This Is Not A Review of Newest Conspiracy Movie
I was hoping to have a comprehensive write up about the movie Old World Order that would have been released on the Stew Peters Network. Stew Peters had been teasing this film for the past week. I was hoping to give a detailed explanation on the contents of the movie and why it failed to convince me of its premise, possible even explain something that changed my views. The movie was not released so this newsletter will take a different route.
This movie has the conspiracy theory sometimes referred to as “Tartaria” or the “mud flood theory.” It proposes that there used to be an ancient empire that disappeared about a century ago and all the old buildings left behind are remnants of that civilization. Sounds like it was lazily made up, but thousands of people believe it.
Peters hosted the director Sean Hibbeler onto the Stew Peters Show last week and made promises that movie would not be censored and would exclusively show the film on his website. Peter said that the movie even runs on their own servers. Peter’s website is listed as being owned by GoDaddy.
Sean Hibbeler has already made a series of movies about his beliefs that the world is flat. In preparation for the release of Old World Order, I watched all 3 of his flat Earth movies as well as his short documentary about the fires in Maui being caused by Direct Energy Weapons. I was not convinced by any of these movies. In Leveled, the film proposes that the scientific community asking for proof that the world is flat needed to prove that world was a globe. Honestly, I found these movies to be comical not informative.
Peters has already released a series of movies that I refer to as the Stew-matic Universe. The most famous movie is Died Suddenly which proposes that millions of people have died as a result of the COVID vaccines. I find it important to note that some people have been seriously affect by vaccines, but the number of lives saved from Covid vaccines is significantly greater. This movie has been widely debunked, but I believe this movie might be one of his movies closest to reality, this is not a compliment to Died Suddenly but rather an insult to every other movie.
Other movies include These Little Ones about how Child Protective Services is abducting children for satanic sacrifice. One of the subjects of the movie is Diego Rodriguez who has since be found at fault for defamation related to his accusations in the movie. Another movie is Watch the Water which has a chiropractor claiming that COVID isn't real, and people are just getting sick from snake venom in the water.
The theme with all of the content is that most of what comes from the Stew Peters Network is not true. In fact, most of the arguments being presented are at war with reality. Which is why I was so interested in watching Old World Order. This is a movie that contends that human history prior to the 20th century has been fabricated. His audience primed to disregard anything from a fact checker.
When I watched a preview, Hibbeler talked about how people were told that fires destroyed entire cities. On the screen flashed the painting of the Fall of Richmond. A painting that depicts a fire destroying many buildings in Richmond in 1865.
This made me more excited than anything else involved with the movie because if the fire was inaccurate history, then that meant the Civil War never happened. I began to think of how American history would not be true. That America was not founded by George Washington like in the history book but instead the remnants of the Tartarian empire. How could this movie explain this?
Then it dawned on me, Stew Peters is extremely Christian. Every episode starts off with “I gave this show to God.” How would he explain the Bible and Jesus Christ if all of history is manufactured?
Last year Hibbeler appeared in Shots Fired with Deanna Lorraine (part of the Stew Peters Network.) Hibbeler said that he believed that religion was fake. Shocked that kept him in Peters orbit.
On Saturday, Stew Peters posted a video with an emergency alarm and the text that read, “The release date for ‘Old World Order’ has been delayed. The Stew Peters servers have been compromised! Please give us your patience as we try and figure out a solution. They do not want this video to be released. Please stay tuned for further updates.”
I refuse to take Stew Peters on his word with that disclaimer. But I continued to watch more Stew Peters this weekend.
I watch the Stew Peters Show every day. I began about a year ago when I worried about a friend being blamed for a mass shooting like with Alex Jones and Sandy Hook. I watched to make sure my friend was not mentioned by name, and I have stopped since. It's an extremely nauseating show but I have gotten used to it.
Peters does basically two things. The first is accuse just about everything of being “fake.” The nation of Ukraine, Michelle Obama, and every election are all fake in his world. The second thing is that everyone will face extreme accountability. Anthony Fauci, Taylor Swift, and supportive parents of trans children should he convicted and sentenced to death in his mind.
On Friday, Stew Peters had a surprise appearance on the YouTube and Rumble show Fresh and Fit. Fresh and Fit is a show for weirdo guys that got into the culture of Red Pill, Manosphere, ect. Like a wacky morning talk radio show but the hosts are misogynist. The second half of the show has a roundtable with women mixed in with the guest where the women are subject to constant insults.
This was an opportunity to watch him be questioned about life. I was almost able to see the tangible lies he was telling. For example, Peters said that he never takes money for a speaking engagement. However, Peters was paid $100,000 by Freedom Law School to speak (even though he was a no show.) Peters said he does not charge for his videos, but his website has premium content for $10 a month.
On Monday, I watched his regular show with no mention of the delayed movie except that he still ran the trailer for the movie. The movie is just like the Tartarian empire, I can only guess what it was like but likely never existed.