The hit movie “The Hunger Games” takes place in a dystopian
future where the poor and wretched masses live under the high tech
tyranny of a wealthy elite. Is the movie depicting the kind of society
the elite is trying to establish for the New World Order? We’ll look at
characteristics of the world presented in “The Hunger Games” and how
they relate to plans for a New World Order.
Pushed by a gigantic marketing campaign, The Hunger Games
did not take long to become a world-wide sensation, especially among
teenagers and young adults. Sometimes referred to as the new Twilight, The Hunger Games has
similar components to the previous book-to-movie craze (i.e. a young
girl torn between two guys) but takes place in a very different context.
Set in a dystopian future (why is the future always “dystopian”?), The Hunger Games
paints a rather grim picture of the world of tomorrow, whether it be
from a social, economical or political point of view. In short, it is a
big-brotherish nightmare where a rich elite thrives on the backs of a
starving population. Meanwhile, the perversity and voyeurism of mass
media is taken to absurd levels and is used by the government as a glue
to keep its unjust social order intact. Is The Hunger Games
giving teenagers a glimpse of a not-too-distant future? It doesn’t take a
crystal ball to see the elite are trying to take the world in that
direction. Is the author Suzanne Collins communicating a strong anti-NWO
message to the youth by showing its dangers or is it getting the youth
used to the idea? Let’s look at the fictional, yet possible, future
world of The Hunger Games.
Note: This article is about the movie and not the book series.
The movie has been formatted in a different way and conveys a slightly
different message.
The NWO for Teenagers
The Hunger Games takes place in a context that is strikingly on-par with descriptions of the New World Order as planned by today’s global elite. One of the main characteristics of the New World Order is the dissolving of regular nation-states to form a single world government to be ruled by a central power. In The Hunger Games, this concept is fully represented as the action takes place in Panem, a totalitarian nation that encompasses the entire North-American territory. The United States and Canada have therefore merged into a single entity, a step that many predict that will happen before the full-on creation of the NWO.In Panem, the concepts of democracy and freedom have disappeared from America to be replaced by a high-tech dictatorship based on surveillance, monitoring, mass-media indoctrination, police oppression and a radical division of social classes. The vast majority of the citizens of Panem live in third-world country conditions and are constantly subjected poverty, famine and sickness. These difficult living conditions are apparently the result of a devastating event that engendered the complete economic collapse of North America. In District 12, home of the hero Katniss Everdeen, the locals live in conditions similar to the pre-industrial era where families of coal miners lived makeshift in shacks and eat rodents as meals.
While the masses look as if they are living in the 1800s, they are nevertheless subjugated to the high-tech rule of the Capitol, which uses technology to monitor, control and indoctrinate the masses. Surveillance cameras, RFID chips and 3D holograms are abundantly used by the government to manipulate the will of a weak and uneducated population (although there are signs of solidarity and rebelliousness among the peasants). To preserve the fragile social order, the Capitol relies on a massive police force that is always ready repress any kind of uprising. The workers are often rounded up in civilian camps where they are shown state-sponsored propaganda videos. Panem is therefore a high-tech police state ruled by a powerful elite that seeks to keep the masses in poverty and subjugation. As we’ve seen in previous articles on this site, all of these concepts are also thoroughly represented in other forms of media as there appears to be a conscious effort to normalize the ideas of a high-tech police state as the only normal evolution of the current political system.
Living in sharp contrast to the proletariat, the elite in The Hunger Games inhabits the glistening Capitol city and indulges in all sorts of extravagances and fashion trends. This upper-echelon of society perceives the rest of the population as an inferior race to be ridiculed, tamed and controlled. All valuable resources have been vacuumed from the people living in the districts to profit the Capitol, creating a clear and insurmountable divide between Regular People and The Elite. The concept of an opulent elite ruling over the dumbed-down and impoverished masses (thus making them easily manageable) is an important aspect of the New World Order and it is clearly depicted in The Hunger Games. The government’s reliance on high-tech surveillance and mass media to keep the population in check is something we are already seeing and, if we keep going in that direction, the world of The Hunger Games will soon become reality. There is another concept important to the occult elite that is at the heart of The Hunger Games, however: Blood sacrifices to strike fear and gain power.
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