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Yesterday’s Dystopia Is Today’s Reality Show

The truth is out there, just dressed as a joke to keep you distracted.

Here’s the trick: they don’t hide the truth—they broadcast it. They flood you with it. Wrapped in fiction. Drenched in entertainment. So that when it actually happens, you’re too numb, too conditioned, or too distracted to care.

That’s predictive programming. They show you what’s coming. Not to warn you. But to make sure you won’t resist.

When The Matrix told you the world was fake, you called it science-fiction. When Contagion played out a global pandemic, you said, “Weird coincidence.” When Don’t Look Up mocked mass denial, you laughed and moved on. When films whisper about underground bases, collapsing cores, planetary resets, hidden watergates under Antarctica—you eat your popcorn and forget.

They seed the truth before it happens. So your mind files it under “not real.” Then when it hits, you feel déjà vu—not rage. It’s not preparation. It’s pre-acceptance.

Your subconscious recognizes it. But your conscious mind has been trained to roll over and say: “Yeah, this feels familiar.” And familiarity kills resistance.

They call it storytelling. It’s psychological warfare.

Because if they show it, and you don’t speak out, don’t question, don’t act—then in their eyes, you agreed. Silence becomes consent. Even if that silence was programmed.

You’re not being warned. You’re being anesthetized.

So next time a film hits a nerve—next time your gut says, “Wait... this feels too real...” don’t laugh. Don’t scroll or dismiss it. Ask why they want you desensitized. Ask what they’re making you ready for. And ask yourself: What else have I already accepted... without even knowing it?

— Wout