexual. Hitler took great issue with that and other aspects of his background, but what inspired action was the children-into-trannies thing. It’s outright evil.

This evil goes back thousands of years, to the point one can pretty reliably document that these creatures are harbingers of doom. That’s the next thing on the timeline for much of the population after they pop up. They’re fundamentally Satanic and one doesn’t need to read the Bible to figure that out. After one does, it’s going to be a very enlightening source of information on these matters. Right and wrong are crystal clear these days. I suppose that’s the bright side of things.

Should one survive, my suspicion is that “tumultuous” will be the adjective for what’s coming, while “we should’ve seen it coming” will be the apt phrase to describe our current miasma. Or, maybe I’ll end up retiring to a golf course after all. We can’t see the future, so have a wonderful day and enjoy a cold Bud Light.

Pretty dark, maybe don’t watch.

3 comments

  1. LOL holy crap @ the American Psycho business card scene, I’d totally forgotten about that and legit lol’d watching it. But the main character is definitely a dweeb/nerd, not Le Alpha Male some people like to portray him as– “yeah man I’m basically like Patrick Bateman” younger guys will sometimes say. This is a culture wherein people are *very* confused about what is actually masculine– like people think yelling loudly at people is masculine, when its usually not

    1. You’re quite right about the gender confusion. Stonewall Jackson never swore at his men, but inspired unearthly efforts by his example. Erwin Rommel prescribed the same.

      “Be an example to your men in your duty and in private life. Never spare yourself, and let the troops see that you don’t in your endurance of fatigue and privation. Always be tactful and well-mannered, and teach your subordinates to be the same. Avoid excessive sharpness or harshness of voice, which usually indicates the man who has shortcomings of his own to hide.”

      Erwin Rommel

  2. I must say Sir, I’m no fan of Horror movies.
    But I met some of the family members of this Family in the made for TV movie “in broad daylight” starring Brian Dennehey, one of my favorite actors, they say he’s from Connecticut but we can’t all be perfect. Anyway, I saw the video the family gave me taped on the TV debut in 91 or so, I just watched it on you tube again to see if it was the original one that I saw, and sure enough they edited my favorite part, right before Dennehey told this WW2 veteran he would slit him from crotch to crown, he went on a tirade on what they dId to the German Girls after Germany was defeated. I need to watch the original one again and make sure.
    That scene has stuck in my head pretty good like the, Tom Petty looking Confederate in John Wayne’s “the cowboys” when the Confederate says that they will call me Sir when I go home.
    The family I know of cannot go back to Missouri for fear of their lives, they also told me the movie really made their family out to be really bad.

    I don’t mean to stir up anything for those portrayed in the movie, just rest assured. The family member I know is a Christian Zionist waiting for God to turn the earth into a big Charcoal ball.

    God Bless the Southland.

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