Rob Reiner recently reactivated Castle Rock Entertainment. They shot all the scenes for The American President at their set. So perhaps the real question we should be asking is: "WHERE the fake inauguration is going to take place?" It certainly need not be in DC.
What better way to stage a FF than on a fake location DURING a virtual event? DS just gotta fake everything. Fake 9/11, WSMs, chem wep attacks, celeb deaths, pandemics. Controlled narrative, it's their specialty. All pedes need to be ready to rip it apart, like the "riot" on the 6th.
Defunct argument. If ANYONE wanted to get Harris in, all they had to do was NOTHING because that is what was going to happen. They wouldn't wake people up just to foment rebellion, they would keep them sleepy.
When the boys first venture to Castle Rock, Jack is ecstatic about the potential of the place to be a fort; he looks at the clusters and boulders, viewing it all from the perspective of strategy and defense:
"'Shove a palm trunk under that [boulder] and if an enemy came--look!'
A hundred feet below them was the narrow causeway then the stony ground [...]
'One heave,' cried Jack, exulting, 'and--whee--!'" (106).
Ralph, however, perceives the cluster of rocks to be a "rotten place" (106). He shares none of Jack's enthusiasm for the place, choosing to stay focused on the possibility of rescue and a return to civilization.
As the novel progresses, Castle Rock comes to symbolize control and power. After Jack forms his own tribe, he relocates his hunters to Castle Rock, and the stony fort becomes the seat of Jack's power on the island. The boys' name for the fort, 'Castle Rock,' becomes incredibly fitting, as Jack's rise to power and total control over his tribe resembles that of a king; he has other boys tortured on his command, and the approach to the 'Castle' is unassailable.
In many ways, Castle Rock also represents the boys' turning away from civilization and their final descent into savagery; they have chosen to make the fortified cluster of boulders their home instead of focusing on the hope of rescue. With this in mind, it is fitting that Piggy, who for so much of the novel symbolized reason and order, meets his death at Castle Rock, the epicenter of Jack and the hunters' decline into savagery.
https://radiopatriot.net/2020/06/04/q-post-4414-usss-castle-rock/
One possibility.
Rob Reiner recently reactivated Castle Rock Entertainment. They shot all the scenes for The American President at their set. So perhaps the real question we should be asking is: "WHERE the fake inauguration is going to take place?" It certainly need not be in DC.
What better way to stage a FF than on a fake location DURING a virtual event? DS just gotta fake everything. Fake 9/11, WSMs, chem wep attacks, celeb deaths, pandemics. Controlled narrative, it's their specialty. All pedes need to be ready to rip it apart, like the "riot" on the 6th.
Defunct argument. If ANYONE wanted to get Harris in, all they had to do was NOTHING because that is what was going to happen. They wouldn't wake people up just to foment rebellion, they would keep them sleepy.
https://www.countyoffice.org/greencastle-army-corps-of-engineers-greencastle-in-ffa/
It's believed to be an operation out of the Army 412 with the 475
That’s my guess
https://www.enotes.com/homework-help/what-symbolism-castle-rock-setting-lord-flies-358194
When the boys first venture to Castle Rock, Jack is ecstatic about the potential of the place to be a fort; he looks at the clusters and boulders, viewing it all from the perspective of strategy and defense:
Ralph, however, perceives the cluster of rocks to be a "rotten place" (106). He shares none of Jack's enthusiasm for the place, choosing to stay focused on the possibility of rescue and a return to civilization.
As the novel progresses, Castle Rock comes to symbolize control and power. After Jack forms his own tribe, he relocates his hunters to Castle Rock, and the stony fort becomes the seat of Jack's power on the island. The boys' name for the fort, 'Castle Rock,' becomes incredibly fitting, as Jack's rise to power and total control over his tribe resembles that of a king; he has other boys tortured on his command, and the approach to the 'Castle' is unassailable.
In many ways, Castle Rock also represents the boys' turning away from civilization and their final descent into savagery; they have chosen to make the fortified cluster of boulders their home instead of focusing on the hope of rescue. With this in mind, it is fitting that Piggy, who for so much of the novel symbolized reason and order, meets his death at Castle Rock, the epicenter of Jack and the hunters' decline into savagery.
seat of power From Lord of the Flies.
https://www.enotes.com/homework-help/what-symbolism-castle-rock-setting-lord-flies-358194