Vatic Note: OUR CHILDREN ARE UNDER ASSAULT AND IN SERIOUS DANGER. Remember and NEVER FORGET WHO OUR REAL ENEMY IS IN THIS BATTLE OF LIGHT AND DARK. These enemies are the same ones fostering hate and fear of Muslim religion, and who are planning the third world war. Never forget who the real enemy is. Its important. The first question one has to ask is "who controls the movie and music industry"? Well, John Todd told us before who controls it, the Illuminati, and its satanic based. Remember the Sabbateans (rothschild/zionists) where "Good is evil and Evil is good". Its also in the protocols to attack the goyims children through this depraved and degrading activities to then use these addictions to control them. This is pervasive and dangerous and as parents its time to take back control of this from those sicko's running these industries. REMEMBER WHAT THEY DID WITH OUR BAILOUT MONEY. They paid $40,000 (huh? must have been perverted at that price) A NIGHT FOR PROSTITUTES IN CELEBRATION OF THEIR SUCCESS IN SCAMMING THE TAXPAYER through their perverted congress and senate. Not a single one of those that voted for that bailout should be returned to congress or senate. This MTV where a lot of this also goes on, is also run by a Zionist, Khazar. Its time to take back control of our families before we are unable to do so.
Lady GaGa = Weapon of the Illuminati Controlled Mass Media
http://www.prisonplanet.com/lady-gaga-weapon-of-the-illuminati-controlled-mass-media.html
Black Helicopter Radio
Saturday, September 4, 2010
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxjyEzfrgNo&feature=player_embedded
Lady GaGa and pop culture – it is designed to keep you nihilistic, depressed, and despiritualized! Turn away from it!
Lady Gaga IS poisoning children’s minds
By Bel Mooney, mail on line, Britian
Last updated at 10:30 PM on 12th August 2010
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1302594/Lady-Gaga-IS-poisoning-childrens-minds.html?ito=feeds-newsxml#ixzz0ya5KwOcj
Please don’t take it the wrong way when I tell you that it was Cliff Richard who introduced me to sex.
In 1958, Cliff’s single Move It (described as ‘Britain’s first rock ’n’ roll record’ by John Lennon) topped the charts, and he visited Liverpool on tour — wiggling like Elvis in his shocking pink suit.
I have no illusions as to precisely why that was so exciting. How my friends and I screamed! I was 12 years old.
Queen of sleaze: Lady Gaga conveys nasty images of overt sexuality
That memory is an important reminder that the pop industry has always thrived on sexy rebellion. The fact that my father detested Cliff for his ‘jungle music’ made it all the more thrilling for me. Why then do I sympathise with music mogul Mike Stock’s condemnation of the pornification of pop?
Because what was once rebellious is now mainstream and inescapable; what was once suggestive is now graphically explicit — and, most worryingly of all, it’s being aimed at a fan base that is getting younger and younger. (VN: and coincidentially, it coincides with the perverts putting hormones in milk to advance the age of children into puberty from 12 down to 7, so pedophiles can have more fun. You have no idea how mad this makes me.)
Stock (one third of the legendary pop factory Stock, Aitken and Waterman) has publicly attacked pop culture for prematurely ‘sexualising’ today’s children.
Inside view: Mike Stock - pictured here in his 80s hit-making heyday with colleagues Matt Aitken, centre, and Pete Waterman, right, - made stars of the likes of Kylie Minogue without resorting to overt sexualisation
He believes it’s all gone too far: ‘These days you can’t watch modern stars — such as Britney Spears or Lady Gaga — with a two-year-old. 'Now, 99 per cent of the charts is R&B and 99 per cent of that is pornography.’ If an ordinary person came out with a statement like that the critics would be quick to sneer about ‘moral panic’.
If you dare to challenge the ‘anything goes’ conventions of our society you get dismissed as a prude. But Stock is the man who launched the career of Kylie Minogue and has made his fortune from the business he’s condemning.
Even then, he obviously feels he has to defend himself in advance by adding: ‘It’s not about me being old-fashioned. It’s about keeping values that are important in the modern world.’ Can it really be as bad as he claims?
People like me don’t sit around watching pop videos because there’s no time, and anyway, they’re hardly aimed at my generation. But it’s the generation they are aimed that has caused Stock’s alarm.
