www.aol.com

Alex Jones #conspiracy aol.com

Alex Jones: 'Alien: Covenant' will reveal beliefs of the Illuminati

Kelsey Weekman, AOL.com
Jan 4th 2017 4:52PM

Alex Jones has a serious conspiracy theory about the film "Alien: Covenant" -- and it's not that it's going to be a huge hit.

He says it will explain the secret mission of a global elite that is trying to enslave the human race.

Jones, who hosts "The Alex Jones Show" on the radio and owns the website InfoWars.com has been called "the most prolific conspiracy theorist in contemporary America" by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups.

He's well-known for sharing his theories in radical videos, often by yelling, such as this recent one:

The 14-minute rant, he explains how his conspiracy about "Alien: Covenant" fits in with his philosophy.

According to Vocativ, his guiding theory is that "globalists" operate through a secret society called the Illuminati while trying to build a "New World Order" in which the "super race" rules over all humans.

The Illuminati is made up of world leaders, business authorities, innovators, artists and other influential people.

Jones explains in the video that "the globalist, the social engineers that run this planet" reject the theory of evolution in favor of direct panspermia -- the theory that organisms were planet on Earth by an extraterrestrial race.

In the video, he explains the Illuminati are inspired by that race, and thus are trying to take over human evolution.

"(They) are turning the entire planet into a petri dish where they are testing on the population... to create these new super creations," Jones says in the video.

So how does this tie into a Ridley Scott movie? After viewing the trailer for "Alien: Covenant," Jones said he thinks the director is revealing the globalists' strategy.

"Ridley Scott admitted that basically the ship was a weapon carrying bio-mechanical creatures that were used for war by advanced species," Jones says in the video.

"This is what the globalists are now admittedly currently building. The entire 'Alien' franchise is a revelation of the method."
AdChoices

"Alien: Covenant," which is the second prequel to the Alien series following "Prometheus," shows humans exploring a planet that seems to be paradisiacal.

Jones says it is not what it seems. He claims it's a "giant test tube merging plants and animals in bizarre new forms -- a religious experiment of the advanced Anunnaki race."

The Anunnaki, which is a group of deities from ancient Mesopotamian cultures, are not a part of the Alien franchise.

According to Vocativ, conspiracy theorists believe the Anunnaki were actually aliens who live on Nibiru, or Planet X, and engineered the human race.

Jones claims in the video that, similar to how the alien race of "Alien: Covenant" is creating new organisms through bio-engineering, globalists on earth are modifying organisms through GMOs.

"We are being sacrificed in this huge experiment," he said.

"There are thousands of studies in the last 20 years admitting that GMO crops and GMO vaccines in other systems are purposefully changing our DNA and mutating us."

A wild theory is not unusual for Jones, who says that most American tragedies, notably the September 11 attacks and the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, were orchestrated by the U.S. government to take away our freedoms.

Over the course of the presidential election, Jones went from an angry conspiracist to a seriously influential political voice in favor of Donald Trump.

According to Select All, Jones has spent less time recently warning of the New World Order and more time trying to take down the mainstream media by calling it "fake news."

The president-elect appeared on his show in December 2015, and he told Jones,"Your reputation is amazing. I will not let you down."

Both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama mentioned Jones during campaign speeches -- notably when the president sniffed himself to prove to the audience that he is not a demon, as Jones suggested.

Jones lost radical followers after distancing himself from the Pizzagate investigation, but according to Vocativ, he's gained some back following the "Alien: Covenant" video.

bstark82 #fundie aol.com

I'm sick of hearing about this "Fight for 15", and that minimum wage is not a "livable wage" and that minimum wage cannot support a family. That is not what minimum wage is for, nor was it ever intended to be. Minimum wage jobs are simply entry level jobs to teach people responsibilities, job skills and life skills to prepare them for the job market. This "entitlement" generation has no idea what it means to earn your way. Look at the implementation of the $15/hr min. wage in Seattle. People fight for this increase, yet work fewer hours because they'll lose their free gov't benefits. Raising minimum wages across the board will only increase goods/services sold. Businesses are in business for the sole purpose of profit. Inflation will increase exponentially. Then we'll be back to where we started. I can see it now: #Tantrumfortwenty

Rodrigo Duterte #sexist aol.com

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte attacked the daughter of former President Bill Clinton after he was criticized over a joke he made about his troops raping women, and he questioned whether she was just as incensed with her father after news surfaced of his affair with an intern at the White House.

"When your father, the President of the United States, was screwing Lewinsky and the girls there in the White House, how did you feel? Did you slam your father?" he asked Clinton Wednesday, referencing her father's scandalous affair with Monica Lewinsky, a former White House intern with whom Bill Clinton admitted to having an "inappropriate relationship" with while working at the White House.

The war of words between the two stems from remarks Duterte made about rape during an expletive-loaded speech at a Navy event last Friday.

After declaring martial law in the southern Philippines, Duterte gave a speech to his troops in which he told them they could "arrest any person [and] search any house."

"I alone would be responsible" for anything his troops committed under martial law, Duterte said, reportedly joking: "I will go to jail for you. If you happen to have raped three women, I will own up to it."

Islamic extremists #fundie aol.com

A Pakistani mob killed a woman member of a religious sect and two of her granddaughters after a sect member was accused of posting blasphemous material on Facebook, police said Monday, the latest instance of growing violence against minorities.
The dead, including a seven-year-old girl and her baby sister, were Ahmadis, who consider themselves Muslim but believe in a prophet after Mohammed. A 1984 Pakistani law declared them non-Muslims and many Pakistanis consider them heretics.
Police said the late Sunday violence in the town of Gujranwala, 220 km (140 miles) southeast of the capital, Islamabad, started with an altercation between young men, one of whom was an Ahmadi accused of posting "objectionable material".
"Later, a crowd of 150 people came to the police station demanding the registration of a blasphemy case against the accused," said one police officer who declined to be identified.
"As police were negotiating with the crowd, another mob attacked and started burning the houses of Ahmadis."
The youth accused of making the Facebook post had not been injured, he said.
Resident Munawar Ahmed, 60, said he drove terrified neighbors to safety as the mob attacked.
"The attackers were looting and plundering, taking away fans and whatever valuables they could get hold of and dragging furniture into the road and setting fire to it... Some were continuously firing into the air," he said. "A lot of policemen arrived but they stayed on the sidelines and didn't intervene," he said.
The police officer said they had tried to stop the mob.
Salim ud Din, a spokesman for the Ahmadi community, said it was the worst attack on the community since simultaneous attacks on Ahmadi places of worship killed 86 Ahmadis four years ago.
Under Pakistani law, Ahmadis are banned from using Muslim greetings, saying Muslim prayers or referring to his place of worship as a mosque.
Accusations of blasphemy are rocketing in Pakistan, from one in 2011 to at least 68 last year, according to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. About 100 people have been accused of blasphemy this year.
Human rights workers say the accusations are increasingly used to settle personal vendettas or to grab the property of the accused.