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31
(Englewood
Cliff, NJ: Prentice-Hall,
1976, p. 213) informs us, "As communication
researchers
have
emphasized,
the greatest impact the media have on the formation or change of public opinion is in
terms of impressions
built up over a long period." [bold added] The wholesomeness
of Disney is an
image that has been built over a long period of time. Disney’s occult themes of world citizenship,
witchcraft,
humanism and idolatry have also been long running impressions
that have been craftively
perpetrated upon this nation, so long that they began prior to this author’s --& probably the reader’s--
birth.
People don’t associate movie’s like Consenting Adults with Disney, or The Corpse Had a Familiar
Face with Disney. In fact as previously mentioned, when Disney wanted to put out more "adult"
films, they did a slight of hand and created the label Touchstone
films so that people wouldn’t
associate movies like Splash (which showed what looked like bared breasts) with Disney Productions.
Another label, Hollywood Pictures, was created by Disney to help distribute Touchstone
films. At
first the personnel of these companies was simply Disney’s staff, but as time went on, they got their
own production personnel.
On Oct. 27, 1954, Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color debuted on television. The TV show
celebrated Disney’s movie triumphs. The words Wonderful World of Color are not ill chosen.
According to an Illuminati
mind-control
programmer, when Disney worked on his cartoons, and
amusement parks, colors --special colors and color combinations--were
specifically chosen for mind-
control programming
purposes. Wonderful World of Color under various names such as Disneyland
aired for 22 years over the television networks. In 1955, Walt Disney made his cartoon character
Mickey Mouse real by creating a fan club--the Mickey Mouse Club, which aired five days a week
usually
just as children came home from school. Twenty-four
children called mouseketeers
would
help Mickey, and they would dance and sing and do skits. The Mickey Mouse Club adored the
unique, cute little beanie Mickey Mouse caps with their big ears mounted to each side of the beanie.
In the 1950’s, most kid viewers of the show wanted their own "Mouse Ears" and to become a
Mouseketeer, especially children who were receiving Mickey Mouse scripts in their total mind-
control programming.
Disney used his Mouseketeers
to play all the roles in an Oz movie Rainbow
Road to Oz, which was never shown to the public. Adults today (both men & women) who received
Mickey Mouse programming
during the 50’s through 70’s can still be seen with Mickey Mouse
clocks, watches, lampshades,
knick-knacks,
tee shirts, etc. Years later the kids who watched can still
remember "Spin and Marty" and the Mickey Mouse theme song. The image that everything was
perfect including Mickey was portrayed by the Club’s T.V. program. Still somehow the American
people began to use the word "Mickey Mouse" as a synonym for a silly, pretend way of doing things.
It became common for people to say, "He mickey-moused
it together." to mean he did a poor job
putting
it together. On Jan. 30, 1957, Walt Disney had a television show aired entitled "All About
Magic" where a Magic Mirror explains about magic. The Magic Mirror also contains a "Bibbidi-
bibbidi-Boo"
sequence. In 1959, Disney bought 8 small submarines from Todd Shipyards for $2,
150.000.
When ABC wouldn’t let Walt make a TV series out of a storyline where a magic ring changes a boy
into a dog (a mind-control
programming
theme)--because
ABC didn’t think the public could swallow
the story line--Walt quit ABC for NBC. Walt then made a scaled down version of this occult storyline
entitled The Shaggy Dog. Early in the 1960’s, Walt and his brother Roy went secretly looking for an
area on the east coast to build another Disney Park. Walt the younger of the two, died in 1966, and
Roy finished the project. Beginning
in 1964, 30,000 acres were secretly purchased at $200 an acre in
the Orlando, FL area just west of NASA’s Cape Kennedy. Using phoney names and paying cash,
Disney buyers bought the land and swore the sellers to secrecy. The Magic Kingdom has been
multiplying.
In 1971, Walt Disney World was opened to the public. Bob Hope and others participated
in a Disney special on Oct. 29, 1971 "Grand opening of Walt Disney World". From the time of its
opening until Oct. 12, 1995, Disney World calculated 1/2 billion people visited DisneyWorld.
This
amusement park is in Orlando, FL on over 27,400 acres and includes the EPCOT Center (now also
called simply Epcot). The EPCOT center was another dream of Walt Disney’s (albeit more than
slightly modified from Walt’s original EPCOT ideas.) EPCOT originally stood for Experimental
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