Film Tip Paycheck - or Time is Relative to Actions

Gegenwart

Who among you has heard of Looking Glass? It is a machine that could see quite accurately into the future until 2012. Looking Glass became known through Project Camelot via the Kerry Cassidy interview with Dan Burrisch, who worked there. Unfortunately, it is in English. Presidents, leading economists Many have been inspired there, and sometimes I think the chaos we have today partly comes from the fact that really no one knows what the future holds (except perhaps Putin) because the new 25,900-year cycle is still at the very beginning and no one can really say what will happen, not even a future machine. For those who want to know how such a machine works, I can recommend the movie Paycheck with Ben Affleck, which is from 2003 and can be found on Amazon Prime. Or on streaming sites like Filmpalast. I don’t want to say much about the plot. Just a little.

An engineer engages in industrial espionage for a lot of money and afterwards his memory is erased. But sometimes you want to remember what you have forgotten, especially when everyone wants to kill you because they believe you know something. Everyday objects can be very useful if they come from a time when the future was still known. It is a classic action crime film with a sci-fi touch. Also highly recommended for pure film enthusiasts.

And for those who haven’t read and seen everything I put out…. 2012 marked the end of the old 25,900-year cycle, which is the largest of all cycles. All smaller cycles of 7, 11, 569, 1200, or 2160 years also ended in 2012, just as at the end of every large 25,900-year cycle, so that all of history is restarted.

David Wilcock has written an entire book on the topic of time cycles, even though much is repeated; for those who have never heard of it, I can highly recommend it.

And because actions have consequences and time cycles also have fixed points that arise from actions, one can look through time. Some things are changeable, others are not. Looking Glass is one of the explanations for why one travels through time to change things because one can see the future, and if certain things in the past are changed, the future naturally changes as well. The very well-known Mandela Effect is attributed to such time travels.

If I find a good video, I will do something about the Mandela Effect; however, most explanations currently available assume a change in consciousness that alters reality. To that, I can only say that with a change in consciousness, I can indeed change the future but not the past. The concept of time travel and that it is practiced very massively is too little known for it to have already manifested in pop culture, which is why most explanations of the Mandela Effect are not useful.

Just a question to the readers: What do you think about time travel, both virtual and real?