Saving this post, because I am an ex Doctor Who fan with a fairly large knowledge of the show. I have opinions about all of this, including how it ties to the British Intelligence agencies, the communist manufactured psyop called The Beatles, the Freemasons, and how it pretty much becomes inextricably linked to the Jimmy Savile side of the BBC.
I have my normie brain, which can enjoy things at face value, and then the conspiracy research brain that ties it all together.
I say I'm saving this post because I fully intend to return to it with discussion. I'm just unable to cogently and cohesively organize a million strands of information right now, but can recognise I'm probably someone with the largest knowledge on the board when it comes to Doctor Who through both the normie lens and a conspiracy lens.
How deep do you want the rabbithole to go though? It goes pretty far.
The Kennedy Assassination though, that was the public beginning of a decades long psyop and reframing of society and culture. You need a big mass trauma event to prime or shock the brain into rewiring.
This is the trouble with diving into rabbitholes though, it all starts to get very complex and overwhelming. It's hard to be concise. How do you successfully convey decades of research without an unreadable convoluted text dump that is as exhausting to write as it is to read?
Of course, what you'll find is that the people running Doctor Who especially from 2005 onwards, are crazy woke Communists indoctrinated into a cult, and that they absolutely agree with assassinating Kennedy.
Try not to become too attached as I did, since eventually you hit that same woke point that every media franchise has succumbed to.
It's good for cultural insight, but from someone who watched, absorbed, became invested in this show since I was a teenager, there's zero point in caring about what happens to these characters.
You know what though? I could never see myself saying this. Back in the day I would have been so excited to talk about Doctor Who with someone, anyone.
These days, all I see is a smouldering wreck of a fun scifi show, but because it's dead and expired, it makes it far easier to see behind the curtain of "the entertainment industry" and figure out what's been going on.
We all take gradual steps in our path for knowledge. I hope you continue yours. By all means, watch whatever you want whenever you want, just remember to keep that critical observing eye.
In fairness, they hadn't really established The Doctor (or Dr. Who) as being a guy who intervenes and saves people at that point. The episode from that exact era called "The Aztecs" even had The Doctor chastising Barbara for trying to bring modern attitudes to the past; "You cannot rewrite history, not one line!"
As a second, out-of-universe point, you couldn't really have a TV show that premiered the day of the Assassination and have your main character go back and save the guy that just got assassinated. That would be in poor taste whether you were for or against Kennedy.
This was current events. The show was more focused on being educational, which is why the first two companions were schoolteachers.
You get your history lessons in "the past", exciting scientific concepts for "the future", and current events were basically restricted to advertising The Beatles and the mod scene.
What The Doctor started as, and what he became, are quite different.
Saving this post, because I am an ex Doctor Who fan with a fairly large knowledge of the show. I have opinions about all of this, including how it ties to the British Intelligence agencies, the communist manufactured psyop called The Beatles, the Freemasons, and how it pretty much becomes inextricably linked to the Jimmy Savile side of the BBC.
I have my normie brain, which can enjoy things at face value, and then the conspiracy research brain that ties it all together.
I say I'm saving this post because I fully intend to return to it with discussion. I'm just unable to cogently and cohesively organize a million strands of information right now, but can recognise I'm probably someone with the largest knowledge on the board when it comes to Doctor Who through both the normie lens and a conspiracy lens.
How deep do you want the rabbithole to go though? It goes pretty far.
The Kennedy Assassination though, that was the public beginning of a decades long psyop and reframing of society and culture. You need a big mass trauma event to prime or shock the brain into rewiring.
This is the trouble with diving into rabbitholes though, it all starts to get very complex and overwhelming. It's hard to be concise. How do you successfully convey decades of research without an unreadable convoluted text dump that is as exhausting to write as it is to read?
Of course, what you'll find is that the people running Doctor Who especially from 2005 onwards, are crazy woke Communists indoctrinated into a cult, and that they absolutely agree with assassinating Kennedy.
Try not to become too attached as I did, since eventually you hit that same woke point that every media franchise has succumbed to.
It's good for cultural insight, but from someone who watched, absorbed, became invested in this show since I was a teenager, there's zero point in caring about what happens to these characters.
You know what though? I could never see myself saying this. Back in the day I would have been so excited to talk about Doctor Who with someone, anyone.
These days, all I see is a smouldering wreck of a fun scifi show, but because it's dead and expired, it makes it far easier to see behind the curtain of "the entertainment industry" and figure out what's been going on.
We all take gradual steps in our path for knowledge. I hope you continue yours. By all means, watch whatever you want whenever you want, just remember to keep that critical observing eye.
In fairness, they hadn't really established The Doctor (or Dr. Who) as being a guy who intervenes and saves people at that point. The episode from that exact era called "The Aztecs" even had The Doctor chastising Barbara for trying to bring modern attitudes to the past; "You cannot rewrite history, not one line!"
As a second, out-of-universe point, you couldn't really have a TV show that premiered the day of the Assassination and have your main character go back and save the guy that just got assassinated. That would be in poor taste whether you were for or against Kennedy.
This was current events. The show was more focused on being educational, which is why the first two companions were schoolteachers.
You get your history lessons in "the past", exciting scientific concepts for "the future", and current events were basically restricted to advertising The Beatles and the mod scene.
What The Doctor started as, and what he became, are quite different.