The Truth About “The X-Files”
One of the most accurate assessments ever offered by a government official came when FCC chairman Newton Minow’s described television as a “vast wasteland,” a depiction that has, generally speaking, grown only more accurate since Minow spoke those words in 1961. Today, most programs on television are either vapid or subversive of traditional values—or sometimes both. Rare indeed have been programs of exceptional quality, rarer still those that dissented from the liberal consensus of the day.
One of the few programs in recent years that managed to offer quality entertainment while also suggesting that the Left might not be right was ”The X-Files.” The series went off the air in 2002 after a nine-year run, but is still being rerun and might gain a new generation of fans through the release this Friday of the second “X-Files” movie, “I Want to Believe,” which I am eagerly looking forward to. I only regret that I will not be able to hear the thoughtful analysis of the film from a man I had the pleasure of discussing many of the show’s episodes with, and who would always ask to borrow the tape I made of any installment he happened to miss, the great conservative writer and thinker Sam Francis.
Sam was a knowledgeable fan of science fiction and horror, and he recognized “The X-Files” as a superior example of the genre. The show was consistently well acted, and featured intelligent, well-written stories, and production values equivalent to those of most feature films. The series’s central characters, FBI agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully (played by David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson), were attractive, intelligent, enterprising, and likable, and the supporting cast was superb as well. These were the principal virtues of the series, which could be enjoyed by people of all political persuasions.
But there were hints in “The X-Files” of a worldview far closer to paleoconservatism than is generally found in anything emanating from Hollywood. Sam had in fact been put off by the liberal plot lines he found in other fine examples of television science fiction, such as the “Twilight Zone” or the original “Star Trek.” Unlike those series, “The X-Files” had a certain conservative sensibility, offering no vision of “utopia” or even progress in the human condition. It’s telling that the first “X-Files” movie bore the reactionary title “Fight the Future.”
Rather than guiding the way to a brighter tomorrow, Mulder and Scully face the same fundamental problems human beings have always faced, including the persistence of evil. The aliens and monsters who appeared in so many episodes were not benevolent or even misunderstood but implacable foes who needed to be stopped. There was no hint of moral relativism: The serial killer Donnie Pfaster is shown morphing into a demon or other serial killers as he goes about his work, and those who misunderstand the nature of evil get what they deserve. In the first season episode “Tooms,” a social worker accepts a serial killer’s claim that Mulder had brutalized him, and then attempts to befriend him, only to become the killer’s next victim. And almost every episode featured the tagline “The Truth Is Out There,” meaning not only that the truth might be found in unusual places but that there was in fact an objective truth that could be found, despite what the postmodernists want us to believe.
A recurrent theme of the show was that the government can not be trusted. Mulder and Scully weren’t just chasing dangerous aliens but aliens in league with a conspiracy in the federal government and United Nations. The conspiracy is willing to do anything to further its objectives, including killing, lying, and engaging in massive surveillance of the American people. “The X-Files” gave new meaning to the derisive slogan, “We’re from the government, and we’re here to help.” There were episodes devoted to government attempts at mind control, government use of bioweapons against its own citizens, and government medical experiments on unwitting Americans.
As Scott Richert put it in “Us vs. Them,” from Chronicles in ’97, “The X-Files” achieved success “not because of any popular fascination with aliens, but because, after Ruby Ridge, Waco, Whitewater, Vince Foster, Mena, NAFTA, and GATT, Americans have every reason to believe that their government is being run with a callous disregard for their rights and welfare and for the enrichment of an entrenched ruling class.” In fact, as Richert noted in that article, the show even featured an episode, “Unrequited,” that showed the members of a right-wing militia as being both heroic—they had rescued MIAs left behind in southeast Asia by the government—and truthful—the militia leader is the only one who tells Mulder and Scully about the assassin who’s killing the military officers who had signed off on the decision to abandon him and his comrades in Vietnam. How many other TV shows ever cast a militiaman in a positive light?
Bill Clinton once affirmed that you could not both love your country and hate your government, a remark Sam observed was worthy of Brezhnev. It’s obvious why Sam was such fan of “The X-Files.”
