All Of A Sudden 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony Makes Sense! It Explains Everything! [WATCH]

I am not watching the 2022 Communist China Olympics, but I saw the downright evil things linked to the past Olympics.
I can freely put this at the top of the list!
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Someone shared this on Telegram, and I think it’s worth sharing on our site here.
The things that happened at the Olympics are artsy and creepy too!
Are they predicting the future?
Well yes!
We can start with this:
Remember the 2012 Olympics, with the Giant black figure and all of the hospital beds? It's starting to make a lot more sense now. pic.twitter.com/e40vvhfJuy
— chasetruth_ (@agenda212030) April 20, 2020
You have a huge Black Death Personified figure walking around a room full of hospital beds. Who comes out with these things?
Who plans the Olympics 2012, saying, “you know what I think we need? Do you know what would really start the games off on a great note this year? A giant DEATH walking around a room full of hospital beds.”
Creepy and demonic!
Here’s more!
Remember the 2012 Olympics?
If not may I suggest you go and watch the show, there was a large demonic looking figure overlooking dancing nurses and empty hospital beds.
Their symbolism will be their downfall.#Covid_19 #Symbol #emptyhospitals pic.twitter.com/Fz8HF4QAX3
— jurga (@glamourover35) December 21, 2020
Do you remember this?
https://twitter.com/MoonlashZA/status/1345281030526218241?s=20&t=elzxBd-WLEoASiphszuz8g
2012 Olympics opening ceremony. Nurses, hospital beds and death himself. Coincidence? pic.twitter.com/6aTfpnkhFi
— Dr. Doom (@MajorX11878154) June 26, 2020
If you want to see the whole thing, we have a video for you. Watch it at the 43:49 mark. https://youtu.be/4As0e4de-rI?t=2629
And here’s another video that can reveal everything. It’s called ‘’decoding the Olympic opening ceremonies.’’
The USA Today reported:
The claim: The 2012 London Olympics opening ceremony predicted the coronavirus crisis
As the COVID-19 pandemic spread across the world in the spring of 2020, odd memes and conspiracy theories spread along with it, including one related to the 2012 Summer Olympics.
The theory says that back in 2012, a segment of the opening ceremonies of the Olympic Games in London predicted the coronavirus crisis.
Nearly a year later, the theory is still spreading, even though nothing in the Olympics performance mentions the new type of coronavirus that emerged in China late in 2019. A woman in Canada shared the theory on Facebook on Jan. 13. The user did not respond to a request for comment from USA TODAY.
Fireworks explode during the Opening Ceremony at the 2012 Summer Olympics, in London. Philadelphia will not pursue a bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics, Mayor Michael Nutter announced on Wednesday.
The ceremony
The 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony was four hours long and highlighted British history and culture.
The conspiracy theory concentrates on a 15-minute portion.
This part was designed to honor and celebrate Great Britain’s National Health Service (a government program that provides health care at low cost), a British children’s hospital, and the nation’s body of children’s literature. A video of the ceremony is available on YouTube, and is discussed at the Olympic Games website and in articles about it over the years.
The performers included patients from the children’s hospital and real medical personnel.
The Health Service and children’s literature part of the show was a bonkers spectacle.
It had creepy music (including “Tubular Bells,” a song used in “The Exorcist” horror film), dance music, dancing nurses, characters on roller skates, children in pajamas jumping on hospital beds, towering villainous puppets, and a fleet of Mary Poppins nannies who flew in with their umbrellas to chase away frightening monsters.
The conspiracy theorists see clues to the pandemic in the performance.
Fact check:Fake quote about right to bear arms attributed to George Washington
The conspiracy theories
The image that the Facebook user shared is a photo from the ceremony. It shows nurses in vintage costumes standing among children in antique-style hospital beds that glow with light. There is a giant sculpture of a sleeping baby in the background.
“They told us in 2012,” states the headline text on the photo.
In the comments, the woman added a longer video clip to allegedly provide further explanation.
Actors perform in a sequence meant to represent Britain’s National Health Service during the opening ceremony of the Summer Olympic Games in London on July 27, 2012.
The video shows the nurses putting the children to bed as a lullaby plays. The nurses put their fingers over their lips with the “shh” gesture to tell the children to be quiet and go to sleep. The video adds still photos of former President Barack Obama with a finger over his lips in the “shh, be quiet” gesture, and similar photos of former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and other famous people.
The video ends as a girl in bed reads the “Peter Pan” novel by flashlight under the covers. Then it jumps ahead in the performance to show a moment of the monsters entering the scene among the beds.
To add more information, another commenter shared a poster of famous people making the “shh” gesture. It says “Vow of Silence” and the gesture is a reminder of the Masonic “obligation of silence.” At the top is a quote by Freemason philosopher Manly P. Hall about reading symbolism.
This all translates in the minds of the conspiracy theorists to the London ceremony in 2012 predicted the pandemic in 2020.
In reality, the ceremony was a celebration of a British institution and its culture. There is no reference to the pandemic or the novel coronavirus.
In May, the Myth Detectors website in the Eurasian nation of Georgia looked in detail at similar claims circulating there and said they are false. So did Reuters.
Our ruling: False
We rate the claim that a segment of the opening ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics predicted the coronavirus pandemic FALSE, based on our research. The performance, designed to celebrate Great Britain’s National Health Service and history of children’s literature at the same time, is certainly an unusual mashup, but nothing in it said or depicted anything about the coronavirus.