By Sabin Geyman “Elysium” is yet another tired entry in the barrage of anti-American, anti-Christian sci-fi movies to have dazzled unsuspecting young minds in recent years. It comes courtesy of Director Neil Blomkamp, a South African–Canadian (foreigner) who, according to Examiner.com, does not like that Americans shine floodlights across the border into Tijuana, Mexico, and […]
Man of Steel, Lying Wonders, and Greasing the Skids for an Anti-American, Anti-Church, Antichrist World Order
By Sabin Geyman In the occult movie “Man of Steel,” Superman’s earth dad says “he’s the answer,” and Superman himself tells Lois Lane that he can “do things that other people can’t.” Superman’s Kryptonian mother, who floats around in an oracular bubble and is known as Lady Laura, says there is no refuge but that […]
“Into Darkness”: A Tableau for America’s Moral, Political, and Intellectual Floundering
By Sabin Geyman The movie “Star Trek: Into Darkness” is an exercise in disjointed storytelling, mind-numbing action, and occult symbology. I like a story that is going somewhere—but it doesn’t have to go light-years away, and it doesn’t have to linger in the darkness, to get my attention. The sci-fi genre has always been dubious […]
“Oblivion,” Tetrahedrons, and Other Dark Symbols
By Sabin Geyman Years ago, “Swiss Family Robinson” was an action movie, and it was quite delightful and relatively clean. Nowadays, action often drifts into the sci-fi camp and audiences are treated to any number of unsettling and bleak futuristic scenarios. In “Oblivion,” much of America has been decimated through a series of […]
Reflections on Michael Savage’s ‘A Time for War’
By Sabin Geyman In A Time for War, Michael Savage’s wake-up call about the Communist Chinese threat to America, the ethno-botanist-turned-radio-host serves up an absorbing story of civilization-butting intrigue. In a nutshell, the point of the story, based largely in fact, is that the Chinese Communists (Chicoms) are not so much a potential threat as […]
Privacy Translates to Personal Security and National Security
By Sabin Geyman In the wake of electronic innovations, we have enjoyed many conveniences. But I miss the time when I could answer the rotary phone that was attached to the wall and be confident that no one was listening to my calls. And I really miss the (pre-Kissinger) days when American industry was tops and […]