People are saying that the issue of Batman, Shadow of the Bat number 48, starting with 48, predicted our current Ebola outbreak.
And let me say that this Batman series was from years ago.
Well, basically, Batman goes to a military facility that is studying Ebola, the clinch, as they call it in a comic book.
He finds that a man's there who's been accidentally infected.
I'll start off by saying I don't think that this is at all any type of prediction.
Was Ebola in a comic book?
Is there Ebola in the real world?
Yes, but that's not so much a prediction.
It's just something that's in this particular issue of Batman.
If you want to talk about this as being a prediction, you have to talk about the thousands of other Batman, comic books, Superman, comic books, Spider-Man, whatever, that had nothing to do with Ebola, if you want to talk about that as far as being any evidence of anything.
But we'll talk about something that happened interesting with Batman.
After the Sandy Hook incident, we put out an article detailing how there was a section in Gotham City that is called Sandy Hook, which is true.
That's what it's called in the movie.
People came out and they demonized us.
They said that InfoWars is saying that...
Christopher Nolan or Christian Bale or Tom Hardy was behind the Sandy Hook shooting.
We said nothing of the like.
We just said there was a section in Gotham City called Sandy Hook, which there was in that particular version of the film.
But people have pretty wide-ranging theories as to why things are going on as far as predictive programming.
And when we see this by Paul Joseph Watson last week, did the Simpsons predict the Ebola outbreak?
And if you watch the clip...
Marge presents a book to Bart that says, you know, Curious George and the Ebola outbreak.
And Paul goes on to say, you know, that's all it was.
It was a 10-second clip out of a 30-minute episode.
It's not anything to get, you know, in a tizzy about.
I wouldn't say that's predictive programming, and Paul wouldn't either.
He said it's just a part of a fictional TV series.
But there are real things we should definitely be concerned about and take into consideration as we go about the current Ebola...
I don't know if epidemic is the right word for the states, but it's definitely starting to spread.
We see 85% of nurses not trained for Ebola.
And you'll see the governor get on TV. You'll see these health professionals get on TV. There's nothing to worry about.
It will not spread.
They were saying that a couple weeks ago, but now we know that it has spread.
A recent case in Dallas over the weekend, a person in Spain has it, who knows how many other people could catch it.
And hopefully it won't be this big epidemic outside of Africa.
It's a shame that's a...
That is an epidemic there, but hopefully it will not spread.
Will it spread?
I don't know.
I just hope it won't.
But as far as curing the disease, treatment for the disease, they have these various vaccines and other things they're trying to push.
Experimental, I might add.
But really, the only thing we've found to be effective so far that I know of is blood transfusion.
So, you know, you can get some clean blood and hopefully that'll help clean you out.
You know, whether it's in Batman, whether it's in The Simpsons, you know, people will find anything anywhere.
You know, like I said, are there real-world parallels?
Certainly are, especially in video games.
You have the Black Ops video game series where they have a lot of real-world technology.
I'm not saying Black Ops is predicting any future definitive event, but same thing if you go on the internet and you type in...