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JAWS symbolism

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaws_(film)

Shot mostly on location on Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts, Jaws was the first major motion picture to be shot on the ocean, and consequently had a troubled production,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martha%27s_Vineyard

Martha's Vineyard (Wampanoag: Noepe; often simply called the Vineyard)[2] is an island located south of Cape Cod in Massachusetts in the United States in North America that is known for being a popular, affluent summer colony. Martha's Vineyard includes the smaller adjacent Chappaquiddick Island, which is usually connected to the Vineyard.

The Vineyard was home to one of the earliest known deaf communities in the United States; consequently, a sign language, the Martha's Vineyard Sign Language, emerged on the island among both deaf and hearing islanders.

The island received international notoriety after the "Chappaquiddick incident" of July 18, 1969, in which Mary Jo Kopechne was killed in a car driven off the Dike Bridge by U.S. Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy. The bridge crossed Poucha Pond on Chappaquiddick Island (a smaller island formerly connected to the Vineyard and part of Edgartown).

In 1974, Steven Spielberg filmed the movie Jaws on Martha's Vineyard, most notably in the fishing village of Menemsha and the town of Chilmark. Spielberg selected island natives Christopher Rebello as Chief Brody's oldest son, Michael Brody; Jay Mello as the younger son, Sean Brody; and Lee Fierro as Mrs. Kintner.[41] Scores of other island natives appeared in the film as extras. Later, scenes from Jaws 2 and Jaws: The Revenge were filmed on the island, as well. In June 2005 the island celebrated the 30th anniversary of Jaws with a weekend-long Jawsfest.[42]

Why do presidents like to go there?

Since the 1990s, Bill Clinton spent regular vacation time on the island during and after his presidency, along with his wife, Hillary Clinton, and their daughter, Chelsea. Clinton was not the first president to visit the islands; Ulysses S. Grant visited the vacation residence of his friend, Bishop Gilbert Haven on August 24, 1874. As a coincidental footnote in history, Bishop Haven's gingerbread cottage was located in Oak Bluffs at 10 Clinton Avenue. The avenue was named in 1851 and was designated as the main promenade of the Martha's Vineyard Campmeeting Association campgrounds.[46] On August 23, 2009, Barack Obama arrived in Chilmark with his family for a week's vacation at a rental property known as Blue Heron Farm.[47] In December 2019, President Barack Obama completed the purchase of a 30-acre (12 ha) homestead on the Edgartown Great Pond.

Why do so many die there?

On July 16, 1999, a small plane crashed off the coast of Martha's Vineyard, claiming the lives of pilot John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife Carolyn Bessette and her sister Lauren Bessette. Kennedy's mother, former U.S. first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, maintained a home in Aquinnah (formerly "Gay Head") until her death in 1994.

No one hears anything there.

Martha's Vineyard was known as an "everyone signed" community for several hundred years,[53] and many deaf people view Martha's Vineyard as a utopia.[54] A high rate of hereditary deafness was documented on Martha's Vineyard for almost two centuries. The island's deaf heritage cannot be traced to one common ancestor and is thought to have originated in the Weald, a region that overlaps the borders of the English counties of Kent and Sussex, prior to immigration. Researcher Nora Groce estimates that by the late 19th century, 1 in 155 people on the Vineyard was born deaf (0.7 percent), about 37 times the estimate for the nation at large (1 in 5,728, or 0.02 percent),[53] because of a "recessive pattern" of genetic deafness, circulated through endogamous marriage patterns

Cape cod is famous for THIS story:

Cape Cod has been the home of the indigenous Wampanoag for centuries prior to European colonization. They lived from the sea and were accomplished farmers. They understood the principles of sustainable forest management,[citation needed] and were known to light controlled fires to keep the underbrush in check. They helped the Pilgrims, who arrived in the fall of 1620, survive at their new Plymouth Colony.

Cape Cod was among the first places settled by Puritan colonists in North America.

Maybe what we've been taught about the "Puritans" is not who they really were:

In the early 17th century, thousands of English Puritans colonized North America, mainly in New England.

17th century? The 17 is often used to symbolize when the "narrative" is not the real story.

Did the Cult send out colonies?

https://listverse.com/2018/05/19/10-horrifying-ways-americas-puritans-persecuted-the-quakers/

After Fisher and Austin left, the Puritans didn’t get any nicer to the Quakers. As far as they were concerned, the Quakers who were starting to visit America were a threat to their religion. They saw them, as one Puritan put it, as “instruments for propagating the kingdom of Satan,” and they weren’t going to put up with them

Why were they so threatened?

