The Master and Margarita, H.G.Welles and the Gothic Novel

A film with that title has been released, and of course, some Western online news portal interpreted it as an anti-Putin film. It’s funny how easy it is today to take Bulgakov or anyone else out of context and twist their meaning to pander to the Western anti-culture that has embraced satanic values—still in their crypto phase, at least, until one day when it’s too late.

Now, these satanists are preparing us to worship demons in the form of aliens. H.G. Wells and his crew had already laid the groundwork. It’s as if Gothic novels came to life and their leading characters, like Frankenstein or Dr. Jekyll, roamed the streets. Literally the same. It is possible to do it because Hollywood props and special effects can do anything—even convince us that we’re not boiling in our own pressure cooker.

If we were to ask Bulgakov what he thinks about the extracting his work out of context, who was anti-Stalinist and a White Guard supporter (which means pro-Hirst and pro-Tsar), he would probably spit on this bootlicking of the anti-Christian West—if that’s what the aforementioned film is (I haven’t watched it, but it anyway seems like a waste of time to do since we live in an age of cultural, cinematic, and political prostitution).

When we recall how The Simpsons "predict" future events (which I call conditioning through mass media to make people accept the idea that the future is "predetermined, programmed"—thus spreading defeatism and the notion that resistance is futile, especially against the machine driving us toward a slave system in which we already exist de facto, boiled like a frog), even the Gothic novel becomes a suspect.

Frankenstein is like a precursor to artificial intelligence. I can't be bothered to elaborate. The point is in the key term "remotely controlled"—that is, creating a super-soldier, a super-slave who will bow down to the Antichrist, fight for his interests, eat only the portions of food he assigned, and live in fear that at any moment he can instill punishment in case of a rebellion by taking away the daily bread. The "plan" is probably to have him save us from the nasty aliens, while the first phase is to get us to even believe they exist (refer to the appropriate episodes of The X-Files, which also introduced us to that narrative), or something like that.

It’s all essentially ridiculous. Much ado about nothing. But unfortunately, as the holy fathers tell us, Antichrist will claim many souls, which is the goal. Since people naturally seek Christ, love, peace, and dignified living, he has to pull them away from all that by gradually convincing them of the opposite—through conditioning, primarily through visual hypnosis. To achieve this, he is obviously making enormous efforts, and he seems to be in a hurry. As if he forgets that anything rushed turns out poorly.

It’s cruel and sad, considering that humanity has sunk deep into defeatism, divided between those who are for and against—but for now, these people are mixed among different nations, political affiliations, and worldviews, distracted by local conflicts, wars, and revolutions. However, it seems to me that those who refuse to see the truth will suffer because they seek a messiah in politicians, actors, and psychiatrists.

It turns out that God does not need whiners, weaklings, bootlickers, or cowards. Neither those who refuse to repent nor those who always take the path of least resistance. It seems He needs those who bravely fight against the evil within themselves, no matter how many times they are defeated. (It is human to fall, but satanic not to rise up.) That is the real battle. Evil outside of us also exists, and although we may struggle to oppose it alone, we can at least show resistance—then God will take care of the rest, especially if the innocent suffers or if someone dictates our fate using the metastasized powers of the sky infiltrated into "state institutions and NGOs."

However, without effort, there is no true knowledge. Without practice, there is no experience, and without experience, a person falls easy prey to wolves in sheep’s clothing—because without experience, there are no tools to recognize wolves in any shape. All bookish, theoretical knowledge remains in the mind, brain, and reason, while the heart remains uncultivated. That is where the greatest danger lies, for evil emerges from the heart, and this is where the battle is won or lost.

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