I've generally accepted that pedogate is real, there's something odd about bloodlines and perhaps even alien/demon connections (I spent a few hours watching Bible videos and book of Enoch videos and I'm open minded enough to accept that it's possible). Mind you, I am coming at this from what I understand to be a Christian perspective.
I'm basing the following on my very vague understanding that satanic practitioners must use their symbolism to hide in plain sight. These are the assumptions I'm making as I ask the following questions. Hopefully someone who has gone far deeper down the rabbit hole than I have can connect some dots for me, because I'm confused.
So, I came across a Great Awakening thread on how Orion was not carried over from the NASA logo to the Space Force logo, because (the theory is) Orion aliens are bad guys. Let's go with that assumption for now. They also mention aliens from Draco and Sirius as being not exactly good guys.
Which of course brings me to Harry Potter. Draco and Sirius are major characters, as is Bellatrix and probably a bunch of other constellations I'm too much of a noob to recognize. The books dive into concepts like alchemy, eternal life, granting your deepest desire through the mirror, and even drinking the blood of the innocent (unicorns) to prolong life, at the expense of the soul. Clearly way too much to be a coincidence, so I'm sure someone has written a much more thorough breakdown than I have put together myself.
It's easy to believe how Rowling, a nobody, might have "sold her soul" to achieve such immediate and overwhelming fame and fortune. She then uses those symbols and allegories in her work, as plenty of other authors and musicians do.
This also brings me to Stephen King. His work is heavily based on the tarot, for example. But in Doctor Sleep, the evil soul-sucking demons prey on the youngest, the most innocent, and they make sure their victims feel as much fear as possible to make the life-sustaining soul smoke more potent. Adrenal/pineal glands, anyone? The connections are way too clear to be coincidences.
Then you have Star Wars as another example. Anakin's path to the dark side, the way he proved his dedication to Palpatine/the devil was to go and slaughter a bunch of children, which corrupted his soul and made sure he was fully dark side.
As someone who never really connected these dots before (just a mindless consumer of media) I didn't pick up on it. When I started picking up on these themes, I figured that they were a way of normalizing the ideas - The Avengers movies sure did spark a lot of discussion on whether eliminating half the population was actually a bad thing to do, for example, which is pretty horrifying when you think of how willing to accept that solution a lot of people were.
But why, then, are all the characters who do these things in books/movies portrayed as the bad guys? With the exception of Sirius from Harry Potter, who was clearly a good guy FRAMED for being a bad guy, the audience is supposed to feel that Voldemort drinking the blood of innocent unicorns is disgusting, that the creepy soul-suckers in Doctor Sleep are terrible, that Palpatine is clearly evil.
If the creators were simply trying to normalize these concepts, wouldn't they blur the lines and have the good guys use some of these powers like "It's okay as long as you're doing it for good" or something? It doesn't make sense to me.
If anyone here has thoughts or knows about things I should research to connect these dots, please let me know. I want to understand.
Yes! I have always scratched my head about that as well.