I wrote an article about going to a Pussycat Dolls/Rihanna concert at Wembley in 2006, when I was amazed at the vast number of children in the audience.
Thrusting dancers: 'The Pussycat Dolls concert I attended It was a Sunday night in school term time and no place for children, let alone toddlers'
They’d been taken by their parents to see an adult show full of pumping music and thrusting dancers: raunch from start to finish.
It was a Sunday night in school term time. No place for children, let alone toddlers. With that experience in mind, I knew what to expect yesterday when — to investigate Stock’s claims — I settled down to watch a series of Lady Gaga videos on YouTube. But even I was taken aback by the relentlessness of the imagery — not just sexual, but cruel, too.
The undertones of violence are as obvious as the sex. No Romance: Gaga's videos included bondage and grotesque sexual violence, but Cher, pictured on the right in 1992, and Madonna were the mothers of pop-porn
Bad Romance contains bondage and grotesque sexual violence; Paparazzi is particularly tasteless with its references to death and disability; while Alejandro is full of jackboots, bondage and menace — culminating in a hideous gang-attack/rape on a nun-type figure. (VN: this is a parable of the attack on religion and spirituality which is at the heart of the Satanist as we have shown through our series on the subject. Once they gain control through transferance to Satan, then they control them and anything is possible after that.)
I don’t deny the theatrical impact or the professionalism of the product. No matter that the choreography is repetitive — all crotch-clutching, writhing and open-mouthed suggestiveness.
No matter that the male dancers have to be tattooed to get the job — this is, after all, rough trade. No matter that the mesmeric electro-beat is synthetic to a point of mind-numbing tedium. No matter that the lyrics reach depths such as: ‘Let’s have some fun, this beat is sick/I wanna take a ride on your disco stick.’
More...
Lady Gaga and her flaming piano: Singer sets the crowd alight as she receives plaque for 51 million singles sold
JAN MOIR: Cheryl Cole's tiny dress would look like a duvet in my size - but why don't designers make clothes that flatter real women? Children 'at risk from pop charts porn': Top producer Mike Stock blasts his own industry
The point is Lady Gaga has sold more than 15 million albums and 40 million singles worldwide. She’s a phenomenon — who knows that she must up the ante all the time in order to go on selling.
Even if it means launching yourself into a festival crowd wearing nothing but a fishnet body suit and a pair of tiny knickers, not caring who grabs you.
Sleaze and Gaga are two sides of the same coin, which wouldn’t matter if all this took place between consenting adults. But any eight-year-old can watch this stuff on the TV or computer — and they do.
‘Mothers of young children are worried because you can’t control the TV remote control,’ says Mike Stock.
‘Before children even step into school they have all these images — the pop videos and computer games, such as Grand Theft Auto — confronting them, and the parents can’t control it.’
Pop music has always used subtle sexual innuendo, but once it wasn’t de rigueur. Shock value: Britney Spears and Madonna shared an infamous kiss at the MTV awards, as performers seek ever more explicit ways to impact on audiences
Now raunchy R&B and hip-hop seem to have a stranglehold on the market, so that what used to be edgy and extreme is now the commercial mainstream. One of the results is that female singers are happy to flog themselves as sex objects.
Cher probably started it 20 years ago with the video for If I Could Turn Back Time being briefly banned on MTV because of her outrageous outfit.
Today, a minute black leather thong, buttock tattoo, fishnets and leather jacket wouldn’t turn a hair. Cher and Madonna were the ‘mothers’ of this pop-porn chic.
But how sad that nowadays if you’re a pop star (with some honourable exceptions such as Leona Lewis) you feel you have to ape the clothes and gestures of the downmarket glamour model — the cheaper the better.
Female singers seem to think that the only way to sell their albums is to flash their gussets, while looking mean, vacant and up for it. Cheryl Cole could look beautiful in a bin liner so why does she stoop to degradation?
Even Cheryl Cole (the most sexy woman in the world, according to the men’s magazine FHM) chose to perform on The X Factor wearing boots and bizarre side-split trousers that showed her knickers. Did she need to? No. Cheryl Cole would look beautiful in a boiler suit.
But such porn-fashion infects the majority of pop videos — from Katy Perry’s wide-eyed suggestiveness to Britney Spears’s tired old sleaze. And therefore it’s on the High Street.
