View Full Version : The Hunger Games" - Satanic Ritual for Teens
Serpo
2nd January 2012, 12:28 PM
December 31, 2011
The indoctrination of our children continues with a sadistic trilogy in which teens are tortured and killed in rituals like those used by the Illuminati to trauma brainwash their own children.
The Illuminati media is the Church of Satan. We are the congregation, unconscious of this relentless, sinister assault on our psyches.
by Pamela Lanides
(henrymakow.com)
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins is a trilogy of books which has received glowing reviews in the Illuminati media. They are seen as successor to the Harry Potter series and more popular even than the Twilight series.
As of February 11, 2010, The Hunger Games trilogy has sold 800,000 copies in the US. Hunger Games was followed by Catching Fire, in Sept. 2009 and Mockingjay, in August 2010.
Rights have been sold in 38 territories and there are over 2.9 million copies in print. It was on The New York Times list for over 100 consecutive weeks as of September 2010. The first movie is due out in March.
Some schools have included these books as mandatory reading for their English classes, ignoring the many fragmented and run-on sentences which the publisher, Scholastic, has ignored.
Mothers have reported their daughters having nightmares after reading the series. The books are more gruesome and grisly than some of the more violent video games that are out there.
The story centers on Katniss Everdeen, 16, whose mother fell into a deep depression upon the death of her father in a coal mining accident. Her family lives in "District 12," one of 13 districts around the Capitol in a post-apocalyptic United States. Most of the District 12 residents live in abject poverty. Katniss must illegally hunt in the woods to feed her mother, younger sister and herself.
PRE HISTORY
In the pre-history of the story, District 13 had rebelled against the Capitol's slavery-inducing, consumer-driven production fields and was literally bombed out of existence for their insurgency.
As a result, the Capitol, under President Snow, demands a reaping, a sacrifice of two children, between the ages 12-18, from each district every year.
In supreme sadistic irony, the children are forced to dress in their very best clothing for the reaping. Those who try to earn extra grain and oil for their families offer their names in the "Hunger Games."
(left. author Collins, generational satanist?)
Against all odds, the twelve year old sister of Katniss is chosen. Katniss immediately offers herself in her sister's place.
Twenty-four children are brought to the Capitol and fed the richest foods, pampered, and put on display. Each district is forced to watch the games on television.
Without her knowledge, Katniss is secretly chosen to be the face of the rebellion of the districts against the capitol.
What follows are the Hunger Games themselves. They are held in an arena from which there is no escape. The most sadistic forms of torture imaginable are used against the children in the games. There can be only one victor. The children must kill each other. One girl is only twelve years old. If they refuse to kill each other, the Gamekeeper devises torturous ways in which they are forced to kill each other off.
Some of the children must initially murder each other in a 'bloodbath' in order to secure necessities from the cornucopia. They face hunger, starvation, sleep deprivation, poisonous gases, acid rains, blood rains, killing waves, mutant creatures who maul them to death, killing traps, insects that drive them madly insane if they are not outright poisoned to death by them.
By the final book, some of the children are tortured by government officials for months on end. Mind-bending, memory forging brainwashing is included. The formerly innocent children are turned into killers.They must kill or be killed.
The victors are paraded through-out the districts. Parents of murdered children must salute the victors, the murderers of their children. The victor's families are moved into nice houses and are wealthy for the remainder of their lives. The families of the murdered children receive nothing. Sound familiar?
In the last book, Katniss discovers that under-age children have been sold into prostitution by the President.
Book after book in the trilogy, the torture, the killing, the deception and the sadistic glory continue not only for those who have been captured by the Capitol, but also in the additional Hunger Games that has been declared.
All the former victors must participate. In the end, Katniss and the rebels win victory against Snow, but it does not protect her little sister, who has been purposefully targeted by yet another enemy and burned alive in front of her eyes.
Scholastic Inc. is the world's largest publisher and distributor of children's books.
http://www.henrymakow.com/hunger_games.html
Ponce
2nd January 2012, 12:36 PM
And like I keep saying......."Someday sex with minors will be a normal thing, just smoking marijuana, getting drunk, being a homo and so on".........welcome to a new world.
Mouse
2nd January 2012, 01:41 PM
For someone who is so disgusted by these books he sure writes a detailed book report. I guess he has read them all. I still have to read the last one in order to complete my illuminati transformation into a non-human murdering satanist. Stay tuned.
Serpo
2nd January 2012, 01:57 PM
For someone who is so disgusted by these books he sure writes a detailed book report. I guess he has read them all. I still have to read the last one in order to complete my illuminati transformation into a non-human murdering satanist. Stay tuned.
by Pamela Lanides
Younger people are more impressionable........
