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I hate the simpsons

Redcurtain

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Apr 2, 2020
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In “Last President (1896)”, there is an underdog that ran for President who no-one believed he would win. He lived on 5th Ave in New York (Trump Tower is actually on 5th Ave). There were riots and protests all over the land as a result of his Presidency. His Secretary of Agriculture was named “Lefay Pence” (check out pg. 16).

In “Baron Trump (1893)”, he lives in “Castle Trump,” and is a wealthy aristocrat guided by “The Master of all Masters” called “Don” to find “Goggle-Land” somewhere in the middle of Russia, which is described as a “World within a World” where everything is made of silver with marble roads.



This is how far back predictive programming goes.
 
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8049475-L.jpg

baron2.jpg


41wzdDedVNL._SY346_.jpg

In “Last President (1896)”, there is an underdog that ran for President who no-one believed he would win. He lived on 5th Ave in New York (Trump Tower is actually on 5th Ave). There were riots and protests all over the land as a result of his Presidency. His Secretary of Agriculture was named “Lefay Pence” (check out pg. 16).

In “Baron Trump (1893)”, he lives in “Castle Trump,” and is a wealthy aristocrat guided by “The Master of all Masters” called “Don” to find “Goggle-Land” somewhere in the middle of Russia, which is described as a “World within a World” where everything is made of silver with marble roads.



This is how far back predictive programming goes.
Does this mean he does die and we have a civil war that ends it all?
 

This is how far back predictive programming goes.
Does this mean he does die and we have a civil war that ends it all?

Civil War

"Chapter 4, the author notes that there is a strange prophecy that
there would be a dawnless day. Well, that prophecy was fulfilled, and on March 4, 1897, the
“Dawnless Day” occurred. The President was to announce the selection of his cabinet, and many
said that this would ultimately prove that he was a “sell-out”, but apparently their apprehensions
were misguided. The president chooses a strong cabinet, and most notably, he chooses Lafe
Pence as secretary of agriculture. His inauguration speech, again, is aimed at the common
people, and then he gives out executive order one – the immediate abandonment of the “gold
reserve” and the gold and silver standard of the Constitution shall be resumed. People’s reactions
were of shock, exhaustion, and sheer terror, especially those on Wall Street."

"Chapter 8 : In ’99, rioting broke out everywhere, especially in the north, and socialism and
anarchism “found willing ears.” – that’s a little unnerving, isn’t it? The South seems to form
great power, and they are extremely upset about the tax put on them, especially because the
North is much richer. There are cries of treason and the republic is shaken at its foundations. The
North then had to start to prepare for a second rebellion. The president was deeply troubled.

Chapter 9: The rebellion had been squandered, but there was a new prophecy that the North,
“rich with 100 cites”, would rise against the federal government. There would have be a
revolution within a revolution. The North would have to fight or lose its power. (From my
understanding, the South seems to be the Common People). The North wanted to separate itself
from the union and from its own republic. How long would they have to wait?"

"Chapter 10: Congress refused to adjourn over the holidays. The entire chapter centers around the
final debate between the North and South. At the point the president is pale, and seems to be
weak. The Speaker of the House says the president must resign. Then, the president speaks, and
it seems almost godly – he has everybody back under his power for a moment! Out of nowhere,
the capitol is struck by dynamite and destroyed (what a twist!). The republic was dead, and “it
had died so peacefully, that the world could not believe the tidings of its passing away” (p. 43)."

The ending "
“As the dawn broke cold and gray, and its first dim light fell upon that shattered dome glorious
even in its ruins, a single human eye filled a gleam of devilish joy, looked up at it long and steadily, and then it's owner was caught up and lost in the surging mass of humanity that held the Capital girt round and round " (p.43)


This is a review someone gave of each chapter I could not link it but it was under amarketplaceofideas
 

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