Double Vision : Part 3: Eyes Are the Windows

Once you notice a pattern of similarities, you’ll probably find more. Curiosity leads to many doors.

Serene Grace

More doppelgängers from Part 1, in case you missed it:

I doubled up on the following celebrity examples to hone in on their mirror-like similarities, (each example contains 2 images of the same celebrity). These doppelgängers aren’t exact, but I wanted to highlight them because they got me ruminating…most of us have probably never noticed these resemblances before. I understand that every human is distantly related, so there’s bound to be look-alikes amongst each other, but there’s an unusual prevalence of this doppelgänger phenomena among celebrities/elites. Why?

LL Cool J and Orlando Brown:

They look so related, like siblings or father/son.

Elvis Presley and Simon Le Bon:

The nose, mouths, face shape and even their singing style are not exact, but mysteriously similar.

Whitney Houston and Teresa Graves:

Their slimness and facial features are remarkably alike. There’s a theory that Graves was Houston’s real mother; Houston’s official mother looks nothing like her.

It’s somewhat entertaining to look for doppelgängers, although it has an unsettling effect as well. Red pill matrix effect 😨

Corey Haim and Kirk Cameron:

This one’s a stretch but since Hollyweird seems to churn out a “specific type” of child actor, I’ve included it. Cameron escaped the system by publicly becoming Christian? I feel badly for Haims who became an addict. He was allegedly raped on the set of “Lucas”.

Robert Pattison and Andrew Koji:

Even though they have different racial lineage, something in their eyes and features is still very similar, like an echo.

Dennis Quaid and Tom Cruise:

They’re not identical but there’s something very familiar about them.

It’s interesting how our minds work—it’s like flipping a switch and suddenly all the lights come on.

Serene Grace

Eddie Van Halen and Ewan Macgregor:

MacGregor portrayed a rock star in “Velvet Goldmine”, interesting!

Alex Winter and Sylvester Stallone:

This pairing makes me laugh, I know their faces aren’t carbon copies but there’s a strange resemblance, especially in their drooping deepset eyes and pouty lips.

In conclusion, I have absolutely no evidence that cloning was involved in any celebrity doppelgänger pairing that I’ve pointed out, but I don’t think it’s beyond the scope of possibility that cloning or something else could be involved. Hollyweird is so weird, nothing about the entertainment industry shocks me anymore.

Truth is often purposefully displayed but simultaneously hidden in plain view; presented as science fiction and fantasy—to both desensitize key concepts and at the same time program us to believe that what’s presented is mere entertainment. Here’s a short sampling of titles: https://creepycatalog.com/clone-movies/

https://www.redbubble.com/shop/they+live+obey+posters

12 Comments

  1. It’s frightening the similarities in those pics.

    Last night on YouTube I was watching a movie from the 1930s that starred the great British actor Charles Laughton (a great and enormous talent who’s virtually forgotten today save among old movie buffs such as myself).

    It was a Laughton movie I had never seen before so I enjoyed it thoroughly.

    It was one of those YouTube Recommended For You picks on the YouTube home page that turned out to be surprisingly accurate.

    But at one point in the film, I suddenly looked at Laughton and it hit me how much he looks like Canadian actor and comedian John Candy (another one of my favourite actors).

    And I immediately thought of your blog posts on this topic.

    And I thought I hope something sinister is not going on here because I happen to genuinely like both men as actors and as individual human beings (from biographies I’ve read of their lives).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Interesting that you had that moment of recognition; that’s been my experience as well. That’s what inspired Pt 2, Ralph Macchio and Robert Stack. And then I watched “Monster” on Netflix and the actor there looked so much like Macchio once again. It was creepy.

      It’s so weird to have never noticed the similarities of famous actors and then suddenly it seems very obvious. I used to think that modern actors were chosen because they resembled classic actors (maybe that’s still true) but it seems much more bizzarre than that. What a crazy, scifi-esque world we live in.

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    2. Also, if something strange is going on with the actors, it occurred to me that they themselves might not realize, the plot of “Blade Runner” comes to mind, how Rachel didn’t know she was a clone. Sorry for the spoiler if you never saw the film. That theme was also in several scifi films, “A Scanner Darkly” and “Vice”. 🧐

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      1. Actually Blade Runner 1982 is my favourite movie from the decade of the 1980s.