However distrustful Mulder and Scully were of the government for which they worked, they never lost faith in America. Scully was the dutiful daughter of a Navy officer, and the boss and protector of Mulder and Scully at the FBI, Walter Skinner, was a proud Marine veteran of Vietnam. (Sam thought it significant that Mulder and Scully worked for the FBI, a bastion of Middle America, rather than the far more elitist CIA). That there is no contradiction between distrusting the government and loving America was brought home in “Jump the Shark,” the final episode featuring the Lone Gunmen, three freelance conspiracy theorists who kept tabs on government misdeeds and often aided Mulder and Scully.
In “Jump the Shark,” the three freely sacrifice their lives to stop a terrorist intent on unleashing a biological weapon and killing thousands of innocent people, causing one of their former adversaries who had worked with the conspiracy to describe them as “patriots” and prompting Skinner to “pull some strings” and get the trio buried at Arlington. As Scully observes at the burial, “like everyone buried here, the world’s a better place for their having been in it.” The love for America evident in those lines is as genuine as the distrust of the government.
“The X-Files” was also largely (though not entirely) devoid of the leftist themes that regularly appear in so much popular entertainment, such as a focus on the glories of multiculturalism and the evils of discrimination. In fact, the show eschewed the de rigueur multiculturalism which dictates that every scene (except ones depicting villains) be carefully integrated and that minorities show up as computer geniuses and the like in vastly greater numbers than in the real world. In many, perhaps most, of the show’s episodes all the characters were white, the minority characters who appeared in the show, just like the white characters, ranged the gamut from the morally ambiguous (Deputy Director Kersh, Mulder’s informant “X") to the heroic (Agent Reyes), and there were no anguished discussions about race or discrimination.
What the series showed in terms of encounters between the established American culture and immigrant cultures also deviated from the standard multiculturalist script in which Americans are either oppressing immigrants or being enriched by them. In “Hell Money,” a Chinese doctor exploits his fellow immigrants by running a rigged lottery in which no one ever wins, but the losers end up being operated on and eventually killed so that their organs can be sold for profit. Even when the lottery is exposed as a fraud, the doctor evades justice because none of the immigrants are willing to testify against him. And a very sympathetic immigrant who has participated in the lottery in the hopes of earning money to treat his daughter’s leukemia (and loses an eye for his efforts) asks his daughter, “Do our ancestors scorn us for leaving our home? Is that why you are sick now?”
Although the immigrant father in “Hell Money” stays in Chinatown, other “X-Files” immigrants do indeed defy standard Hollywood protocol and decide to return home. In “Fresh Bones,” the problem is caused by a Marine colonel overseeing a refugee camp for Haitians. The colonel fully embraces multiculturalism to the point of becoming a practitioner of voodoo and actually holds the Haitians in North Carolina against their will until the leading priest reveals all his secrets. The problem is solved when the Haitians return to Haiti, after the colonel loses a voodoo contest with the Haitians’ leader and ends up buried alive.
In “El Mundo Gira,” Eladio Buente, a Mexican farmworker in California is exposed to an extraterrestrial enzyme and begins to spread a disease that kills on contact. He is ostracized by his fellow illegal immigrants as “El Chupacabra,” a Mexican monster in which the immigrants fervently believe. For most of the episode, Buente is also being pursued by a brother seeking vengeance for Buente’s first victim, a woman loved by both men. None of his fellow immigrants is willing to protect him from his brother—even an ostensibly assimilated Mexican-American INS agent—because they all believe that “God curses a man who stands between two brothers.” Like the Haitians in “Fresh Bones,” Buente sees his salvation in returning to his homeland for good. “Diversity is strength,” as we all know, but it’s also clannishness and suspicion of outsiders, voodoo and superstition, and blood feuds.
“The X-Files” was largely silent on the hot button issues of the culture wars, but there were intriguing hints that once again the show’s sympathies were not with the Left. In “Colony,” Mulder and Scully investigate the deaths of abortionists who are not being killed by radical pro-lifers but by an alien bounty hunter. The aliens are using the fetal tissue gathered in this grisly trade to attempt to create an alien-human hybrid that will further their plans to colonize the Earth. The conspiracy, too, is working on creating transhuman hybrids, and for this reason one of its leading members is shown in “Redux II” watching with approval as Iowa Democratic Senator Tom Harkin describes as futile any effort to stop human cloning.
