I noticed this picture while browsing a major German magazine today. Repitilian Eye from some Lego set.. I’ve noticed often how this and many other publications use obvious pictures like this, as well as what I consider to be linguistic hints etc. in their storys. Which obviously means the “journalists” writing them up do definitely know about the conspiracy. Shows how deepy entrenched and complicit, and guilty all of these institutions are.
Also Germany is particularly tough these days about any dissenting voices.

This is saurons eye from the lord of the rings movies, not a reptilian eye.
It’s interesting for people that are collecting the Lego lord of the rings set ups.
my lord u are lost and confused.
Those eyes in Lord of the Rings must indeed have a hidden reptilian background, since all those authors were occultists.
Read and Watch Lord of the Rings and you will understand what it is.
Tolkien and CS Lewis were not writing Christian fiction. This is a falsehood that needs to be exposed.
https://veronicaswiftblog.substack.com/p/occult-writers-jrr-tolkien-and-cs
I read the above linked article by Veronica Swift (claiming that “Tolkien and CS Lewis were not writing Christian fiction”), another one by her on the subject of CS Lewis & JRR Tolkien’s supposed occultism, which included a long post by another writer going into more detail, as well as an article by Veronica Swift called “The Catholic Church Isn’t Christian.”
Ms. Swift may perhaps be a well-intentioned Protestant researcher documenting former occultist whistleblowers of various stripes. I don’t know; I haven’t read any of her work beyond the few articles I listed above.
However, I did not find her articles on Lewis & Tolkien, or the Catholic Church, persuasive at all. They were based on non-authoritative “authorities,” misinterpretation and conflation of Christian & occult symbols, and lack of awareness of the history, leadership structure, teachings and doctrines of the 1,500-plus years of Christianity before the Protestant so-called “Reformation.”
If you are similarly unaware of the important early history of Christianity, I’d suggest starting at the website of a wonderful ex-Protestant, now Catholic Christian, Joshua Charles (who has edited a book against Freemasonry)… his website is Eternal Christendom (https://eternalchristendom.com/becoming-catholic/articles/ then scroll down to “Browse Articles by Topic”).
A blessed Advent and Merry Christmas to you & yours!
This is not just marketing. Their writings, and now the films and the games, are a way of bringing witchcraft to the masses. That explains why their works are being so heavily promoted in every way possible. This world (our days especially) is led by those who practice witchcraft, child abuse and satanism.
Though I haven’t seen the new Amazon LOTR tv series, which is surely tainted material given the production company, I disagree with the idea that JRRT or CSL were “bringing witchcraft to the masses.” At least I haven’t read or seen anything yet that makes a good argument for that idea, IMHO.
I hope my other comment on this will be approved soon.
Meanwhile, this article might be of interest: “Harry Potter vs. Gandalf: An In-Depth Analysis of the Literary Use of Magic in the Works of JK Rowling, JRR Tolkien, and CS Lewis,” by Steven D. Greydanus (http://decentfilms.com/articles/magic), a Catholic movie reviewer who is now a deacon in the Church.
He’s a normie, not aware of occult conspiracies & stuff, so he doesn’t cover that kind of evil within works like The Wizard of Oz, but in my opinion, he does make some great points about a legitimate depiction of the holy, Godly supernatural in fiction, even if it’s veiled by symbolism, versus an occultist or pagan depiction of magic/magick, superstition, & idolatry. It’s a great article!
Christian writers who are aiming for a broad modern audience, not just Christians, often need to disguise the holy, the angelic, the saintly, and the miraculous within their fiction, in order to reach their secular audience with the **deeper** truths of the Christian worldview and the gospel. I’ve heard this described as preparing the intellect, or “baptizing the imagination,” for the gospel. I’ve also heard it called “sneaking past the ‘watchful dragons’ of the secular, pagan, or atheist heart, to bring them an image of Christ and His Kingdom. That’s certainly what the works of CS Lewis and JRR Tolkien did for me when I was a secular child, then an atheist young adult, before my conversion to Catholicism.
Well I was positively fascinated with the occult after watching the original LotR trilogy. And those movies won tons of awards. That simply just doesn’t happen unless it’s pushing an agenda.
Occultism. There is no God in this world. There is no God in Tolkien’s world. There are villains and “good” magicians. But magicians are sorcerers.
I understand your reasoning, Antonia! As usual, you are the optimistical one here, cautious and always looking for the positive explanation – most of the time I am, too!
I have read ms.Swift.s article, too, and, just like you felt the need to scroll down and see other related articles written by the same author. I do not support her way of portraying catholicism, no matter how many intrusions there are in the church that are clear to the eye.
I.ve been christian for as long as I can remember. Of course I had my share of ups and downs, too. I used to be a huge movie consumer – I used to love horror movies until I got fed up with seeing so much obvious satanic stuff. The Lord of the Ring – strikes me as another movie with an agenda behind, filled with dark symbols, dark atmosphere… I find everything dark in this movie, endless, dark and hopeless.