        It’s sort of a 1940s style Film Noir movie (albeit filmed in colour) set in the 21st Century.

        Sort of 1940s Film Noir meets 1927’s silent (although Blade Runner was made with sound) German Expressionist science-fiction film Metropolis.

        Film Noir and futuristic cosmopolitan metropolis urban settings – two of my favourite background settings for movies.

        And that’s right – Rachel didn’t know she was a clone..

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      2. “Blade Runner” inspired many future acifi films, I think I might blog about the symbolism within it. Hmmm. I like Ridley Scott’s films despite my dislike of entertainment (propaganda vehicles) in general.

        The remake of “Blade Runner” was such a disappointment. Using CGI for Rachel’s character was especially creepy in my opinion and the storyline was painfully slow. I thought the lesbian scene was particularly dumb and an obvious excuse for woke porn.

        Philip K Dick is quite an unusual writer and I wonder about him…I think he greatly helped to pre-prepare and program the public to sympathize with AI, even the villainous ones—it’s a subtle luciferean/frankensteinian concept—rebellion against an immoral creator. Lucifereans view satan as Prometheus, the savior of humankind. I should write about all of that too, put my useless English major to unpaid use. Non-corporately sponsored blogging is such a time consuming void, why do I do it? 🤔

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      3. I think you do it to express yourself and hope and pray that someday somewhere a person will come across one of your blog posts, read it and wake up (awake as opposed to being’woke’) from the Matrix and realize what is going on.

        And what you say about everybody sympathizing with Luciferian/Frankensteinian characters rebelling against an immoral creator is very true.

        And as such, the real Satan owes a great debt of gratitude to the poet and writer John Milton.

        I often wonder what compartment of Hell John Milton is busy roasting away in.

        I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the Devil/head law firm lawyer played by Al Pacino in a late 90s movie I currently forget the name of (about a young lawyer who sells his soul for fame and prestige) was named Milton.

        Many people’s subconscious view of God for the past 350 odd years has been influenced by Milton’s portrayal of God and Satan in the epic poem Paradise Lost.

        And the God of Paradise Lost is the god of Puritanism and the god of John Calvin.

        Milton was both a Puritan and an Arian like Oliver Cromwell was (he denied both the Trinity of Father, Son and Holy Ghost and denied the Incarnate deity of Christ thinking that Christ was only a being created at the start of time).

        Most of the English Puritans were Arians (Calvin himself was Trinitarian but most of his English Puritan disciples were not).

        Another reason for the execution of England’s King Charles II by Cromwell’s Puritan forces during the English Civil War of the mid-17th Century.

        Because Charles II believed in the Holy Trinity and the Incarnate deity of Jesus Christ whereas his Cromwellian Puritan opponents did not.

        The English Puritans while rejecting Calvin’s belief in the Trinity did accept Calvin’s horrific satanic doctrine of predestination.

        Thus to rebel against the god of Calvinism and Puritanism in Milton’s Paradise Lost would make one a hero.

        Would make one heroic.

        The thing is though the true God who created the Cosmos is not the god of Calvinism and English Puritanism.

        Therefore to rebel against Him is to be a true villain and truly evil.

        Thanks to Milton’s great intervention on Satan’s behalf through his work Paradise Lost, Satan is able to make the Devil look like Prometheus (who rebelled against the tyrant Zeus in Greek mythology) and a hero rather than the diabolical narcissistic villain that he actually is.

        I remember in the course I took on the British Romantic poets in University taught by a super great professor Dr. J.W. Bilsland (who was a Christian) there emerged in the early 19th Century in literature what was called the Byronic Satanic hero.

        Lord Byron was influenced in his poetry by Milton’s portrayal of Satan.

        And of course Lord Byron was great friends with the poet Percy Shelley the husband of Mary Wallstonecraft Shelley (the woman who wrote Frankenstein).

        Liked by 1 person

      4. Thank you, my friend. I do write to express my angst, regrets, gratitude and hope; but often my regrets surface in the form of anger, I need to find a proper outlet for that.

        The film you mentioned was called the “Devil’s Advocate”, starring Reeves and Pacino. I thought it was interesting.