Then there’s the subject of sex, sex, sex—a topic to which much of our popular entertainment devotes endless hours and which “The X-Files” virtually ignored. The friendship between Mulder and Scully did not become a physical relationship until they had worked side by side with each other for many years, and even then the exact nature of their relationship was somewhat mysterious. It was as if each character was on a quest for the truth, and nothing else could take precedence—a chivalric ideal within a culture of “if it feels good, do it!”
This ideal was in fact realized in the case of the Lone Gunmen. In the episode “Three of a Kind,” their leader, John Fitzgerald Byers, is shown dreaming about what life would be like if he were married to Susanne Modeski, a woman he has fantasized about since meeting her nearly a decade before. At the end of the episode, Byers is given the chance to go off with Modeski but, fearing that he would endanger Modeski and not wanting to abandon his friends and their own quest for the truth, he declines to follow the woman he loves, a kind of choice that would have made perfect sense to a member of the Templars or the Hospitallers but that is exceedingly rare in today’s culture.
Perhaps the clearest conservative themes in “The X-Files” emerged in connection with religion. Scully’s Catholicism was the focus of several episodes, and she was depicted as a woman of sincere faith, if not a consistent churchgoer. Two episodes show Scully in the confessional, once after saving a boy who is a stigmatic from a man who was in league with the devil, and again after helping to thwart the devil from taking the souls of four teenage girls, whom Scully comes to believe had been sired by an angel. It’s doubtful a leftist show would ever feature the devil as a real character. It’s even less likely it would depict him occupying the professions he did when he appeared on “The X-Files”: a high school biology teacher (“Die Hand Die Verletzt”), a social worker (“All Souls”), and a liberal Protestant minister who advocates tolerance and opposes fundamentalism (“Signs & Wonders”).
“Signs & Wonders” might be the most reactionary episode in the entire series. Mulder and Scully go to rural Tennessee to investigate a murder, and they immediately begin to suspect Enoch O’Connor, a snake-handling fundamentalist preacher who expelled his daughter and her boyfriend from his congregation when she became pregnant. (Interestingly, in addition to sharing the same last name as the great Southern writer Flannery O’Connor, Enoch has the same first name as a character in O’Connor’s novel Wise Blood and wears old-fashioned glasses reminiscent of the type worn by the writer). When Scully complains to Mulder about O’Connor’s “intolerance,” he replies, “Sometimes a little intolerance can be a welcome thing. Clear cut right and wrong, hard and fast rules, no shades of gray.”
O’Connor’s opponent in the town is a liberal Protestant minister, whose church encourages members to “think for themselves” and “live [their lives] the way [they] want,” and which offers an “open and modern way . . .of looking at God.” Despite the attractiveness of the liberal minister and the rough edges of his fundamentalist counterpart, Mulder and Scully learn in the end that the murders have been committed by the liberal minister to discredit his fundamentalist rival, and the viewer learns that the liberal minister—who disappeared from Tennessee only to become the pastor of a church in liberal Connecticut—is the devil. Sam felt that no other series on TV would have produced an episode that so perfectly transgressed the norms of the liberal Zeitgeist, in which “tolerance” is the supreme good and any Christian who takes the traditions of his own faith too seriously is treated with suspicion at best or hostility at worse.
The religious theme became more explicit in “The Truth,” the final episode of the series. The series ends with Mulder and Scully on the run from the conspiracy and its friends in the government, hiding in a hotel room in New Mexico. These are the final lines spoken in the series:
Scully: “You’ve always said that you want to believe. But believe in what Mulder? If this is the truth that you’ve been looking for, then what is there to believe in?
Mulder: “I want to believe that the dead are not lost to us. That they speak to us as part of something greater than us—greater than any alien force. And if you and I are powerless now, I want to believe that if we listen, to what’s speaking, it can give us the power to save ourselves.”
Scully: “Then we believe the same thing.”
Mulder: “Maybe there’s hope.”
Lest the viewer have any doubt about what is being discussed, the camera zooms in on the tiny gold cross Scully has worn throughout the series. In discussing this ending with Sam, he told me that it contained the most pro-Christian sentiment he had seen in a mainstream television show in some years. “The X-Files” was hardly an apology for orthodox Christianity, and it explored many ways of believing, but its respect for belief certainly encompassed the Western traditions.
