Well, first thing first...
>Fact-checkers are saying this was created recently. - If so why was the creator of the short film in The Library of Congress predating the plandemic?
So I went to the library of congress and searched for the obvious title of this film, which can be seen at the beginning; "an early warning cartoon". Nada, with or without quotes, in category "film/movies" and in the "everything" category. Then I searched for "how to take over the world", same deal, nada. Tried IMDB, same deal...
Now maybe I missed it... Or maybe I got the original title wrong...
But of course... This can be a cover-up... They erased the tapes... Smartass motherfuckers...
So I went on researching that particular movie, all over the intarwebs...
Found this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5uyAgb7r2wg
>premonitory cartoon 1930 "introduce a Weaponised Influenza" "Flood Newspapers and Radio with Death" "Shut Down Shops and Churches" "Use Law Enforcement To Stifle Dissent" "Parade The Sick And the Dead" "Inject a Vaccine To Sterilise The Work shy and Euthanize the Old" "the People who Own the Banks now owns the hospitals. This is Their Plan To Own YOU"
Interesting... 1930? Hm... Not sure but well why not...
Now I wonder who's the actual author, since the movie isn't featured in the LOC, I suspect the author might not be "herblock"... Herblock was born in 1909... A tad too young for being the author of such a piece IMO, but who knows maybe he was given the opportunity to make such an anime at such a young age who knows, at 20 something, circa 1930... It's possible, I guess...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herblock#Career
>He began taking classes at the Art Institute of Chicago when he was eleven, and adopted the "Herblock" signature in high school. After graduating in 1927, he attended Lake Forest College for almost two years. Late in his second year there he was hired—after submitting some cartoons he had done in high school and college for the Evanston News-Index—to replace the Chicago Daily News' departing editorial cartoonist. He never returned to school. Block moved to Cleveland in 1933 to become the staff cartoonist for Newspaper Enterprise Association, which distributed his cartoons nationally. He won his first Pulitzer Prize in 1942, then spent two years in the Army doing cartoons and press releases. Upon discharge Block became chief editorial cartoonist for The Washington Post, where he worked until his death 55 years later.[4]
Hm.
The style reminds more of popeye btw https://youtu.be/Zq_66Su5348?t=32
And this is herblocks' style in the 30s https://pic8.co/sh/QOhQHK.jpg
I don't think that anime is authentic, definitely not from herblock. I think it's a fabrication quite frankly, too much missing pieces surrounding it to begin with for being a legit piece from herblock. The only sources referencing it are people claiming it's legit and people claiming it's fake, but you can't find it in the old stuffs collections, like popeye and such...
Thanks for digging into this. The info is helpful
(post is archived)