1. I was showing a cinematically-ignorant friend Stanley Kubrick trailers on YouTube, we went through 2001, The Shining, Full Metal Jacket, Dr Strangelove, and then to Eyes Wide Shut. I told her, “It’s said Kubrick was killed because of this film, it’s all about Epstein-style orgies and secret cults. I used to think this was bullshit, since he was an old man and could have just died of natural causes, but now, well, who knows.”
With 2001, FMJ, Dr Strangelove, it sufficed to begin entering the film’s title. Usually, YouTube autocompleted, with “trailer” as one of many of options. If not, I could just enter the full name and “tr”. For example:



When it came to Eyes Wide Shut, it was a different story:



How curious. Autocomplete suddenly doesn’t work.
Lastly, I entered “eyes wide shut trailer” and got:

That’s right: zero autocomplete results for “eyes wide shut trailer”.
My friend looked rather perturbed at this point, before I’d even found & shown her the trailer: after she’d seen the trailer she looked even more alarmed. Everything I’d vaguely speculated about Cabal killing Kubrick suddenly seemed not wholly implausible, if YouTube (owned by Google, i.e. Cabal-tech) was discouraging the casual viewer from Eyes Wide Shut.
2. Later I thought – one can use Cabal organs such as the mainstream media, YouTube, Google, Facebook, Twitter, as contrary indicators: if they conspicuously hide a film, it is probably of interest (for its content, if not its form); if they attack someone, he is probably a good man, or at least against their interests.
This is mostly why I have faith in Donald Trump: the vitriol and hatred directed against him by the powers of this world. I briefly wondered if it was a trap, if Cabal were merely propping him up as an apparent bad guy – but that too many people believe the mainstream media: I don’t think it would be worth the support of the 5% of “conspiracy theorists”, to then lose the 30%-or-so who believe whatever CNN tells them to believe.
3. I derived my own sense of “the world” as the domain of evil from experience and observation; this is why I enjoyed this line of Alessandro Baricco’s:
“La guerra l’avete vinta. Questo le sembra un mondo migliore?” – “You won the war. Does this seem a better world to you?”
The world seems to me a sty of iniquity and corruption, amidst which some life implausibly flourishes. When I consider the pattern of good & evil, it is almost always so: the top-down governmental or organisational powers (NGOs, charities, universities, media, celebrities, actors, rockstars) operate on a spectrum between ineptitude & evil; and the good comes to be by chance, in overlooked nooks & crannies.
‘To tell you the truth,’ replied Gandalf, ‘I believe that hitherto… he has entirely overlooked the existence of hobbits…. But your safety has passed. He does not need you — he has many more useful servants — but he won’t forget you again. And hobbits as miserable slaves would please him far more than hobbits happy and free. There is such a thing as malice and revenge.’
Whatever has mainstream acclaim is typically either evil or a piece of indigestible goodness, gnawed within the maw of the wicked & the vile. When academics, journalists, or politicians praise Shakespeare, Mozart, Tolkien, they are chewing viciously on that which was hitherto overlooked; they wish to grind it down, to denigrate and mock it – hence, the ghastly modern productions of Wagner; and, I would imagine, the upcoming CIA Amazon Lord of the Rings show.
But within every system, there must arise a contradiction (perhaps even from the very heart). Hence, the first season of True Detective, or Donald Trump.





