The News | Kryon – Lee Carroll | 2021

 
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Kryon – Lee Carroll
 
 
 
The video recording of this post can be viewed at the above article link or at this Vimeo video link:
The News

Instructions from Kryon

Hi everybody. I’m Lee Carroll, but you knew that already because you’re on my website or my Facebook. Let’s face it. Oh, is that a joke? Anyway, I wanted to tell you, thank you for watching this. This is one of the few Facebook Lives I do… maybe one a month or so. This is an important one. It may be a little longer than normal and it’s more of an opinion. It’s also the opinion of, and the instructions from, Kryon and the subject is “The News.”

Don’t Watch the News

Kryon has said very, very succinctly, and I have too, “Don’t watch the news.” And I want to give you the reasons why this is being said from my standpoint, and also the fact that it’s been given by Kryon, I think gives me permission to talk about it. And I know it’s controversial, but I’m going to go slow and let you know what this means.

Many have said, well, if we don’t watch the news, we’re not going to be informed, citizens. I want you to think about this. Kryon said, don’t watch the news. He didn’t say, don’t have the news. Stay tuned because this is going to be fully explained.

Power of Visuals with Music

My background before I ever got to Kryon was in media… in graphics and broadcasting. I wasn’t in front of the camera, I was behind it as a tech. So I had basically 20 years growing up and I had about 20 in that business. And then we have about 30 in this business. Don’t count them up. Okay, just don’t do it. : )

But I’ve come from this, and I know what pictures and music are designed to do. I learned about the power of visuals and music. I’m going to give you a statement. Humans tend to cognize and personalize (take it to themselves), what we see and view on a screen, whether it’s TV or a movie. It tells a story and we’re glued to it. This affects us a lot more than if we simply are reading.

Six Movies Lee Loves

This is why commercials work, and the classic example truly is movies. I want to tell you just a little bit about something. It’s so remarkable to even think about it, and I was sucked into this too. Movies rewrite history, and it’s really hard to undo.

I’m going to read six movies that I just loved. Now this will tell you a lot about me because I like these kinds of movies and they’re historic movies about not just history, but about people. And they’re involving some really good actors, and I liked them all. The Last Samurai with Tom Cruise, I love Tom Cruise. The Patriot with Mel Gibson. Braveheart with Mel Gibson, so heartfelt. This is about history, about people that actually existed. Gladiator with Russell Crowe. Now that wasn’t necessarily about a real person, but it was about a place in history that we all know. Argo, Ben Affleck. That was about the Iran issues that happened, real stories. Pearl Harbor with Ben Affleck.

They Got it All Wrong

Now I just gave you all of these six movies, and you might say, well, they’re about history that happened, and people that worked and did their thing and scenarios. They really did. Yep, they did, and they got it all wrong. Completely. Timelines are wrong, facts are wrong. People that didn’t do what they did or said what they said.

And yet I viewed them all as being accurate and true. And that’s what I take away with me is you try to tell me about something as profound as Pearl Harbor. I remember the Pearl Harbor film. I don’t remember the history book as much and they got it wrong.

Historically Inaccurate Movies

Now, if you say, what do you mean? They got it wrong, Lee. I will give you a reference. I often don’t do this, but I’m going to do it this way. There was a man named Jack Delaney, he’s from Twitter, I think. And he has a webpage. It says the 15 most historically inaccurate movies ever. So you can see these and what they did with them, and what I’m talking about by going to, ready, kryon.com/badhistory. That’s going to get you right to this article.

Here’s the point. There’s no delete key in our brain. We can’t see this movie, enjoy two hours’ worth of this and all this history, and then have a disclaimer at the end that says we didn’t mean it. I mean, it doesn’t work. We tend to cognize, believe what we see. Now, I want to give you the reverse of this as far as bad history. I want to show you how movies sometimes actually inform and change history.

Nuclear Reactor Meltdown

Back in 1979, and if you weren’t there, don’t worry, I’ll tell you about it. The China Syndrome, a very, very powerful movie with Jack Lemmon and Michael Douglas. Jack Lemmon, I think got an Academy Award for it. It’s a made-up story at the time about a nuclear reactor. It was about something in the control room that was about to be covered up. And The China Syndrome name, you probably are aware, that’s the name for a nuclear reactor going into meltdown.

All right. So that was presented to us in 1979, actually based on true occurrences we find out in control rooms in nuclear facilities. So they made a screenplay about it and they presented it. Now, this was before, way before Chernobyl. This is way before Fukushima, but what happened is really fascinating. Within days of the release of The China Syndrome film, we had an issue at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania and the result was between the film and what happened in Pennsylvania, there wasn’t one nuclear reactor built in the United States from 1977 to 2013. And they said this is the power truly of the film.