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Anyways, as you are surely aware of it, there are many authors that are targeting children and teenagers through their writings. Often a ,,great,, movie sends the consumers to the origin – the books. People need to have the games, the movies AND the books!… the whole collection and everything related to that subject. That is when I believe a part of the ,,magic,, happens. People get used to the symbols and incorporate in their lives the real magic hidden in these works ( I am stressing the idea, again, that children and teenagers are being targeted and that they are desensitized into the occult and witchcraft). Remember Harry Potter? There is fight between good and evil in all these books, too, right? Good wizards, bad creatures… I wonder how many children already love to play the good witch/wizard and learn and exercise some ,,good innocent,, spells?
I hate spoiling the idea of good entertaining stuff, but I tend to look at the bigger picture and I cannot help seeing the trend. This is why I believe cartoons, and movies, and tv shows, music, books destined for our youngsters are promoted heavily precisely because there is a target (the youngsters) involving an agenda (looking at what happens in the world we see there is an agenda in play). Having two small children myself made me see a bit clearer what is at stake. Have you seen how many cartoons and movies with witches there are? Spells, demons, not to mention transexuals and gays in animations for children? …Anyways, take Disney for instance – he was raised in a christian background, so they say, When one looks at his tv stories one might think they are moral stories, the classic animations we all loved which portray the well-known good versus evil fight. Yet, with an aware adult eye I can now easily spot the symbols, the sexual inuendos, and I understand why they are there in the first place. Let us not forget Disney was a 33 degree mason. Who/what is his target? Children!
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In addition, I do not know what to make of these:
Tolkien and Lewis formed a friendship and were both part of The Inklings – a group of writers who met regularly to discuss philosophy, literature, and the like. However, it went deeper than that. It is believed that a fellow Inkling Charles William, introduced The Inklings to, what he called, “white witchcraft.” C.S. Lewis: ‘The pathway to God is like a hall with many doors; they all lead to God’ John Todd (an Illuminati Defector) stated the following: “Tolkien was a member, along with another gentleman I’m going to mention in a minute… both were supposed, confessed, born-again Christians. But, both were members of The Golden Dawn… that’s the Rothchild’s private church in London; it’s the oldest coven in the world. There are four Freemasons among close relatives of J. R. R. Tolkien! They were members of the United Grand Lodge of England: Henry Tolkien, John Benjamin Tolkien, Alfred Tolkien and Frank Neville Tolkien.https://tolkniety.blogspot.com/2018/04/four-freemasons-in-jrr-tolkiens-family.html
Tolkien, despite his abhorrence of the occult and the practice of it, still indiscriminately and carelessly wove many biblically-condemned occult elements throughout his narratives to enhance the pagan mystique and mythic landscape of his stories, without anticipating its immediate appeal to the adherents of Theosophy and Neo-paganism. Tolkien’s published letters and essays reveal his other missteps which do not align with Christianity: 1) the frequent veiled assertions that his myths were not invented, but “recorded” by him as revealed ancient truths, perhaps divinely inspired; and 2) his regressed ancestral memories of Atlantis which hint at a belief in both reincarnation and Plato’s imaginary “island of Atlas.” Tolkien, Hippies, and LSD
The first religious practices inspired by Tolkien’s narratives appeared in the late 1960s after the publication of a paperback edition of The Lord of the Rings in 1965. Hippies married each other in ceremonies based on the book and read passages during LSD trips in order to amplify the spiritual experience. Some readers wondered whether The Lord of the Rings was in fact a parable about Faery and joined the emerging Neo‐Pagan movement to explore the Celtic and Germanic mythologies from which Tolkien had drawn much of his inspiration. Two significant religious movements, Tolkien religion and the Elven movement, developed out of the post‐paperback fascination with Middle‐earth and consolidated after the posthumous publication of The Silmarillion in 1977https://sacredsandwich.com/2020/04/26/the-sad-truth-of-tolkien-spirituality/
For more info on the Lord of the Rings series, I found these interviews fascinating…
1) J.R.R. Tolkien’s ‘Lord of the Rings’ prophecy of coming AI tyranny uncovered
https://www.lifesitenews.com/blogs/j-r-r-tolkiens-lord-of-the-rings-prophecy-of-coming-ai-tyranny-uncovered/
2) How J.R.R. Tolkien’s ‘The Lord of the Rings’ predicted the rise of AI and gender ideology
https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/how-j-r-r-tolkiens-the-lord-of-the-rings-predicted-the-rise-of-ai-and-gender-ideology/
predicting does not necesarily imply he was against implementing this agenda.
100 years later (this is a joke, of course, since I do not believe humanity has that much time anymore) people might look back at Schwab.s ,,Grand Reset,, and think that he was a visionary and that he predicted it. Both me and you know he endorses it. He was also raised christian, but he is not. Look at his fruit!…
Under these guys’ interpretation, JRRT set the AI/digital tyranny as totally evil (depicted by Sauron, the Ring Wraiths, & the other evil-aligned characters), to be fought against at all costs even unto martyrdom, so that does heavily imply that he was against it.