It appears that “I Want to Believe” may delve into some of these same themes. The tagline for the movie in its theatrical trailer is “To find the truth you must believe,” which is not that different from Anselm’s credo ut intelligam. But even if my guess about the movie is wrong, and Mulder and Scully end up embracing every leftist shibboleth imaginable, the original series will still continue rewarding intelligent viewers who give it a try, particularly those viewers who believe that the truth is out there, somewhere off to the right.
Tom Piatak is a contributing editor to Taki’s Magazine.
Comments
Mr. Piatak, what did you think of the short-lived spin-off, Millenium?
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Interesting article, but you failed to mention Chris Carter’s most extraordinary premonition of the truth and of the workings of the American government. An episode of the short-lived, spin-off series The Lone Gunmen, which aired in early 2001, depicted the hijacking of a Boeing aitrcraft by remote control and its deliberate crashing into the World Trade Center Towers. An act that is then used as a pretext for declaring war on foreign dictators.
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Outstanding article. The X-Files was full of characters that resemble 1st century Christian martyrs - their commitment to their beliefs dominated their decisions and actions. These characters are contrasted with “moderns” who are more concerned with personal gain. The world view of a martyr baffles the modern mind. Self-sacrifice is just not “cool” (or profitable). I pray for the gift of faith that will allow me to be more like the Lone Gunmen (and St. Stephen) because the Truth is out there and the Kingdom is at hand.
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Great article. Personally I prefered X-Files creator Chris Carter’s Millennium series with its dark view of human nature and excellent acting by Lance Henriksen. Despite a few episodes that drifted into gnosticism and DaVinci Code territory it is well worth checking out.
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I miss the X-files! It is by far my favorite TV show of all time. The characters were both endearing and enduring. Most shows on TV are too simplistic and too liberal. Most shows today simply reflect the liberal media and champion their cause. The X-files is timeless, championing classic reasoning and solid viewpoints, not fly-by-night poll taking. I love the overall Christian theme, and the respectful treatment of the Catholic faith. The X-files was also a show that I could watch with my older children, it showed good and evil and there was no confusion between the two.
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Mr. Piatak,
Thanks for the insight into Dr. Francis’ thinking (something, sadly, we can’t get much of anymore).
I always thought the “Alien” movies were less liberal( I wouldn’t call them conservative) than “Star Trek.” Mankind still had a fallen nature in the Alien movies. Sex and race still mattered and could be a source of friction in those movies. There was still such a thing as “illegal alien” (Private Vasquez in the 2nd movie) in the future and the Sigorney Weaver character was tough but had to be rescued from an attempted rape by a male prisoner in the 3rd movie. Her femininity was contrasted with the masculinity of the prisoners in some important scenes in the 3rd movie.
The whole Star Trek world seemed so sterile and perfected. The “Alien” world had dark, leaky spaceships with wires poking out everywhere and sweaty, stinky-looking main characters, etc.
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Excellent article, Mr. Piatak. I never watched the X-Files while it was originally on - I had a couple of friends who really liked it but were also the type to dress up for Star Trek conventions, so I assumed the show was just for hardcore geeks. But you’ve definitely sparked my interest in it, both for its quality and for its underlying message.
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Hi Tom -
Wonderful piece!
You do a terrific job of highlighting those episodes that were, in fact, my favorites. You walked me down memory lane to a certain degree, and I thank you.
It’s a real pleasure knowing you, Scott, and Dr. Francis all have/had a soft spot of a very good T.V. program.
I had a wish no so long ago: that Chris Carter would have produced more programs in the same or similar vein as X-Files and Millennium. But then again, in most instances, quantity compromises quality, so I’m fine with enjoying these two programs, and your excellent exegesis.
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Presumably Tom is aware of the commentaries on the X Files done by Paul Cantor, a right-leaning
libertarian professor of English at the University of Virginia. Cantor wrote his work about ten years
ago but like Tom, was impressed by the hard-hitting questions raised by the series. What he did not
find in the earlier series, however, was the unambiguously traditionalist intent that Tom uncovers
in these latest installments.
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This is yet another excellent and well-written article of the kind we’ve come to expect from Tom Piatak. In 1961, Newton Minow’s darkest nightmares could not begin to predict how truly awful his “vast wasteland” of television could become. “The X-Files” remains an oasis of inspirational and thought-provoking entertainment. It lends credence to Mr. Minow’s other characterization of television in another part of his same speech: “When television is good, nothing—not the theater, not the magazines or newspapers—nothing is better.” Fight the future! The Truth is out there!