The Power of Video

Now Kryon tells us… can I just divert for a minute? Let’s talk about nuclear power because Kryon says there are far better ways to make electricity, and this statement is from Kryon. “Many times,” he said, “nuclear reactors are the most expensive and potentially dangerous steam engines on the planet.” Did you know that nuclear reactors just make steam? That’s all they do.

I have a quote I want to read by a screenwriter. His name is Frank Deasy, and it has to do with the power of video, stories, and drama. Here’s his quote. I’m reading. “As screenwriters, our work has the capacity to reach millions, if not billions. And sometimes what we do actually shifts public opinion, shapes the decision-making of powered leaders, perpetuates destructive myths, yes, or unexpectedly enlightens the culture.” That’s the power of moving pictures on a screen.

Fear-Based News

Bottom line. Stories presented with drama and music create reactions, create beliefs, no matter whether they’re true or not. The TV news media that we have in the United States is entertainment-based. It knows it, you know it, and it knows how all of this works. They’re presenting fear-based news, even though it’s often positive in some way. I mean, honestly, it’s truly fear-based.

They’re not showing the entire story. They’re not talking. Now, I want to make it clear. I’m not talking about politics, forget politics. I’m just talking about the news of the day, specifically, I would say almost anything that we would be concerned with. A virus, for instance. That’s a big one. I can tell you about it here.

Frightening Viewers

This is not a conspiracy. They’re not doing this as a conspiracy. They’re doing this for money. This has to do with the agenda of keeping sponsors and ratings and income. They compete for your eyes. The more they’re able to frighten you, the more you’re going to watch. They’ve got you.

I went to the dentist last week and she made a statement and I want to tell you what she said. She says, “In these last seven months,” she said, “since COVID-19 truly,” that would be off, that’s a year. There has been a tremendous increase in her office of clenching and grinding. That’s fear, that’s worry, that’s all anxiety.

Journalism vs. Entertainment

As bad as the pandemic is, the news media has purposely made it worse. Here’s a quote from Kryon in 2020. “More may eventually die from the fear created around the virus than from the virus itself because we know fear creates disease.”

I want you to watch for something. I think it’s already started to happen. News anchors, real journalists, after years of experience, due to the conflict between what they’ve learned and what’s happening, good journalism versus entertainment, are going to start quitting. They’re going to start moving off or retiring, or deciding they’ve stopped because they are some of the first to realize that they’re no longer journalists.

Skewing the Facts

Let me tell you what happened to me in Iceland. This is where it really started. I was in Iceland last February and COVID broke out then, so I was out of the country. And I watched this happen, many news outlets from around the Planet presented in Iceland.

And what I saw is our news media from the United States was presenting things. I was so disappointed. You know what? Where they disappointed me again, as bad as the virus was and it was on a rampage there, and we were all looking at it. And our news was only showing facts on infected and death. They had no column for recoveries, none at all.

Inaccurate Information

So the good part, if you can have any good part of this, was the fact that we were even back then at a 93% rate of recovery, but they never even showed that. There was no accurate information either.

We found out later that our seniors were mostly at risk and that the others were not near as much. Let’s protect our seniors, but it was presented back then by our news media, like the plague. I’m not telling you anything you don’t know. If you could go back and see those, and if they’d replay that, you’d see that. Again, there was no column for recovery. It was simply infection and death, and that’s what you were shown.

Select What You Want to See

No impartiality that journalists are trained to have. Bottom line, it’s still happening folks. Now, here’s my suggestion. If you want to get the news, and you want it as best you can… go to the Internet. Select your favorite news outlet service on the Internet, then read or see (they have videos), the articles that you select, that you select in the order that you select them.

You select how you want to see it without the bias of a storyteller, constructing a drama that plays in a certain sequence with carefully chosen pictures and sounds that goes right into your consciousness whether you want it to or not.

Get Your News the Right Way

Here is the plea. Be in charge of how you get your news and don’t buy into an entire scenario of marketing, entertainment scenario that wants to scare you every day basically for money.

I hope this was okay with you. I am really still disappointed with our news media. I’ve said it before. I think they should be ashamed of themselves for frightening us at a time that’s already frightening enough. I have love and compassion in my heart for all of you. Get the news, get it right. Don’t be fooled. Thank you.

Blessings,

Lee Carroll
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