Quaker women weren’t just beaten and imprisoned. The Puritans turned abusing Quakers into a weirdly sexual display. They would strip them naked down to the waist and parade them through the town, whipping their backs as they went.

Puritan laws only became harsher. From 1656 on, every male Quaker caught in Massachusetts was to have his right ear cut off. If they came back, they’d lose the other ear. And if they came back again, they would have their tongues bored through with a red-hot iron.

Puritans sound like sociopaths. Just like in Haiti they tried to make a place where "they wouldn't be judged for their brutality" they seemed to have tried to create other places.

They'd bring a flock of "sheep" (the malleable to do the work) and then try to practice their brutality under the name of "God".

Quakers were a threat to their practice.

The Puritans got fed up. On July 17, 1658, they dragged Holder and Copeland to prison and chopped off both men’s right ears.[4] They were kept in prison, where they were brutally and repeatedly whipped on a set schedule for nine weeks straight. Then, finally, they were forcibly sent back to England.

The greatest refuge for Quakers in the New World, though, was Rhode Island. It was the one place in America that refused to persecute them for their faith. As the Puritans chased more and more of them from their colonies, more and more Quakers found themselves hiding in the protection of Rhode Island—and that made the Puritans furious.

The Puritans of New England threatened the Colony of Rhode Island, telling them that they would cut off all communication and trade if they didn’t start torturing, exiling, and executing Quakers.

Bowne told the European court everything that was happening to the Quakers of America. The court was shocked and soon wrote the governor of New Netherlands, ordering him to put an end to the persecution of the Quakers.

Puritans weren't "normal" and nice. It sounds like the CULT tried to make a colony in the US, but it got foiled because too many normal people came. They tried to drive them out, but were foiled. However, they did set up deep roots.

Decoding blog mentions that the US colonies were originally meant to be a refuge for these sociopaths. The early colonies had laws allowing the marriage of 9 year olds. Eventually they had to go somewhere else.

I suspect these sociopaths have continuously looked for somewhere to "be themselves" and be as evil as they like without the threat of the Sheep murdering them.

Hence the symbolism of "James"

https://lets-reason.com/2018/11/22/thinking-of-the-puritans-on-thanksgiving-day/

It’s that time of the year Americans celebrate Thanksgiving Day in memory of the feast the Puritans (also known as Pilgrims) held with the local Indians in order to rejoice after their first harvest in the New World that fall of 1621.

But who were those Puritans who, along with the colonists of Jamestown in Virginia some ten years earlier, are considered the first permanent European residents of America?

Epstein Island was called "Little St. James" and "great St. James".

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

JAWS symbolism

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaws_(film)

Shot mostly on location on Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts, Jaws was the first major motion picture to be shot on the ocean, and consequently had a troubled production,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martha%27s_Vineyard

Martha's Vineyard (Wampanoag: Noepe; often simply called the Vineyard)[2] is an island located south of Cape Cod in Massachusetts in the United States in North America that is known for being a popular, affluent summer colony. Martha's Vineyard includes the smaller adjacent Chappaquiddick Island, which is usually connected to the Vineyard.

The Vineyard was home to one of the earliest known deaf communities in the United States; consequently, a sign language, the Martha's Vineyard Sign Language, emerged on the island among both deaf and hearing islanders.

The island received international notoriety after the "Chappaquiddick incident" of July 18, 1969, in which Mary Jo Kopechne was killed in a car driven off the Dike Bridge by U.S. Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy. The bridge crossed Poucha Pond on Chappaquiddick Island (a smaller island formerly connected to the Vineyard and part of Edgartown).

In 1974, Steven Spielberg filmed the movie Jaws on Martha's Vineyard, most notably in the fishing village of Menemsha and the town of Chilmark. Spielberg selected island natives Christopher Rebello as Chief Brody's oldest son, Michael Brody; Jay Mello as the younger son, Sean Brody; and Lee Fierro as Mrs. Kintner.[41] Scores of other island natives appeared in the film as extras. Later, scenes from Jaws 2 and Jaws: The Revenge were filmed on the island, as well. In June 2005 the island celebrated the 30th anniversary of Jaws with a weekend-long Jawsfest.[42]

Why do presidents like to go there?

Since the 1990s, Bill Clinton spent regular vacation time on the island during and after his presidency, along with his wife, Hillary Clinton, and their daughter, Chelsea. Clinton was not the first president to visit the islands; Ulysses S. Grant visited the vacation residence of his friend, Bishop Gilbert Haven on August 24, 1874. As a coincidental footnote in history, Bishop Haven's gingerbread cottage was located in Oak Bluffs at 10 Clinton Avenue. The avenue was named in 1851 and was designated as the main promenade of the Martha's Vineyard Campmeeting Association campgrounds.[46] On August 23, 2009, Barack Obama arrived in Chilmark with his family for a week's vacation at a rental property known as Blue Heron Farm.[47] In December 2019, President Barack Obama completed the purchase of a 30-acre (12 ha) homestead on the Edgartown Great Pond.

