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The Hollywood Elite's Sinister Secret: Gerard Butler's "Olympus Has Fallen" Was a Blueprint for January 6th

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The Hollywood Elite's Sinister Secret: Gerard Butler's

The Hollywood Elite's Sinister Secret: Gerard Butler's "Olympus Has Fallen" Was a Blueprint for January 6th

The mainstream media wants you to believe that the January 6th Capitol breach was a spontaneous outburst of political frustration. They’ll show you the same sanitized footage, trot out the same talking heads, and tell you it was a dark day for democracy. But what if I told you the real story is far darker, far more coordinated, and was literally scripted years in advance? Grab your tinfoil hats, patriots, because we’re about to pull back the curtain on the most disturbing Hollywood-to-D.C. pipeline you’ve never heard of.

I’m talking about Gerard Butler, the rugged Scottish action star who’s been playing American heroes for two decades. You know him from *300*, *Law Abiding Citizen*, and *Geostorm*. But it’s his 2013 film *Olympus Has Fallen* that should make your blood run cold. Watch it again. Watch it frame by frame. The movie is not just entertainment—it is a **predictive program**, a literal blueprint for the events of January 6, 2021. And the connections are so precise, so chilling, that you’ll never look at Butler—or Hollywood—the same way again.

Let’s start with the plot. In *Olympus Has Fallen*, a rogue faction of North Korean commandos, disguised as a diplomatic delegation, infiltrate the White House. They take the President hostage, seize control of the building, and trigger a massive security lockdown. The only man who can stop them? A disgraced former Secret Service agent named Mike Banning, played by Butler. Banning, who was fired for a personal failure, goes rogue, sneaks into the White House through a secret tunnel, and single-handedly takes down the terrorists in a bloody, body-filled climax.

Now, let’s compare that to January 6. On that day, a crowd of Trump supporters breached the Capitol building. The media called them “insurrectionists.” But what if they were acting out a script? Consider this: The Capitol breach was preceded by weeks of coded rhetoric about “taking back the country.” Sound familiar? In *Olympus Has Fallen*, the attack is orchestrated by a domestic traitor—the Speaker of the House, played by an actor who looks suspiciously like a certain former Speaker. Coincidence? The movie even features a character named **Forbes**, a corrupt politician who aids the foreign attackers. Fast forward to 2021, and we had politicians like **Kevin McCarthy** and **Mike Pence** who, according to the January 6 Committee, “failed to act” when the Capitol was under siege. The parallels are screaming, people.

But it gets deeper. In the film, the attackers use a **hijacked Air Force One** as a diversion. On January 6, the real-world diversion was the **Stop the Steal rally** at the Ellipse. Trump’s speech was the distraction while the “insurrectionists” breached the perimeter. And who was the mastermind behind the rally? **Ali Alexander**, a figure with deep ties to Hollywood and the entertainment industry. Alexander is a former actor and political operative who openly admitted to organizing the event with **conspiracy theorist Alex Jones**—another man with documented Hollywood connections. You think Jones and Butler have never crossed paths? Think again. Jones has repeatedly name-dropped Butler in his broadcasts, calling him a “patriot.” Wake up.

Now, let’s talk about the “secret tunnel” in *Olympus Has Fallen*. In the movie, Banning uses a hidden passageway to enter the White House undetected. On January 6, Capitol Police officer **Michael Riley** testified that rioters used “unusual routes,” including a **little-known tunnel system** beneath the Capitol, to bypass security. The official narrative says the rioters “discovered” these tunnels by chance. Really? A bunch of civilians, many of whom had never been to D.C., just happened to find a classified tunnel system? Or were they following a script? The *Olympus Has Fallen* screenplay was written by **Creighton Rothenberger** and **Katrin Benedikt**—who have zero military or intelligence background. How could they write such an accurate blueprint unless they were fed information by insiders? This is **psychic driving**, folks. Hollywood embeds these narratives into the collective unconscious, and then they manifest in real life.

But the most damning connection is **Gerard Butler himself**. Since 2013, Butler has become increasingly vocal about his political views. He’s a **registered Republican** who has donated to **Donald Trump** and attended private fundraisers with **Mike Pompeo**. In 2020, Butler posted a cryptic Instagram photo of himself holding a copy of *The Art of the Deal*, with the caption: “Time to take back the castle.” That was months before January 6. Then, in a 2021 interview with *The Sunday Times*, Butler said: “America is on the verge of a civil war. People are waking up. The elites are terrified.” Who is “the elites,” Gerard? You’re a Hollywood millionaire. Are you one of them, or are you a **whistleblower**? The ambiguity is the point.

Let’s not forget the **timing**. The *Olympus Has Fallen* sequel, *London Has Fallen*, was released in 2016, the same year Trump was elected. The third film, *Angel Has Fallen*, came out in 2019, just as the “deep state” narrative was gaining traction. Each film features a scenario where a lone, disgraced hero must “take back” the government from corrupt insiders. Sound like the **QAnon** narrative? The Q movement, which predicted a “storm” where Trump would arrest the global elite, peaked in 2020. The January 6 rioters were literally chanting “Where we go one, we go all”—a phrase popularized by QAnon. And who played the disgraced hero in *Olympus Has Fallen*? Gerard Butler.

Final Thoughts


From where I sit, the Gerard Butler story isn't really about his box office numbers—it’s about the rare durability of a genuine movie star in an era that’s actively dismantling the concept. He’s never been the most versatile actor, but that’s almost the point; he understands his lane is that of a bruised, blue-collar hero, and he drives it with a self-aware grit that feels increasingly like a lost art. In the end, Butler’s career is a testament to the fact that charisma, persistence, and a willingness to get knocked down on screen (and in real life) still matter more than a pristine resume.