MAGNES
2nd January 2012, 02:02 PM
First I heard of this one, I am not surprised, I have often spoke
of my bookstore experience, kaballah, withcraft, black magic, tarrot
cards, astrology, a whole big row of this stuff and some spooky
teen series, all false teachings and garbage and rooted in the Occult.
GSUS/gim itself has some blatant Occult posters, they war on History, troll it,
and troll my posts and threads, constantly attacking Christians,Western Leaders.
There are some real gems on here by a handful of people, especially recently.
This is what you get.
Turn your back on Western History that matters, and Christian.
A lot of what is happening today would of been unthinkable in the
very near past, you don't have to go that far back, how far down
are we going to go ?
Serpo
2nd January 2012, 02:16 PM
Some conservative Christians do not differentiate among the Occult, Satanism, Wicca, other Neopagan religions. Many seem to regard all as forms of Satanism who perform horrendous criminal acts on children. Others view The New Age, Neopagan religions, Tarot card reading, rune readings, channeling, work with crystal energy, etc. as merely recruiting programs for Satanism. In fact, the Occult, Satanism, Neo-pagan religions are very different phenomena, and essentially unrelated. Dr. Carl Raschke, professor of Religious Studies at the University of Denver describes New Age practices as the spiritual version of AIDS; it destroys the ability of people to cope and function." He describes it as "essentially, the marketing end of the political packaging of occultism...a breeding ground for a new American form of fascism."..........
New Age beliefs:
A number of fundamental beliefs are held by many -- but not all -- New Age followers; individuals are encouraged to "shop" for the beliefs and practices that they feel most comfortable with: Monism: All that exists is derived from a single source of divine energy.
Pantheism: All that exists is God; God is all that exists. This leads naturally to the concept of the divinity of the individual, that we are all Gods. They do not seek God as revealed in a sacred text or as exists in a remote heaven; they seek God within the self and throughout the entire universe.
Panentheism: God is all that exists. God is at once the entire universe, and transcends the universe as well.
Reincarnation: After death, we are reborn and live another life as a human. This cycle repeats itself many times. This belief is similar to the concept of transmigration of the soul in Hinduism.
Karma: The good and bad deeds that we do adds and subtracts from our accumulated record, our karma. At the end of our life, we are rewarded or punished according to our karma by being reincarnated into either a painful or good new life. This belief is linked to that of reincarnation and is also derived from Hinduism
An Aura is believed to be an energy field radiated by the body. Invisible to most people, it can be detected by some as a shimmering, multi-colored field surrounding the body. Those skilled in detecting and interpreting auras can diagnose an individual's state of mind, and their spiritual and physical health.
Personal Transformation A profoundly intense mystical experience will lead to the acceptance and use of New Age beliefs and practices. Guided imagery, hypnosis, meditation, and (sometimes) the use of hallucinogenic drugs are useful to bring about and enhance this transformation. Believers hope to develop new potentials within themselves: the ability to heal oneself and others, psychic powers, a new understanding of the workings of the universe, etc. Later, when sufficient numbers of people have achieved these powers, a major spiritual, physical, psychological and cultural planet-wide transformation is expected.
Ecological Responsibility: A belief in the importance of uniting to preserve the health of the earth, which is often looked upon as Gaia, (Mother Earth) a living entity.
Universal Religion: Since all is God, then only one reality exists, and all religions are simply different paths to that ultimate reality. The universal religion can be visualized as a mountain, with many sadhanas (spiritual paths) to the summit. Some are hard; others easy. There is no one correct path. All paths eventually reach the top. They anticipate that a new universal religion which contains elements of all current faiths will evolve and become generally accepted worldwide.
http://www.religioustolerance.org/newage.htm
muffin
2nd January 2012, 02:40 PM
Jeez, you could have used spoiler tags for those of us reading it.
I think it's definitely sadistic. And it's given new material for my dreams.
Just wondering, what kind of impression is the author of the original article thinking that the books are puting on the young adults?
I'm not endorsing or rejecting the books just yet. I'm pretty indifferent to them. Just a good read for now.
vacuum
2nd January 2012, 03:04 PM
How is this popular?
muffin
2nd January 2012, 03:23 PM
How is this popular?
Not sure. But I don't even understand the fascination with the Twilight series or even Harry Potter either.
My sister INSISTED I read the Hunger Games trilogy. And it's hard enough to get her to read, so, to appease her, I decided to read them. But then about halfway through the first one, I realized how eerily familiar it was. At that point, I just had to finish them. I kept talking about it to Mouse and it finally piqued his interest. I think, for us, it's more a morbid fascination with the brutality. It's pretty gorey....
