Theory On Meaning Of "Iron Eagle" In Q Posts
(media.greatawakening.win)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (67)
sorted by:
I’d like to contribute here but only have a few minutes right now and want to put some thoughts out that may be meaningful and be able to be built on by others:
-Symbolism and coding / decoding are key. Some might say a keystone. Symbolism will be their downfall. Nothing is as it seems. Lies are everyone. All truth can’t be revealed as very few could handle it vs losing their mind.
-With that said, some can not handle much of it at all. Most people aren’t ready to decode the symbols and lies. The blog mentioned is excellent and yet many will find it otherwise due to these reasons. Fake history, fake science, fake human understandings. Very hard to unravel, for each of us - and impossible for some.
-As another poster highlighted, Q signatures are movies and/ or books. Iron Eagle is a 1986 movie. George Clinton has a song in the move / soundtrack. Reagan was president in 86, George, Clinton. (If you aren’t ready to look into decoding and media symbols and comms, ignore that last comment as it’s a worthless one for you.)
-Clinton’s SS handle that he chose was Eagle.
-Merkel referred to as Iron Chancellor and what that meant - see note on graphic on post.
-Q also refers to NWO as the Nazi World Order.
-Iron Eagle also refers to a terminal Colonel as others have noted. Chris Miller is an Iron Eagle by that definition and clearly key to Q and this whole narrative. Is he part of the reference to Iron Eagle? I’d venture to say the movie absolutely is, so then who is Chris “in the movie” or how does knowledge of both enhance overall understanding?
-The movie which I haven’t watched is almost certainly stupid. Building movies around “hidden” comms does not always make for good movies - but the comms are what matter. Keep that in mind if you watch it. It will not be a documentary that tells you anything explicitly.
-The basis of the story relates to real life attacks by the United States against Libya over the Gulf of Sidra, in particular the 1981 Gulf of Sidra incident.
-Doug Masters, son of veteran U.S. Air Force pilot Col. Ted Masters, is a hotshot civilian pilot, hoping to follow in his father's footsteps. His hopes are dashed when he receives a notice of rejection from the Air Force Academy. Making matters worse is the news that his father has been shot down and captured by the fictional Arab state of Bilya while patrolling over the Mediterranean Sea.
-Seeing that the U.S. government will do nothing to save his father's life, Doug decides to take matters into his own hands and come up with his own rescue mission. He requests the help of Col. Charles "Chappy" Sinclair, a Vietnam veteran pilot currently in the Air Force Reserve, who, while not knowing Col. Masters personally, had a favorable run-in with him years prior to meeting Doug and "knew the type."
-Chappy sounds like an Iron Eagle and also going against the official CoC in this fictitious rescue mission
-(After rescuing the father), The two are summoned by an Air Force judiciary panel for their reckless actions. Seeing that any form of punishment for the duo would expose an embarrassing lapse in Air Force security, the panel forgoes prosecution as long as Doug and Chappy never speak of their operation to anyone. In addition, Chappy convinces the panel to grant Doug admission to the Air Force Academy. Days later, a plane assigned by the President returns to the U.S., reuniting Doug, Chappy, and Col. Masters with family and friends.