Friday, July 30, 2010

Dystopia not Utopia


I watched a new NZ TV One series called "This is not my life" last night. It was pretty good. The NZ Herald review called the fictional "Waimoana" neighborhood "dystopia not utopia" and I agree. The 2 hour preview did a great job poking at what a green utopian type of life might be in a near NZ future. It was frightening = a good thriller.

The main character wakes up in a "perfect" world with complete amnesia. His home, family, neighborhood, job and local 24 store are all a "perfect" green dreamland... which he is prevented from leaving. Resistance is futile.

Even near the end, when a boy he has tried to help mysteriously vanishes but is quickly replaced with another boy, ala Stepford, he acknowledges it, yet meagerly wonders why he has accepted it?

Mind control,literally, through some type of computer chip (?) "they" have implanted in his brain... We'll have to keep watching to find out who "they" are...


They did use a cool cell phone gadget called a "PeC" (personal entertainment and communications) device... Its so good "authorities have made it the only mobile communications device available..."
More CONTROL...
That is what the "green" movement is all about: CONTROL.
From one reader's review "...Many greens applaud these "de-developments" but it is worth noting that in planning their "managed communities" (like "Waimoana"...!) where people live above their work site, rarely travel and never truly experience a wilderness... Instead, they are transporting us to a brave new world where freedom is a thing of the past, and the recreational, indeed spiritual, values of the wilderness are no longer available to any but the privileged wealthy green elites. What Milloy has documented then is not just the "green agenda." He has documented a fundamental change in the American left. It is a change from concern, however misguided, about average people, to an open defense of the wealthy elites, and an economy that is designed to perpetuate this stratification in a way capitalism never could. It is a horrific vision and one which, unfortunately is now guiding American domestic policy. "

The environmental movement has cultivated a warm and fuzzy public image, but behind the smiley-face rhetoric of "sustainability" and "conservation" lies a dark agenda. The Greens aim to regulate your behavior, downsize your lifestyle, and invade the most intimate aspects of your personal life.

"...their plans are much more ambitious than you think, says Milloy. What the Greens really seek, with increasing success, is to dictate the very parameters of your daily life--where you can live, what transportation you can use, what you can eat, and even how many children you can have.

Citing the tactics and goals of Green groups as explained by their own activists and leaders, Green Hell demonstrates:
* How Green pressure campaigns threaten the safety of your home and your car, and public health overall
* Why the election of President Obama portends a giant leap forward for coercive Green policies
* Why Greens obstruct the use of all forms of energy--even the renewable sources they tout to the public
* How wealthy Green elites stand to profit fabulously from the restrictions and regulations they seek to impose on the rest of us
* How Green pressure campaigns are hamstringing the military and endangering our national security
* Why big business is not only knuckling under to the Greens, but is aggressively promoting the green agenda to the detriment of its own stockholders
* What you can do to help stop the great Green machine

A one-of-a-kind, comprehensive takedown of the entire environmental movement, Green Hell will open your eyes to a looming threat to our economy, our civil liberties, and the entire American way of life.
No wonder "This is not my life" is so scary: it is a view of what type of future the left envisions... a nightmare we must all FIGHT.

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