‘Upload’ Is the Latest Predictive Programming Depicting the Afterlife as Simulation – Hard Drive Selfie

by EzekielDiet.com
Posted on May 31, 2020

Ezekiel Diet Note:  If you have an Amazon Prime Video account I recommend ‘Upload’, the new Amazon Original Prime Video Series. It’s a comedy in the style of Black Mirror.

I believe the clubs (that you ain’t in) are getting the masses ready through this type of predictive programming for a new industry and spiritual deception. Upload is about a virtual reality afterlife where your mind, memory and essence are uploaded to a hard drive (you become a fragile hard drive) where you wear an avatar (in your image) and you live in perpetual bliss in a virtual reality resort with your current mind and a few catches. There are a lot of glitches in the V.R. programming and everything extra costs money. Kind of like a cruise ship vacation. You have general access to food and luxury amenities; but up to half the expenses of the cruise happen in extras and onboard excursion sales. In V.R. heaven you have to fund your lifestyle from pre-death savings, or someone still living has to underwrite your bliss and pay all the incidental costs of your “extras”. When the money runs out, the bliss runs out until you end up frozen in a white room until more funding is available.

We’re seeing more propaganda movies, programs and series about the “upload” concept for non-believers verses the promised heaven for believers in Jesus Christ and His finished work on the cross to make us part of the family. So the masses have an extra afterlife choice: 1) eternal life in heaven through Jesus Christ and be part of the family with inheritance,  or 2) temporary electronic upload to your own perpetual wonderland. As long as you or someone still alive can underwrite the cost perpetually. Choice number 2 also gets you one of these two: 3) die before the mark of the beast and receive soul death, or 4) take the mark of the beast and burn in the lake of fire for eternity; long after your hard drive selfie has crumbled to dust or burned up in the hard reset.

Is this just a new high-tech version of the old Catholic Church indulgence system of making payments for the dead? I think it went totally out of control once already. It was one of Martin Luther’s key issues in the Protestant reformation.

What happens when people become codependent on a virtual reality avatar of a dead loved one? You can have it as long as you can afford it. Maybe that’s why death is so final as designed. So people can detach and move on.

The main character, Nathan (Robbie Amell) considers himself a “Non-Denominational Charismatic Christian” by title, but he prefers a bowling alley to a V.R. chapel. So he admits he’s a fake Christian in label only, or he’s a member of a church somewhere, or his parents were Pentecostal so he must be Pentecostal. And in typical club controlled MSM style it minimizes the Christian faith to inconsequential.

I’ll have more comments later.

‘Upload’ Is the Latest Show Treating the Afterlife as Simulation

Observer, by

Greg Daniels’ new Amazon Prime Video series Upload turns the afterlife into a very familiar place. In the show, Nathan (Robbie Amell) is uploaded to a sort of Four Seasons deluxe V.R. estate after he suffers a fatal car crash. He can still call and chat with his living friends and family, but can never leave the “digital afterlife program” that serves as his version of heaven.

Upload presents a less than perfect take of the afterlife. Aside from being unable to go back to a physical body, Nathan’s seemingly perfect, high-end resort ends up playing more like a freemium game, complete with DLCs for food, clothing and loot boxes. It’s basically The Good Place by way of Parasite.

Though Upload is far from the first TV show to take place in the afterlife—that was The Good Place‘s bread and butter after all—the Greg Daniels comedy is also part of a recent wave of TV shows using computer simulations to give us a glimpse into heaven—and they usually end up about as scary and bad as you’d expect.

Read more: https://observer.com/2020/05/upload-amazon-prime-video-greg-daniels/

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