third coast.. said:
Q: The real passion of the christ
third coast.. said:
Q: The real passion of the christ
aggieforester05 said:
There's not any mainstream streaming services other than news organizations (ie. Fox News and a handful of much smaller organizations) that are right leaning. They're all lefties and they're brainwashing low information voters. HBO, Netflix, Prime, Showtime, Cinemax, ESPN, Hulu, Disney, Facebook, Google, Twitter, Spotify. All push a leftist agenda and that will and should continue to be condemned by those of us that realize it's brainwashing low information voters.
For example when I open my Spotify app, I get bombarded by suggestions to listen to podcasts about voter suppression. They are pushing a narrative to their listeners that the Georgia election laws were designed to suppress legitimate voters particularly minorities. It's a lie and they know it but they will continue to try to brainwash their listeners into believing it. They do not highlight any podcasts about voter fraud which is the real issue that the Georgia laws are designed to combat. Why? Why not offer up both and let listeners decide the truth.
I know these companies have the right to do so, but it is harmful and I will continue to call them out on it. People need to know that they're only getting one side of the story.
There's also a wealth of material to make every leftist group look ridiculous, this was not unique to the Q .
I'd also add that leftist organizations only doing documentaries on conservatives and Republicans isn't really helpful to anyone. The people that are most important to reach about the extreme corruption and incompetence in the Democrat party are the people that would vote for them (ie. Bill Maher's audience). Same can be said with roles reversed.
How sizeable is the slice of the country that believes liberal elites eat babies versus people who believe that major corporations and news organizations are run by people who live and work amongst mostly left leaning people and therefore use their power to help the DNC in anyway they can? It would appear that you're trying to paint a broad portion of the population with believing in the deepest darkest parts of the Q conspiracy, when it is likely a very small group of individuals that took it that far. It was also a relatively small group of people who rioted at the Capitol. It's intellectually dishonest to assign the failures of those two groups to millions of people that you happen to politically disagree with, just because those nut jobs happened to vote for the same political candidate. I doubt you'll find many people on the right who agree with what those rioters did anymore than they agree with the left wing rioters who spent all summer vandalizing government buildings. I live and work in one of the most conservative areas in the country and I don't know a single person who ever claimed that liberal elites eat babies. There are probably similar numbers of fringe leftists that believe Donald Trump was an actual Nazi that was going to round up the gays and Muslims and put them in camps. Those nut jobs voted for Joe Biden. Does that mean most or even a sizeable portion of liberals believed that idiotic conspiracy theory? Noamercer said:
It appears that a sizable slice of the country has lost the ability to discern between "things I disagree with" and "things that are bat**** crazy".
So you get this false equivalence between any policy proposal they don't like, and a conspiracy theory that says the world is run by liberal elites who traffic in babies in order to drink their blood for a magic substance that gives them life force....
aggieforester starts off by noting his disagreement with painting with a broad brush and claims it's "intellectually dishonest to assign the failures of [a few] to millions of people that you happen to politically disagree with, just because those nut jobs happened to vote for the same political candidate."aggieforester05 said:How sizeable is the slice of the country that believes liberal elites eat babies versus people who believe that major corporations and news organizations are run by people who live and work amongst mostly left leaning people and therefore use their power to help the DNC in anyway they can? It would appear that you're trying to paint a broad portion of the population with believing in the deepest darkest parts of the Q conspiracy, when it is likely a very small group of individuals that took it that far. It was also a relatively small group of people who rioted at the Capitol. It's intellectually dishonest to assign the failures of those two groups to millions of people that you happen to politically disagree with, just because those nut jobs happened to vote for the same political candidate. I doubt you'll find many people on the right who agree with what those rioters did anymore than they agree with the left wing rioters who spent all summer vandalizing government buildings. I live and work in one of the most conservative areas in the country and I don't know a single person who ever claimed that liberal elites eat babies. There are probably similar numbers of fringe leftists that believe Donald Trump was an actual Nazi that was going to round up the gays and Muslims and put them in camps. Those nut jobs voted for Joe Biden. Does that mean most or even a sizeable portion of liberals believed that idiotic conspiracy theory? Noamercer said:
It appears that a sizable slice of the country has lost the ability to discern between "things I disagree with" and "things that are bat**** crazy".
So you get this false equivalence between any policy proposal they don't like, and a conspiracy theory that says the world is run by liberal elites who traffic in babies in order to drink their blood for a magic substance that gives them life force....
Who's making false equivalencies of policy positions?
What has been said and is undeniable is that wild conspiracy theories are the cornerstone of American left wing culture. Conspiracy theories that have nothing to do with policy, but are tools used to tarnish the Democrat's political opposition. Those conspiracy theories are widely accepted by their voter base because they live in a near perfect echo chamber of confirmation bias. As we've seen through 2020 and into 2021, those conspiracy theories have had devastating negative impacts on this country. These conspiracy theories are fabricated by political leadership and left wing media organizations that know they are lies, instead of some weirdo internet troll, so they are going to look different. I'd argue that their impact has been far more substantial than that of Q's.