But who am I to accuse it of being satanic? My favorite author is Stephen King and he's pretty f***ed up!
Old Herb Lady
2nd January 2012, 04:12 PM
you don't have to go that far back, how far down are we going to go ?
To the bottom , we're in fast forward to the bottom.
Gaillo
2nd January 2012, 04:19 PM
To the bottom , we're in fast forward to the bottom.
Based on what I'm seeing lately, we've already hit rock bottom... and started digging! :o
Gaillo
2nd January 2012, 04:51 PM
I was just over on Amazon.com to check status of an order, and clicked on the "100 top-selling books" link to see if these "hunger" books have made the list. I was (kind of) shocked to see that ALL 3 of the books were in the top 100, in positions #2, #3, and #4. Quite a showing, especially considering that I've NEVER heard of these books until this thread! Actually, not surprising at all now that I think about it... I've always been a bit "out of touch" with popular crap culture... hell, I didn't even know what Harry Potter was until the last book in the series came out! ;D
madfranks
2nd January 2012, 06:14 PM
You know, I have to dissent on this thread. Fiction is fiction. While the OP didn't necessarily mention whether it was high school or other grades having to read these books, fiction is a great way to explore the thoughts & motivations of others. Consider 1984: this book opened many of our eyes to the tactics and methods of totalitarian governments (doublespeak, control of the media, controlled opposition, etc), yet none of us would fault George Orwell for writing a piece of fiction that in his day was radically outside the mainstream. I haven't read the Hunger Games, but I am discerning enough to know the difference between a well written fiction piece and reality. I am raising my children to be the same, and in the meantime if an author writes an extreme work which causes one to think, I personally have no problem letting them read it, or reading it myself.
muffin
2nd January 2012, 06:43 PM
You know, I have to dissent on this thread. Fiction is fiction. While the OP didn't necessarily mention whether it was high school or other grades having to read these books, fiction is a great way to explore the thoughts & motivations of others. Consider 1984: this book opened many of our eyes to the tactics and methods of totalitarian governments (doublespeak, control of the media, controlled opposition, etc), yet none of us would fault George Orwell for writing a piece of fiction that in his day was radically outside the mainstream. I haven't read the Hunger Games, but I am discerning enough to know the difference between a well written fiction piece and reality. I am raising my children to be the same, and in the meantime if an author writes an extreme work which causes one to think, I personally have no problem letting them read it, or reading it myself.
That's EXACTLY how I feel about it. It really isn't great literature but it does make you think. And the series is very much in line with 1984, IMO. Just not so drab. More gore than anything.
Tumbleweed
2nd January 2012, 07:23 PM
This thread is the first I've heard of these books so all I know is what I've read here. The illuminatti are pedophiles, they rape, torture and murder children. These books sound like something the illuminatti would get off on. Read Cathy O'Brians books on what they did to her and her daughter. Ted Gunderson investigated satanists who were sacrificing children. A lot of sick shit was done to children that was covered up in the Franklin cover up. I don't know where I read it but the illuminatti would play "the most dangerous game' with children where they hunted them and when they found them they would rape, torture or murder them. Cathy O'Brien was hunted by them in this way. The people who do this are sick bastards and I'm wondering if these books are a "fictional" version of what they actually do. These books sound sick to me.
Old Herb Lady
2nd January 2012, 07:27 PM
This thread is the first I've heard of these books so all I know is what I've read here. The illuminatti are pedophiles, they rape, torture and murder children. These books sound like something the illuminatti would get off on. Read Cathy O'Brians books on what they did to her and her daughter. Ted Gunderson investigated satanists who were sacrificing children. A lot of sick shit was done to children that was covered up in the Franklin cover up. I don't know where I read it but the illuminatti would play "the most dangerous game' with children where they hunted them and when they found them they would rape, torture or murder them. Cathy O'Brien was hunted by them in this way. The people who do this are sick bastards and I'm wondering if these books are a "fictional" version of what they actually do. These books sound sick to me.
Exactly how I see it !
Serpo
2nd January 2012, 08:27 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZccxuKjXApA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZccxuKjXApA
muffin
3rd January 2012, 07:13 AM
Books 1 and 2 are about the horrors of totalitarian (Capital) and socialist (13) government and in book 3 she also emphasizes the hardships that come with the revolution in that no one is ever safe in that type of war whether it be from the murdering of children or her multiple examples of PTSD. She also gets some jabs in about the way Americans are complacent and as long as they are fed and entertained they don't care if the government around them controls their lives or if it falls to pieces.
