Don't have time to watch the 2 hour video now. But I'm curious to hear their take on the Fortress Israel narrative in World War Z.
I rewatched it recently and was specifically thinking about how Pedowood jews chose to portray Our Greatest Ally in a fictional setting of end of days & a zombie apocalypse.
Apparently the source material novel is completely different than the Brad Pitt version. So not sure if Israel is even in the OG book. IIRC, the novel has a completely different ending where Pitt's character suffers a family tragedy then joins a band of surviving freedom fighters for a last battle offensive in Moscow.
The Israel chapter in the Pedowood version seems really shoehorned. Pitt flies there on a tip from that jailed traitor spook in SK tells him it was a pure coincidence that Jerusalem just so happened to finish their 3000 year wall the very week that the zombie outbreak goes down. And after the Patient Zero narrative at the US Korea base is a bust.
The scene with the glowie in the cell at the US Korea base giving updates about how other countries like Best Korea are fareing (their Supreme Leader had millions of sets of teeth extracted to stop the outbreak), always seemed really out of place. It's definitely a MacGuffin to progress the story to visit Israel next after Korea. But the character seems so shoehorner in & out of place. Always wondered if there were deleted scenes with more backstory. Or maybe it's a holdover from the novel.
So Pitt & his pilot fly from Worst Korea to Israel (dooming the rest of his extraction team & the remaining grunts on the SK base). Israel, ironically, is full of goyim flights from Belarus & all over the world using their runways as a refuge. Israel also is allowing masses of refugees on foot through controlled screening & entry into their walled city.
Pitt then consults with some old fat Jew who IIRC, tours him around & brags that the Jews are eternal & omnipotent. Or some such.
Then, presumably ?Muslims within the city walls start doing their call to prayer via sound systems. To which the zombies react to the noise, create siegetowers zombie columns to breach the walls, then throw themselves into the Jerusalem crowds, dooming everyone, creating panic & exodus. And essentially killing off all the Jerusalem Jews & non-chosen ones alike.
The IDF is portrayed, but is mostly ineffective zombie bait. For some reason, Pedowood decided to make the composite IDF character an androgynous bald female who accompanies Pitt, gets bit, has her arm hacked off & survives to flee with Pitt on an escaping Belarussian commercial jet (which goes on to have stowaway zombies aboard, conveniently causing it to crash just outside a ?Welsh/ Scottish WHO vaccine facility that Pitt was specifically trying to locate).
The one-armed IDF foid zogbot survives the crash with Pitt and hangs around as a supporting character for the rest of the film. But no longer really does anything notable beyond dragging his injured ass to the WHO facility with the virology scientists.
The novel is vastly different from the film. There are no crossover characters or stories. The book is about a UN inspector collecting stories of the zombie war 10 years after it's end.
In the book the Isreal chapter is basically they built walls because of the 10th man declaration. It doesn't fall and Isreal and Palestine come together in peace
Yeah, now I remember the fat old Jew in the movie talking about the "10th man rule"
The 10th Man Declaration refers to a decision-making principle rooted in Israeli intelligence, developed after the surprise 1973 Yom Kippur War. It mandates that if nine individuals in a group agree on a decision or assessment, the tenth must deliberately dissent, regardless of how implausible the opposing view may seem. This role is not about personal disagreement but a structured, institutionalized form of "devil’s advocacy" to challenge consensus, uncover hidden risks, and prevent groupthink.
It still seems poorly reasoned out & a MacGuffin in the film. So they built a gazillion foot high wall for centuries because "You never know what could happen?"
Don't have time to watch the 2 hour video now. But I'm curious to hear their take on the Fortress Israel narrative in World War Z.
I rewatched it recently and was specifically thinking about how Pedowood jews chose to portray Our Greatest Ally in a fictional setting of end of days & a zombie apocalypse.
Apparently the source material novel is completely different than the Brad Pitt version. So not sure if Israel is even in the OG book. IIRC, the novel has a completely different ending where Pitt's character suffers a family tragedy then joins a band of surviving freedom fighters for a last battle offensive in Moscow.
The Israel chapter in the Pedowood version seems really shoehorned. Pitt flies there on a tip from that jailed traitor spook in SK tells him it was a pure coincidence that Jerusalem just so happened to finish their 3000 year wall the very week that the zombie outbreak goes down. And after the Patient Zero narrative at the US Korea base is a bust.
The scene with the glowie in the cell at the US Korea base giving updates about how other countries like Best Korea are fareing (their Supreme Leader had millions of sets of teeth extracted to stop the outbreak), always seemed really out of place. It's definitely a MacGuffin to progress the story to visit Israel next after Korea. But the character seems so shoehorner in & out of place. Always wondered if there were deleted scenes with more backstory. Or maybe it's a holdover from the novel.
So Pitt & his pilot fly from Worst Korea to Israel (dooming the rest of his extraction team & the remaining grunts on the SK base). Israel, ironically, is full of goyim flights from Belarus & all over the world using their runways as a refuge. Israel also is allowing masses of refugees on foot through controlled screening & entry into their walled city.
Pitt then consults with some old fat Jew who IIRC, tours him around & brags that the Jews are eternal & omnipotent. Or some such.
Then, presumably ?Muslims within the city walls start doing their call to prayer via sound systems. To which the zombies react to the noise, create siegetowers zombie columns to breach the walls, then throw themselves into the Jerusalem crowds, dooming everyone, creating panic & exodus. And essentially killing off all the Jerusalem Jews & non-chosen ones alike.
The IDF is portrayed, but is mostly ineffective zombie bait. For some reason, Pedowood decided to make the composite IDF character an androgynous bald female who accompanies Pitt, gets bit, has her arm hacked off & survives to flee with Pitt on an escaping Belarussian commercial jet (which goes on to have stowaway zombies aboard, conveniently causing it to crash just outside a ?Welsh/ Scottish WHO vaccine facility that Pitt was specifically trying to locate).
The one-armed IDF foid zogbot survives the crash with Pitt and hangs around as a supporting character for the rest of the film. But no longer really does anything notable beyond dragging his injured ass to the WHO facility with the virology scientists.
The novel is vastly different from the film. There are no crossover characters or stories. The book is about a UN inspector collecting stories of the zombie war 10 years after it's end.
In the book the Isreal chapter is basically they built walls because of the 10th man declaration. It doesn't fall and Isreal and Palestine come together in peace
Yeah, now I remember the fat old Jew in the movie talking about the "10th man rule"
It still seems poorly reasoned out & a MacGuffin in the film. So they built a gazillion foot high wall for centuries because "You never know what could happen?"
For centuries? The book covers around 50 years of time. Nothing in it is meant to last centuries.
To be fair the muslims being retarded and the jews completely useless seems accurate to me