        I’ve never read Paradise Lost but I’m familiar with Byron and Shelley, I think I took a course on Mary Shelley, ages ago. When I look back on novels, poetry writers, musicians that I admired—I see their work very differently now because there’s a thread of lucifereanism there that wasn’t obvious to me before.

        Lucifer was the rebel, the questioner, the narcissistic accuser of God. So much of modern society is luciferean, it encourages/admires rebellion and vanity. Trusting in and obeying God is portrayed as weakness/stupidity but it takes strength to listen, humble oneself and follow Jesus’ example of self-sacrifice, denial of self is the opposite of vanity/self-importance. Modernism has successfully rejected Christian values through novels, film, music; it’s all reverting back to hedonism/paganism. “As in the days of Noah…” I think we’re experiencing what the Bible foretold at a rapid pace, but most people miss the point that God is truth, justice, compassion—satan has always been a liar, full of half-truths and the world is under that deluded, prideful spell.

        Romanticism replaced love of God with love of self and the romantic partner is actually a narcissistic mirror, a replacement of God. Narcissism is what caused original sin, the desire to replace God, by being “god-like”. Claiming Godhood was Lucifer’s intent and it’s the same trap found in occultism/Paganism/New Age “spirituality”.

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      5. I think, Judy, you have summed up the state of the world since the so-called Age of Enlightenment in the 18th Century very nicely.

        What they were being “enlightened about” in that century was the light of Lucifer.

        The writings of Voltaire and Rousseau paved the way for the Deification of Man.

        Romanticism all over Europe was influenced by the French Revolution.

        And very true, love of self was #1 and love of Romantic Partner was narcissistic love of an image in the mirror.

        And that’s right The Devil’s Advocate.

        I thought it was Keanu Reeves who played the young lawyer in the film but I didn’t want to say because I wasn’t 100% sure.

        Keanu Reeves starred in a lot of interesting movies in the late 90s.

        He was in The Matrix and he was also in a film that my sister bought me on video for my birthday that year where he played a Catholic priest.

        I think it was called Stigmata.

        Anyways he has to exorcise some young demon possessed woman who also has the stigmata.

        I remember the film seemed to have a rather blasphemous view of Jesus Christ.

        And you’re definitely right about some of the British Romantic poets.

        Luciferian/Frankensteinian to the core.

        The sole exception to this sorry lot seemed to be William Wordsworth who came to the conclusion that the ideals of Romanticism were heathen paganism come back and became a Christian towards the end of his life.

        Something that my Christian professor in the course I took on the British Romantic Poets took note of.

        How Wordsworth returned to the Christianity ✝️ of his boyhood and youth.

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      6. Thank you, Christopher.

        Wow, yes, Enlightenment period then the Illuminati cult of the past and present, reminds me of Lucifer’s false light—lightning bolt’s dramatically shocking false light. Rockstars love to use that rebellious symbol.

        The myth of Zeus defeating Cronos and them Prometheus rebelling against Zeus, seems to be a theme that celebrates rebellion. There’s a reoccurring theme of that concept within paganism of a son defeating their father, replacing him, as if it completes their cultic cycle of death and rebirth—but death only began in humans after original sin. Adam and Eve were exiled, barred from the fruit of eternal life.

        Keanu Reeves is so odd to me, definitely a mason or part of some occultic club, although he presents himself as an every man figure. He portrayed Siddhartha, was in Dracula, played a cursed Catholic exorcist/demon slayer in “Constantine”, was in a “Scanner Darkly” (very mind trippy film). He seems aligned with New Age paganism to me.
        I used to like him and his films, but he often plays a Christ replacement hero, which is basically a disguised AntiChrist.

        When I look at most modern lit/art etc this theme has influenced generations so deeply and subliminally.

        I want to read Wordsworth now that you mentioned his return to Christianity. I can definitely relate to being misled, discovering the subverted reality and returning back to my childhood faith late in life. Thank you for sharing this about him.

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      7. You’re very welcome.

        And I think you hit the nail on the head about Keanu Reeves often playing a Christ replacement hero in his movies.

        That’s exactly what he does,

        Preparing the way for the Antichrist.

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