Underlying messages...
Awoke
10th January 2012, 05:13 AM
by Pamela Lanides
Younger people are more impressionable........
My 8 year old nephew and my 13 year old nephew are reading this series right now.
Thanks for the OP.
Awoke
10th January 2012, 05:23 AM
You know, I have to dissent on this thread. Fiction is fiction. While the OP didn't necessarily mention whether it was high school or other grades having to read these books, fiction is a great way to explore the thoughts & motivations of others. Consider 1984: this book opened many of our eyes to the tactics and methods of totalitarian governments (doublespeak, control of the media, controlled opposition, etc), yet none of us would fault George Orwell for writing a piece of fiction that in his day was radically outside the mainstream. I haven't read the Hunger Games, but I am discerning enough to know the difference between a well written fiction piece and reality. I am raising my children to be the same, and in the meantime if an author writes an extreme work which causes one to think, I personally have no problem letting them read it, or reading it myself.
MadFranks,
Orwell spoke multiple times at Fabian Society meetings and he has worked with the Fabian Research Bureau as well. You don't get those connections to the Fabian Society unless you're on their team.
Orwell did not write and release anything he was not meant to release. All his books served the specific purpose of planting the seeds of submission in the generation before mine. His books were MANDATORY READING in all highschools in our province, and AFAIK across the Continent.
Now this article in the OP states that this new series of books is being made compulsory reading for our children, and so the cycle repeats.
Where Orwell prepared us subliminally for accepting the NWO police state, now this series will prepare the next couple generations for government regulated starvation and torture games/satanic ritual sacrifice.
Book
10th January 2012, 08:44 AM
The illuminatti are pedophiles...
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_e3rhEktRLkE/Sh8Ykb-sCBI/AAAAAAAADJc/fmQsLs1vPNA/s400/stclementottawa.jpg
Loominaughty is a rather broad term.
http://www.cod1.co.uk/forum/images/smilies/s6/ScratchHead.gif something kinda creepy about The Church also...
nunaem
10th January 2012, 09:42 AM
It sounds like it's based on/stolen from Battle Royale.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-T7yPJVvXw
lapis
8th March 2012, 01:16 AM
I have to admit that I got sucked into reading this book by my daughter, who hasn't been this excited to read anything else.
I was reading it aloud to her every night because some of the vocabulary is hard for her, but then she took it upon herself to read the last couple of chapters by herself. I hope this will stimulate more independent reading on her part.
Check out this review from LewRockwell.com:
What if You Read The Hunger Games? (http://lewrockwell.com/orig11/spherical2.1.1.html)
What if more people thought that total strangers murdering each other by the thousands or millions represented humanity at its worst? What if in this age of perpetual wars, more people were repulsed by the very idea of war? What if a book could do this?
What if you read a book review that didn't reveal an annoying amount about the story or its characters? What if a fiercely anti-political, anti-war novel was resonating with people young and old? What if the power of a story gave you hope that more people will embrace peace and freedom? What if I told you this story exists right now, and it's called The Hunger Games (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0545265355?ie=UTF8&tag=lewrockwell&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&creativeASIN=0545265355), a trilogy of books by Suzanne Collins?
What if The Hunger Games was so compatible with the principles of individual liberty, and such a page turner, that the author of this review (who doesn't write book reviews), felt compelled to tell others about it? What if it was set in a dystopian North America now called Panem (Latin for "bread")? What if Panem had a kind of "circus", brutal and horrifying, designed to keep the masses in fear of its rulers? What if a young woman decided to defy a seemingly omnipotent state?
What if The Hunger Games portrayed politicians as vicious predators willing to sacrifice people on a whim to maintain their grip over others? What if the villains in the story personified Orwell's insight that "political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable"? What if those who foment war, market war, profit from war, even extol war, won't stop orchestrating mass murder...until the masses withdraw their consent?
What if Stephen King's endorsement, "Constant suspense...I couldn't stop reading" was not marketing hype, but true? What if the story appealed to readers of all ages, not just the young adult audience it's marketed to? What if sons and daughters and mothers and fathers were equally compelled to keep reading "just one more page"? What if it was a perfect gift for home schoolers and public school sufferers? What if a powerful story can sometimes be the best teacher?
What if spreading awareness of The Hunger Games stirred countless souls to revile war and political aggression? What if you could simultaneously enjoy hours of entertainment, reward an author that made the message of peace and freedom come alive, and support the #1 libertarian web site (http://www.lewrockwell.com/) in the world? What if the entire trilogy on Kindle cost less than a movie ticket and popcorn? What if the hardcover edition (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0545265355?ie=UTF8&tag=lewrockwell&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&creativeASIN=0545265355) was an ideal gift for friends and family?
