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Matrix - an allegory of our world?

Posted: Fri Jun 27, 2025 5:33 am
by InuYasha
The Matrix (1999) - an allegory of our world?

If you remember the famous film by the Wachowski sisters, you get the impression that it was a reflection of our reality, which has been imposed on us for over 80 years.

In this film, most people live in the "Matrix" - a computer simulation created by machines, which is designed to depict a world similar to our own.

99% of the population is in a coma, in the "fields", connected to the matrix and used as batteries.

The few people who have realized what is happening are trying to leave the simulation, and these are sought by representatives of the resistance, led by Morpheus. Inside this world, he is a "dangerous terrorist", but in reality, quite the opposite.

The remnants of the survivors live deep underground, in a city called Zion, and they are hunted by machines, high-tech de facto intelligent beings that destroy people.

It seems to me that this is a very relevant allegory of our world. The Matrix is ​​an image created by Western media, politicians, historians, writers and public figures, which most people believe in as the real world. In it, Hitler is a bloody dictator who killed tens of millions of people, the enslavement of the peoples of Europe is "democracy", voluntary love is a "crime", and the mass murder of innocent people is "self-defense".

This "Matrix" is controlled, of course, not by robots, but by the Zionist elites who stand behind the government of most countries in this unjust world. A significant part of the population is connected to it, only not through capsules and tubes entering the head, but through the Internet, television and news.

Despite the fact that the city of survivors is called Zion, its fate is more reminiscent of the inhabitants of Palestine or Ukraine, who found themselves trapped and in a state of endless war with a technologically superior enemy.

The enlightened are revisionists who have had a vague suspicion all their lives that something is wrong with this world, and suddenly realized what it is. Escaping the matrix is ​​escaping illusions.

And the red or blue pill is a choice between historical and political truth and the generally accepted correct narrative.

Morpheus is the personification of the leaders of countries who have led the resistance to such global, widespread injustice.

The question arises: who is the Chosen One? Will he appear to confront (((machines))) and the system on equal terms?

Re: Matrix - an allegory of our world?

Posted: Fri Jun 27, 2025 12:26 pm
by HansHill
There are two answers - the Religious answer that The Chosen One will be Christ, and a secular answer. The former obviously is not very satisfactory for a discussion like this, so lets focus on the latter.

The Chosen One as you say, will be required to hold such a skillset that seems almost impossible by today's standards. He will need to be a statesman in the vein of old, by which I mean a Frederick The Great or a Bismarck. We don't seem to have great statesmen anymore. Even within one generation, the drop off in quality from Rumsfeld to Hegseth is shocking, as just one prominent example.

The Chosen One will need to have the utmost mastery of digital media, elevating the importance of propaganda from the levels of understanding of Goebels & co into the stratosphere. He will, in effect, need to be a 1-man-PR-show. Debating skills, relentless perseverance, ability to shape public opninion and mobilise a movement.

There are many other qualities needed like rhetoric, oration, high IQ, even good looks. The lack of any one of these characteristics can be compensated by exceptional (even by his standards) performance in other areas.

In brief - a polymath. A polymath the likes of which have been very rare in history. A Frederick the Great meets Bismarck meets John F. Kennedy meets Steve Jobs meets Ghandi meets Henry Ford meets PT Barnum meets Benjamin Franklin etc etc etc.

If this feels too unrealistic, then I have made my point well ;) a nascent movement like Revisionism (or rather in a broader context, White Identity Politics, or White Nationalism) meets its death when it sits around waiting for a perfect leader to appear and do everything. Rather my view, is that the work of "minor" figures and us peasants alike, is to create a fertile environment where these ideas are not immediately poisoned, and have capacity to grow and evolve. The best arguments needs to be put out there, become visible, and defended honestly and rigorously. Cucking out to "false prophets" and grifters we see emerging all the time on the dissident Right Wing (Donald Trump? Nick Fuentes? Tucker Carlson?) should be cautioned at all avenues.

Re: Matrix - an allegory of our world?

Posted: Sat Jun 28, 2025 12:41 am
by Stubble
In your allegory, neo is 'everyman' I would assume.

Otherwise this hyperbole falls flat, as there is no 'savior'.
No one is coming to save you, expect to self rescue
Comes to mind.

'The Joy of Satan' organization (left hand path 'occultists') have a video called 'Exit the Jewtrix' where 'Cobra Commander' teaches the world about 'spiritual warfare' against the jew and 'metaphysics'. I say this unironically, as this is an actual video that was actually made by actual people who I assume actually believe it. Anyhow, they actually, really, legitimately think we are in the 'jew matrix'. They have an entire pseudoreligious structure based on a Hollywood film from the late 90's. Talk about niche.

I watched the whole thing and ate icecream. It wasn't nazi alien lizard reptiles at the center of the earth good, but, it was ludicrous to the point of being enthralling. I think the people that wrote it watched 'what the bleep do we know' taking bong rips and one of them said, dude dude dude dude, what if, hear me out, what if, it's all the jews, I mean, like, the whole thing, what if, the jews like, literally made the world we live in man, and they are like, interdimensionally harvesting our essence like in the dark crystal, but, its really the matrix.... and the rest of them just, rolled with it.

Just to prove I'm not making this up, here, is, this masterpiece;



(Personally, I still think Plato nailed it with 'The Cave').