turingtest
Mistral, mistral wind...
listen to the Q-Anon shaman, it makes about as much sense... at least the first 20 seconds, which are merely wrong. After that... um. He's the human timecube
Wow. All those worldwide underground bases where a crafty, clandestine conspiracy's R&D department is coming up with highly top-secret technology like infinite energy, anti-gravity, and "inertia propulsion"*...and a shirtless guy wearing a fuzzy hat with horns and carrying a sign that looks like it was drawn by a mildly-talented tween knows all about it.
I mean, I know that it's really kind of useless to try to logically dissect the ravings of an obvious lunatic, but this guy is so emblematic of what happened in the Capitol on Jan 6 that it's maybe worth a little closer look than to just dismiss it like that.
*Whatever the **** that's supposed to mean- "inertia propulsion" sounds like the method behind rest of his diatribe, stringing together impressive sounding words without any real clear idea of what any of them actually mean.
*OT* The only thing I can find on "inertia propulsion" is this proposal (at freepatentsonline.com, 2008), which is described as
That sounds a lot like some devices described by Rupert T. Gould in his book Oddities, from 1928, in the chapter on Orffyreus' Wheel- a supposed "perpetual motion machine" that may have been such a device, and was exhibited first in...1712. Evidently the conspiracy's R&D Dept has been working for a long, long time on this one thing.an inertial propulsion unit [that] converts centrifugal force to linear motion using two or more masses. The masses are connected to telescoping arms that rotate about a single axis. The rotating telescopic arms are guided along a closed path by a guide. The telescopic arms extend and retract as they rotate around the closed path changing the inertial moments of each of the telescopic arms. A resultant linear force from the rotating telescopic arms provides a propulsion force suitable for a vehicle.
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