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One of the things I liked most about X-Files and the outstanding Millennium (seasons 1 and 2), and lets not forget about the equally good but even more ignored Harsh Realm, is that they did not make me think about politics. These shows were “objective”, the story was what mattered, not social engineering, not some affirmative action casting (for the most part), not making alternative lifestyles the norm, not trying to manipulate the audiences emotions, not the offensive insults to men and Caucasians that we have to endure daily on TV, especially from the satanic mouse network.
These shows created a space to lose oneself, to admire the art of the creators, to eagerly anticipate the next episode. Not to mention the astonishing influence this show had. As soon as it was cancelled, the whole paranormal/ alien mania was over.
Sure, it showed the corruption of government as a whole and at the same time gave us hope that good individuals within it would have the courage to do what is right- something we don’t see nearly enough these days. It was also reverential toward religion which was very apparent.
Thanks for pointing these political aspects out. Just another reason to like Chris Carter’s work.
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Just an absolutely great essay from a fellow Ohioan.
My kids and I watched X Files every Sunday night. It was the music, at the opening, that hooked you. You just knew something very weird was about to happen.
And, speaking of anti-liberal, what about the Smoking Man! That dude was doing Chesterfields on prime time!
Great piece!
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I did miss it - I confess, I was a ‘religious’ viewer of the show.
What I liked about the themes, even if it may have ‘leaned’ right in some sense, it was never in your face. If it had been I may have been annoyed by it just the same as your typical liberal drama show. It felt like it had no agenda..just a great show, great story telling with an under layer of truth to it. It may have ‘jumped the shark’ about the time Mulder left, but it is still one of my favorites.
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I much preferred the “monster of the week” episodes to the grand conspiracy arc. The X-Files
was one of those rare shows that regularly took the characters out of the cities and into
small towns and the countryside. Scully and Mulder visited forests, deserts, Indian reservations, ranches, Appalachia, dairy country, the New Jersey Pine Bottoms, etc., etc.
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Ian (2nd comment) recalls Chris Carter’s “premonition”. In fact, it may have been the inspiration for the 9/11 attacks on the WTC. Terrorists watch television and movies!
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“it may have been the inspiration for the 9/11 attacks on the WTC”
No way Kenny. The preparations for an attack like that on 911 would have taken years and not a few months. My comment was somewhat tongue-in-cheek. In fact, Carter’s premonition may not have been quite as amazing as it seems at face value. Contrary to the blatant lie told by Condoleezza Rice (to the effect that no one could have imagined that hijacked planes would be deliberately flown into the WTC towers), such a scenario had been modelled by the US military many years prior and had been the subject of various emergency services drills. Carter’s episode of The Lone Gunmen did, however, add some nice touches: the idea of hijacking planes by remote control (probably what did happen on 911) and the idea of using it as a pretext for declaring war on foreign dictators (what did happen).
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Who’d have guessed an article about The X-Files would unearth a Loose Change conspiracy theorist? :-)
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Thanks for the comments--it’s fun to hear from other conservative fans of the X-Files. In response to Mr. Chan’s questions, unfortunately I did not watch many “Millennium” episodes, mostly because I tended to be out of the house when it aired, but I now own the series on DVD and intend to make up for lost time.
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Above, I meant the New Jersey Pine *Barrens.* Now I’ll be able to sleep . . .
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One bad thing about the show was that Scully had an illegitimate child.
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Not illegitimate if it’s immaculately conceived.
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I cannot believe what I just read. The X Files being the subject of political commentary? Remarkable. I am so happy I don’t think this way. The good old left vs right false paradigm is alive and well.
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Mr. Piatak:
This very insightful and thoughtful article is a wonderful tribute to the X-Files series (which I have only recently begun to truly apprecitate.) I find it far more thought provoking and entertaining to watch dvds of the X-Files series than to waste my time watching anything shown on tv today. It is mind boggling that with hundreds of cable tv stations and thousands of graduates from journalism schools, there is nothing on tv or in the movies but mindless trash. I too, am anxiously awaiting the release of the X-Files movie “I Want to Believe” on Friday. I am hoping that in the true spirit of the series it will be smart, honest, funny, and thought provoking enought that I will want to watch it over and over again. I intend to make a family event out of attending this movie because “I Want to Believe” that Hollywood is capable of making good movies!
