


Not many working-class Californians or Americans are driving around in Teslas, which cost between $48,000 and $130,000, depending on the model, even before customization. Now, for those not paying attention, for the most part, government-subsidized EVs are almost exclusively the toys of the wealthy. because they were putting too much stress on the Golden State’s deteriorating power grid. power grids and provide an unsolvable disposal problem for their batteries - soon after the law passed, Newsom was forced to ask Californians to not charge their electric vehicles (EVs) between 4 and 9 p.m. Trudeau also embraces the trend toward “green” electric vehicles.Įmbarrassingly - and quite worrying for those who believe electric vehicles will be a massive drain on weak U.S. Last month, Newsom was successful in shepherding a new law banning the sale of gasoline-powered cars in California by 2035. And yet, these two politicians keep winning. More than losing their minds, millions of their constituents believe they are losing their freedom - along with their personal security, buying power, privacy, energy grids, and ability to choose what is best for themselves and their children under the dominion of “cousins” Newsom and Trudeau. … You can lose your mind, when cousins are two of a kind.” One can only assume that any attempt by Gilbert to inform an adult would have been met by the same guffaws he experiences in 2022, not to mention the ineffectual and seemingly oblivious parenting style of Salem's 1993 adult population, only compounding the feeling of being misunderstood and ensuring allegiance to the infernal trio.As the lyrics from the theme song from the old “ Patty Duke Show” remind us: “They laugh alike, they walk alike at times they even talk alike. Gilbert considers the Sanderson Sisters "ahead of their time" and "misunderstood," suggesting an affinity between the witches and the misunderstood, bullied young man who gazed upon the flying silhouettes 29 years previous. This ostensibly triggers an obsession with the Sanderson Sisters and the occult, instilling a fixation on securing the witches' return. Despondent over a disappointing end to Halloween, Gilbert is gifted this spooky thrill particularly apt for a young resident of Salem, the American home of witchcraft. The duo make an attempt to steal Dani's candy before Max intervenes and gives them his. Returning from an evening of trick or treating, Gilbert explains that his candy was stolen by "a couple of bullies." These are undoubtedly Jay and Ice, the bullies from the original Hocus Pocus who are seen stealing children's candy.

It is later revealed that it was Gilbert who saw the sisters flying across the night sky on their assorted broomstick substitutes. While this covers the adults, the children of Salem, however, were left unaffected and even lured later by the enchanting song of the witches. A post-credits sequence reveals when these adults are freed from the spell, they depart with no memory of these events. Max - who, like Dani and Allison, does not appear in Hocus Pocus 2 - notes that every Salem adult is in attendance, and falls under the surreptitious spell which holds them hostage at the party, forced to dance until they die. The most iconic scene from the original Hocus Pocus is undoubtedly when the Sandersons perform "I Put A Spell On You," with lyrics interspersed with a magical chant - the same so masterfully weaved into "One Way Or Another" in the sequel. The Salem residents present seemingly scoff at the proposition, implying the threat is not one feared by the wider population. Gilbert asserts that "some swear they saw three figures fly across the moon" back on Halloween night in 1993. In 2022, a magic shop has been built within the Sanderson Sisters' ancestral home, run by Gilbert (Sam Richardson).