Why do so many die there?

On July 16, 1999, a small plane crashed off the coast of Martha's Vineyard, claiming the lives of pilot John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife Carolyn Bessette and her sister Lauren Bessette. Kennedy's mother, former U.S. first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, maintained a home in Aquinnah (formerly "Gay Head") until her death in 1994.

No one hears anything there.

Martha's Vineyard was known as an "everyone signed" community for several hundred years,[53] and many deaf people view Martha's Vineyard as a utopia.[54] A high rate of hereditary deafness was documented on Martha's Vineyard for almost two centuries. The island's deaf heritage cannot be traced to one common ancestor and is thought to have originated in the Weald, a region that overlaps the borders of the English counties of Kent and Sussex, prior to immigration. Researcher Nora Groce estimates that by the late 19th century, 1 in 155 people on the Vineyard was born deaf (0.7 percent), about 37 times the estimate for the nation at large (1 in 5,728, or 0.02 percent),[53] because of a "recessive pattern" of genetic deafness, circulated through endogamous marriage patterns

Cape cod is famous for THIS story:

Cape Cod has been the home of the indigenous Wampanoag for centuries prior to European colonization. They lived from the sea and were accomplished farmers. They understood the principles of sustainable forest management,[citation needed] and were known to light controlled fires to keep the underbrush in check. They helped the Pilgrims, who arrived in the fall of 1620, survive at their new Plymouth Colony.

Cape Cod was among the first places settled by Puritan colonists in North America.

Maybe what we've been taught about the "Puritans" is not who they really were:

In the early 17th century, thousands of English Puritans colonized North America, mainly in New England.

17th century? The 17 is often used to symbolize when the "narrative" is not the real story.

Did the Cult send out colonies?

https://listverse.com/2018/05/19/10-horrifying-ways-americas-puritans-persecuted-the-quakers/

After Fisher and Austin left, the Puritans didn’t get any nicer to the Quakers. As far as they were concerned, the Quakers who were starting to visit America were a threat to their religion. They saw them, as one Puritan put it, as “instruments for propagating the kingdom of Satan,” and they weren’t going to put up with them

Why were they so threatened?

Quaker women weren’t just beaten and imprisoned. The Puritans turned abusing Quakers into a weirdly sexual display. They would strip them naked down to the waist and parade them through the town, whipping their backs as they went.

Puritan laws only became harsher. From 1656 on, every male Quaker caught in Massachusetts was to have his right ear cut off. If they came back, they’d lose the other ear. And if they came back again, they would have their tongues bored through with a red-hot iron.

Puritans sound like sociopaths. Just like in Haiti they tried to make a place where "they wouldn't be judged for their brutality" they seemed to have tried to create other places.

They'd bring a flock of "sheep" (the malleable to do the work) and then try to practice their brutality under the name of "God".

Quakers were a threat to their practice.

The Puritans got fed up. On July 17, 1658, they dragged Holder and Copeland to prison and chopped off both men’s right ears.[4] They were kept in prison, where they were brutally and repeatedly whipped on a set schedule for nine weeks straight. Then, finally, they were forcibly sent back to England.

The greatest refuge for Quakers in the New World, though, was Rhode Island. It was the one place in America that refused to persecute them for their faith. As the Puritans chased more and more of them from their colonies, more and more Quakers found themselves hiding in the protection of Rhode Island—and that made the Puritans furious.

The Puritans of New England threatened the Colony of Rhode Island, telling them that they would cut off all communication and trade if they didn’t start torturing, exiling, and executing Quakers.

Bowne told the European court everything that was happening to the Quakers of America. The court was shocked and soon wrote the governor of New Netherlands, ordering him to put an end to the persecution of the Quakers.

Puritans weren't "normal" and nice. It sounds like the CULT tried to make a colony in the US, but it got foiled because too many normal people came. They tried to drive them out, but were foiled. However, they did set up deep roots.

Decoding blog mentions that the US colonies were originally meant to be a refuge for these sociopaths. The early colonies had laws allowing the marriage of 9 year olds. Eventually they had to go somewhere else.

I suspect these sociopaths have continuously looked for somewhere to "be themselves" and be as evil as they like without the threat of the Sheep murdering them.

2 years ago
1 score