What if enough people said "no more" to war for it to become reality? What if you helped those people find their voice? When is now a good time?
March 5, 2012
PatColo
8th March 2012, 02:42 AM
The people who do this are sick bastards and I'm wondering if these books are a "fictional" version of what they actually do. These books sound sick to me.
Remember Scooter Libby (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scooter_Libby) (real name Lieberman)? The ZSM (http://mondoweiss.net/2008/02/do-jews-dominat.html) didn't widely publicize it but he'd authored a sick "fiction" book, which to those familiar with this junk, knew right away it wasn't fiction, but a tell-all where the real PTB characters who were "fictionalized", could be outed if Libby were put in some kind of jeopardy for his career criminality.
I'd have to search around for the details, above is just a general synopsis from memory. Here's a watered down summary from ziopedia,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scooter_Libby#The_Apprentice
The Apprentice
Main article: The Apprentice (Libby novel) (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Apprentice_%28Libby_novel%29)
Libby's only novel, The Apprentice, about a group of travelers stranded in northern Japan (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan) in the winter of 1903 during a smallpox (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smallpox) epidemic, was first published in a hardback (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardback) edition, by Graywolf Press (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graywolf_Press), in St. Paul, Minnesota (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Paul,_Minnesota), in 1996 and reprinted as a trade paperback (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trade_paperback), by St. Martin's Thomas Dunne Books (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Martin%27s_Press), in 2002. After Libby's indictment in the CIA leak grand jury investigation (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIA_leak_grand_jury_investigation), in 2005, St. Martin's Press reissued The Apprentice as a mass market paperback (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_market_paperback) (Griffin imprint).[43] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scooter_Libby#cite_note-Apprentice-42)[44] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scooter_Libby#cite_note-Borger-43)[45] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scooter_Libby#cite_note-USAToday-44) It has been described as "a thriller... that includes references to bestiality (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoophilia), pedophilia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedophilia) and rape (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rape)."[45] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scooter_Libby#cite_note-USAToday-44)
Libertytree
23rd March 2012, 01:25 PM
I'm a late comer to this discussion but I think it might be pertinent? If TPTB are really supposed to tell us in advance of their future plans then maybe this is a heads up? I've often thought that the US would be carved up in order to be better controlled but it's just my thinking from awhile back. I got curious about the Hunger Game thing and started doing a lil research and found this synopsis from another forum and it made me think.
"i read the hunger game series of books a few months ago, my wife picked them up when they came out and read them and suggested them to me as well. pretty good series. i think the stories were written as a metaphor to describe the USA within the world.
the story takes place in some distant (not so distant?) future where there was a violent civil war in the united states. the 'winner' was the capital, and is located roughly in the colorado/rocky mountain area. the capital broke the rest of the USA up into districts and fenced them in. the capital trains 'peacekeepers' which are basically a dictatorial military force to keep order in the districts, and to keep them subservient to the capital. each district is required to specialize to produce something the capital needs/consumes, such as seafood, clothing, grain, etc. travel is not permitted between the districts, the only tv broadcasts are from the capital, and everything is very tightly controlled.
as a reminder to the districts not to rebel, the capital implements the 'hunger games'. each year, there is a lottery in each district in which all children between the ages of like 10-18 put their names in a basket and two names are drawn. these two children are sent to the capital to compete in a fight to the death tournament in which the winner is given immunity from future hunger games, a nice home to live in, an allowance, etc.
people who live in the capital are mostly completely ignorant to what goes on in the world around them. the capital government keeps them well fed at the expense of the districts, entertained, and safe from the outside. the similarities between the capital in the story and the USA and where it could go are pretty staggering. the phrase 'panem et circenses' is put to good use there, just like it is now."
Then in the course of things I happened across this. 2506 2504 Sorry, I don't know how to enlarge but the arrow is pointing to a pin RP is wearing, it's called a Mockingjay and is symbolic in the the Hunger Games trilogy and it stands for "rebellion". Here's a pic of it 2507 2505.
Maybe the HG's are a valuable wake up tool and not some satanic messaging. I like the Mockingjay myself and view it as an FU to TPTB.
StreetsOfGold
23rd March 2012, 01:53 PM
More occult and satanic crap. To think anyone could justify reading this slop... and to their Children, no less? What kind of parent are you?
Philippians 4:8 Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.
Romans 12:2 And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.
JDRock
23rd March 2012, 04:52 PM
scholastic publishing; owned by arthur levine....theres a sheenie under every rock i swear ......
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.0 Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.