To address your first question, yes it’s based on real events and experiences of Tim Ballard and his fight against child trafficking. Some of the footage and photos in the film are from real life raids or recorded abductions.
To answer your second question, it is an above average action film with fantastic performances and story. The reason the left hates this film is because:
A decent amount of people involved in the film are outspoken and devout: Catholics, Evangelicals, and other Christian denominations.
Tim Ballard initially refused to condemn QAnon. His point wasn’t that the conspiracy was real but that the theory was helping to make people aware of child trafficking. He suggested organizations opposed to child trafficking should reach out to believers of QAnon, get them straightened out on the reality of child trafficking, and recruit them to join the fight to stop it. For this entirely reasonable position, he was smeared as a Nazi, alt right, istaphobe and shit on for about a month.
And this one is fucking mind boggling, he was criticized by other organizations for being “too aggressive and violent” when raiding trafficking compounds, for a variety of reasons too pants shittingly retarded to list out.
This final one is just my opinion but I’d say that given what we know about Hollywood and DC, a lot of them are complicit or active participants in this shit, so the additional attention to the subject makes them a bit nervous. They’re rightfully worried normies are going to start putting 2 and 2 together, and that’s when these people at best end up in jail, if not lynched by an angry mob.
QAnon when it first hit the media and started to get passed around Facebook, was essentially a deluded version of Pizzagate. Yeah, anyone on the net regularly knew they were different things but since when have normies or the media ever done the most basic of research? They also made a point of disseminating videos and interviews of clearly uneducated or unhinged people, that by the point your average grandma on Facebook found out about it, the plausible information had been buried under a lot of hysteria, a phenomenon which I am skeptical was entirely organic vs people creating a smoke screen to make sure nothing close to the truth makes it to the masses.
Anyway, Ballard broke ranks by saying that rather than mock or dismiss people, let’s get them involved and pointed in the right direction. For this completely logical and nonpartisan response, he was incessantly attacked by media and other anti-trafficking organizations. Which I’m totally confident had nothing to do with him being a conservative Christian and the majority of other organizations (secular and religious) being ran by leftwing women /s.
It’s a true story right? I watched his interview on Huckabee this past Saturday. Have you seen it yet?
To address your first question, yes it’s based on real events and experiences of Tim Ballard and his fight against child trafficking. Some of the footage and photos in the film are from real life raids or recorded abductions.
To answer your second question, it is an above average action film with fantastic performances and story. The reason the left hates this film is because:
A decent amount of people involved in the film are outspoken and devout: Catholics, Evangelicals, and other Christian denominations.
Tim Ballard initially refused to condemn QAnon. His point wasn’t that the conspiracy was real but that the theory was helping to make people aware of child trafficking. He suggested organizations opposed to child trafficking should reach out to believers of QAnon, get them straightened out on the reality of child trafficking, and recruit them to join the fight to stop it. For this entirely reasonable position, he was smeared as a Nazi, alt right, istaphobe and shit on for about a month.
And this one is fucking mind boggling, he was criticized by other organizations for being “too aggressive and violent” when raiding trafficking compounds, for a variety of reasons too pants shittingly retarded to list out.
This final one is just my opinion but I’d say that given what we know about Hollywood and DC, a lot of them are complicit or active participants in this shit, so the additional attention to the subject makes them a bit nervous. They’re rightfully worried normies are going to start putting 2 and 2 together, and that’s when these people at best end up in jail, if not lynched by an angry mob.
QAnon when it first hit the media and started to get passed around Facebook, was essentially a deluded version of Pizzagate. Yeah, anyone on the net regularly knew they were different things but since when have normies or the media ever done the most basic of research? They also made a point of disseminating videos and interviews of clearly uneducated or unhinged people, that by the point your average grandma on Facebook found out about it, the plausible information had been buried under a lot of hysteria, a phenomenon which I am skeptical was entirely organic vs people creating a smoke screen to make sure nothing close to the truth makes it to the masses.
Anyway, Ballard broke ranks by saying that rather than mock or dismiss people, let’s get them involved and pointed in the right direction. For this completely logical and nonpartisan response, he was incessantly attacked by media and other anti-trafficking organizations. Which I’m totally confident had nothing to do with him being a conservative Christian and the majority of other organizations (secular and religious) being ran by leftwing women /s.