Every political group is going to have it's nuts. We used to be able to keep the village idiot out of sight and out of mind, but now the internet gives them the loudest voice. Spend ten minutes on twitter or reddit and you'll find nuts of every flavor. Those nuts have been weaponized by degenerates on both sides of the political aisle.
That's not exactly what I'm doing and you know it. If you'll reread what I posted I said the most extreme conspiracy theories for example "Donald Trump is a Nazi that's going to round up the gays and Muslims" is something that likely only a very small percentage of the Democrat base believes. The same can be said about people who believe "liberal elites" eat babies.MASAXET said:aggieforester starts off by noting his disagreement with painting with a broad brush and claims it's "intellectually dishonest to assign the failures of [a few] to millions of people that you happen to politically disagree with, just because those nut jobs happened to vote for the same political candidate."aggieforester05 said:How sizeable is the slice of the country that believes liberal elites eat babies versus people who believe that major corporations and news organizations are run by people who live and work amongst mostly left leaning people and therefore use their power to help the DNC in anyway they can? It would appear that you're trying to paint a broad portion of the population with believing in the deepest darkest parts of the Q conspiracy, when it is likely a very small group of individuals that took it that far. It was also a relatively small group of people who rioted at the Capitol. It's intellectually dishonest to assign the failures of those two groups to millions of people that you happen to politically disagree with, just because those nut jobs happened to vote for the same political candidate. I doubt you'll find many people on the right who agree with what those rioters did anymore than they agree with the left wing rioters who spent all summer vandalizing government buildings. I live and work in one of the most conservative areas in the country and I don't know a single person who ever claimed that liberal elites eat babies. There are probably similar numbers of fringe leftists that believe Donald Trump was an actual Nazi that was going to round up the gays and Muslims and put them in camps. Those nut jobs voted for Joe Biden. Does that mean most or even a sizeable portion of liberals believed that idiotic conspiracy theory? Noamercer said:
It appears that a sizable slice of the country has lost the ability to discern between "things I disagree with" and "things that are bat**** crazy".
So you get this false equivalence between any policy proposal they don't like, and a conspiracy theory that says the world is run by liberal elites who traffic in babies in order to drink their blood for a magic substance that gives them life force....
Who's making false equivalencies of policy positions?
What has been said and is undeniable is that wild conspiracy theories are the cornerstone of American left wing culture. Conspiracy theories that have nothing to do with policy, but are tools used to tarnish the Democrat's political opposition. Those conspiracy theories are widely accepted by their voter base because they live in a near perfect echo chamber of confirmation bias. As we've seen through 2020 and into 2021, those conspiracy theories have had devastating negative impacts on this country. These conspiracy theories are fabricated by political leadership and left wing media organizations that know they are lies, instead of some weirdo internet troll, so they are going to look different. I'd argue that their impact has been far more substantial than that of Q's.
Every political group is going to have it's nuts. We used to be able to keep the village idiot out of sight and out of mind, but now the internet gives them the loudest voice. Spend ten minutes on twitter or reddit and you'll find nuts of every flavor. Those nuts have been weaponized by degenerates on both sides of the political aisle.
And then closes by claiming "wild conspiracy theories are the cornerstone of American left wing culture" and "[t]hose conspiracy theories are widely accepted by their voter base because they live in a near perfect echo chamber of confirmation bias."
All within the same post.
Without any hint of irony or self-reflection.
Awesome
I'm trolling by saying that only a small percentage of both sides believes in the most extreme conspiracy theories, while larger groups of both sides believe in the more subtle conspiracy theories and that it's unfair to assign the most extreme conspiracy theories to entire populations?TCTTS said:
It's almost a work of art. Incredible.
I'm now convinced he's trolling, if only because the alternative is too depressing (if not hilarious).
amercer said:
It appears that a sizable slice of the country has lost the ability to discern between "things I disagree with" and "things that are bat**** crazy".
So you get this false equivalence between any policy proposal they don't like, and a conspiracy theory that says the world is run by liberal elites who traffic in babies in order to drink their blood for a magic substance that gives them life force....
I actually agree with this. Not a fan of the term "fake news" and I think it takes away from the real problem, which is biased news.Old McDonald said:amercer said:
It appears that a sizable slice of the country has lost the ability to discern between "things I disagree with" and "things that are bat**** crazy".
So you get this false equivalence between any policy proposal they don't like, and a conspiracy theory that says the world is run by liberal elites who traffic in babies in order to drink their blood for a magic substance that gives them life force....
i think a more fair characterization is an inability to distinguish between biased news and fake news.
the concept of fake news gained traction around the 2016 election because hostile powers were literally astroturfing american social networks with made up articles and stories from spoofed "news" sites to sow discord. then trump and his allies co-opted the term to refer to any news story didn't like, whether true or not. that behavior became reflexive and now we have slice of the population who can't tell the difference between actual fake news and biased news.
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I think it takes away from the real problem, which is biased news.
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Reported on GAB that Milley was at the "Calm Before the Storm" comment dinner gala. Might explain that Q actually was real, but was a black hatted operation with treasonous conspirators creating false hope for patriots and people against corruption.