The costumes familiar from pop videos have become (more or less) what every teen wants to wear on a Saturday night out.
Make no mistake, many young girls (and women) believe the only way to look attractive is to look sexy, and to look sexy you have to look trashy.
It’s a short step from that to behaving like, well, trash. That’s a word I intensely dislike (unless applied to the contents of the dustbin), but I use it deliberately. Sadly, many young women don’t value themselves much higher.
The messages they receive through the screen as children affect their behaviour — and anyone who suggests they don’t is ignorant of the power of advertising and the market.
Last year, a survey published in the American Journal of Preventative Medicine found that teenagers who preferred pop songs with degrading sexual references were more likely to become sexually active.
Note that the emphasis was on ‘degrading’ lyrics — which is a world away from the love (and longing) traditionally associated with pop music, as well as the naughty innuendo of Chuck Berry’s complaint, ‘I couldn’t unfasten her safety belt’ in his 1964 hit No Particular Place To Go.
The research concluded that exposure to raunchy sex in the media could certainly be a risk factor, encouraging young people to experiment sexually at a young age.
I have no doubt that those who defend the ‘message’ of Lady Gaga and the raunchy pop sisterhood will say that their videos make them look ‘powerful.’
After all, a woman made tall by platform boots, dressed in a sci-fi outfit and strutting her stuff can look as if she could rule the world.
But that’s an illusion. The artistes are controlled by a powerful management who know this is all about sexuality — while Cheryl Cole, left, joins in with the over-exposure selling an image.
A powerful female image? Or is this sexual imagery simply a demand of record company executives. And the image, handed down to ordinary young girls, is that of a very easy conquest. That message is, I’m afraid, reflected in too many statistics to bore you with here. A shocking number of young people are so accustomed to all the varieties of porn (the real stuff as well as its fashionable pop-culture spin-off) they carry its conventions through into their own behaviour.
Boys expect certain sexual ‘services’ from their girlfriends that were once the province of prostitutes. And the girls feel they have to comply — or seem hopelessly strait-laced. It’s nasty. If you have any doubts about the degrading message of popular pop videos you should look at the No 4 in the charts, Love The Way You Lie by Eminem with Rihanna. This song is an overt glamorisation of domestic violence.
The video shows a beautiful girl and a rough-looking guy locked into a destructive relationship, hitting each other, making up with lingering kisses, only to resort to aggression once more.
The ‘dialogue’ between the two singers is disturbing. What effect will it have on impressionable minds of both genders?
Lady Gaga crowd surfs at Lollapalooza Festival in Chicago, seemingly not caring who gropes her. Eminem epitomises the inarticulate, violent, macho frustration of a certain kind of man who thinks he owns his woman — and will certainly show her who is boss. He sings: ‘If she ever tries to f****** leave again/I’mma tie her to the bed and set the house on fire.’
Then Rihanna comes in with her chorus (background of flames, by the way) that responds to this aggression with: ‘That’s all right — because I like the way it hurts.’ It’s mind-boggling that a woman who was beaten up by her former boyfriend, the rapper Chris Brown, should agree to justify a woman’s victimisation. But then she does like to pose with devil’s horns on her head.
The message to girls is —– ‘Yes, he owns you and will lie to you and treat you bad, but you put up with it because you like it. Or you’ll be in trouble.’ And this is all being ‘sold’ to the fans by means of a beautifully produced video, employing the obvious talents of designers and filmmakers alike. What a criminal waste. It’s not a message I want any girls to hear. Nor do I want boys to admire Snoop Dogg’s revolting sexual bragging on Gangsta Luv — to name just one of many similar tracks.
Like Mike Stock, I wish we could turn back the clock to the time when Elvis’s fully-clothed wiggle changed the history of popular music for ever. But of course, that’s impossible. Yet I applaud this one man with influence in the music business for speaking out.
For the rest — well, I wish that the producers of music videos would realise that ‘restraint’ is not a dirty word and that selling everything by means of the nastiest sexual message has a long-term corrupting effect on the next generation.
They won’t, of course. But just don’t tell me that doesn’t matter.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1302594/Lady-Gaga-IS-poisoning-childrens-minds.html?ito=feeds-newsxml#ixzz0yZporR14
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