TurkeysGhost
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2018
- Messages
- 35,043
Apparently Shaman man says all he did was walk through an open door. That be why hes still in prison.
I suppose any door is an open door if you break it down first.
Apparently Shaman man says all he did was walk through an open door. That be why hes still in prison.
QAnon grows on the wild misinterpretation of random data, presented in a suggestive fashion in a milieu designed to help the users come to the intended misunderstanding. Maybe “guided apophenia” is a better phrase. Guided because the puppet masters are directly involved in hinting about the desired conclusions. They have pre-seeded the conclusions. They are constantly getting the player lost by pointing out unrelated random events and creating a meaning for them that fits the propaganda message Q is delivering.
There is no reality here. No actual solution in the real world. Instead, this is a breadcrumb trail AWAY from reality. Away from actual solutions and towards a dangerous psychological rush. It works very well because when you “figure it out yourself” you own it. You experience the thrill of discovery, the excitement of the rabbit hole, the acceptance of a community that loves and respects you. Because you were convinced to “connect the dots yourself” you can see the absolute logic of it. This is the conclusion you arrived at. More about this later.
I suppose any door is an open door if you break it down first.
It really appears to be the go-to defense that's being reported for insurrectionists. "The door was open when I got there, so I assumed it was okay to go inside".
Most of these individuals' own social media posts during the incident give away the lie that they were unaware the Capitol was violently breached. "I was just a freelance journalist covering the aftermath" is probably not going very far in court.
It appears someone is making a hastily arranged documentary on Q-Anon.
Q-Anon is not organic. It's (ex) military intelligence telling stories that (we know now) do not come true.
However, Trump made a comment at a rally in the middle of his term, that drove the media crazy. He said, with pregnant pauses, that he might stay 9yrs, or 13yrs or 17yrs.
Did anyone catch that ? 9-13-17
So, what did Trump say ?
9 = I
13 = M
17 = Q
9-13-17 random numbers. The number of years he could never be president. In the process of demonizing and problematizing this claim to stay beyond two terms - nobody figured it out.
Or, maybe it's a sign of the times that those who are studying private communication across public channels are not telegenic teleprompter-readers.
Are the ‘Q’ cretins predicting that in two more days it will be Taco Tuesday? ‘Cuz they might get one right. And I’d be good with that.
Yeah, I don't recall those numbers. 8, 12 and "whatever" or some such but not "17".
Anyway, link the vid and I'll believe he said it. Not the coded numerology adjacent crap though.
This week, when Mr. Biden becomes president and Mr. Trump leaves the White House, it will be a huge blow to QAnon’s core mythology, and it may force some believers to acknowledge that they’ve been lied to. Many will cope by spinning the development as a win, or saying it proves that Mr. Trump is playing the long game. Others will quietly ditch Q and transfer their enthusiasm to a new conspiracy theory. A few might be jolted back to reality.
If one of your cult gets shot in the neck on the specious notion that Diaper Don had their back, and you still maintain such a belief, not much else is going to adjust your course to a setting of objective reality this way >. We recall examples of divorce and suicide due to belief in this nonsense and think, Gee, what are these people thinking? The problem is they are not: not rationally, not reasonably, not critically. It may be innate to their psyche.This article profiling a ‘Q’ cultist sums up the range of possible responses to the imminent final failure of their flabby deity:
A few. Not many of them will admit they were taken in by a particularly insipid metastasized 4chan troll, monetized by a series of cynical politicians who saw their dedicated gullibility glowing like a neon sign.
It’s still funny to look back at the idiotic core premise: that a Q clearance would give this pretend insider access to the pretend secrets he pretended to know. The Q dolts swallowed that one, hook, line, and sinker, without having the faintest glimmering how manifestly stupid that was, or bothering to spend a few minutes Googling and thinking why.
It’s less funny to contemplate the damage this kind of determined stupidity is doing to American democracy, and the lives this vicious yet infantile fantasy has ruined and even ended.
Hot Pockets recall: Nestle recalls nearly 763,000 pounds of frozen food for possible glass, plastic contamination.
This article profiling a ‘Q’ cultist sums up the range of possible responses to the imminent final failure of their flabby deity:
I used to work with a guy who had to get a Top Secret clearance for an old job of his that involved fulfilling prescription drug orders to the military. As he summarized:
What people think a Top Secret clearance gives access to: info about Area 51, new weapons, answers about long speculated conspiracy theories, the identities of the spies in both the US and elsewhere.
What a Top Secret clearance actually gives access to: the address to ship some retired general his Viagra.
An acquaintance of mine related this anecdote :
So much for “Q Clearance.”