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As a huge X-Files fan, I heartily second Professor Gottfried’s recommendation of Paul Cantor’s work on the X-Files, specifically his wonderful book, Gilligan Unbound, which actually treats four tv-shows (Gilligan’s Island, the original Star Trek, the Simpsons, and the X-Files). For those interested in sampling his work before dishing out the cash to buy his book should consider downloading the mp3s of his week-long lecture at the Mises Institute on culture and the arts.
As for this bit:
Scully: “You’ve always said that you want to believe. But believe in what Mulder? If this is the truth that you’ve been looking for, then what is there to believe in?
Mulder: “I want to believe that the dead are not lost to us. That they speak to us as part of something greater than us—greater than any alien force. And if you and I are powerless now, I want to believe that if we listen, to what’s speaking, it can give us the power to save ourselves.”
Scully: “Then we believe the same thing.”
Mulder: “Maybe there’s hope.”
I have to confess to tearing up as this was being uttered, but then, when the camera zoomed in on Scully’s crucifix I started hooting and hopping around my room (to the amusement of my wife) in satisfaction with this most satisfying and eloquent consummation of the series. Here’s hoping that in the new movie Moulder has become a practicing Catholic....
Cheers,
Araglin
P.S., was I the only one who hoped that the Cigarette Smoking Man would find redemption in the show somehow, rather than getting firebombed?
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Mr. Kruse has a point. But recall that Scully gave her son up for adoption to a “Christian couple in Wyoming,” and the fact the couple was religious was portrayed as positive.
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Mark C.—you’ve confused “immaculate conception” with “virginal conception.” “Immaculate conception means
that the child has no original sin. Virginal conception means that there was the child was not the product
of sexual union.
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Araglin, maybe they’ll find some excuse for resurrecting the Smoking Man . . . I think that the episode
in which he commits every assassination of the late 20th century was the show that humanized him.
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‘The X-Files’ was also largely (though not entirely) devoid of the leftist themes that regularly appear in so much popular entertainment, such as a focus on the glories of multiculturalism and the evils of discrimination.
As bloodlines get farther from first-generation, urban, leftist fervor, I think Hollywood’s new Young Princes are becoming a lot less… subtle… in upholding this latter-day Hays Code (America, Christianity and white Gentiles are irredeemably evil; subtropic tribal totem folk are vastly superior to westerners; etc.). And, as such, their product is getting a lot less entertaining. The counterintuitive nature of their message has become harder to camouflage: I was at a movie awhile ago, when, onscreen, a dragnet of rape convicts brought in exclusively white suspects; the theater practically burst with peals of ridiculing laughter.
Also, during the evolution of this marvelous, highly imaginative show, I think producer Carter became more and more skeptical of hocus-pocus conspiracy theories and fairy tale wonderment.
Skepticism in today’s world is a vital trait. As Einstein observed, it’s great to have an open mind - but not so open our brains fall out...
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But didn’t she just give him up for his safety, not because she saw anything wrong with trying to raise a child without a father?
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baby_William
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This charming duo figured it out in advance too:
http://www.wired.com/imageviewer/?imagePath=/news/images/full/coup_full.jpg&imageCaption=The+original+cover+of+The+Coup's+upcoming+album,+Party+Music,+will+be+replaced+with+a+new+design,+the+group's+label+said.&imageCredit;=
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Tom Piatak is a tireless fighter of the future, and his essay was perceptive and accurate as always. The X-Files was probably the greatest show of the last quarter century, and I miss it greatly. I have already seen the movie, and though it succumbed to the annoying habit of casting (or rather, miscasting) a rap “artist” in a role that he has no business being in, Christian fans of the show will no doubt be quite satisfied. Don’t give up!
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What a wonderful essay! Sunday nights have not been the same since the series ended.
One episode which Mr. Piatak omitted was one of my favorites, “Arcadia”. In that episode, people willingly live in one of those “highly restricted” subdivisions which are all too prevalent today and are plagued by the “Ubermenscher” monster, who enforces the covenants and restrictions. I viewed that particular episode as being an indictment against the loss of personal freedom which so many Americans have surrendered in the interest of safety and conformity.
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