I'm getting vibes of Ketanji Brown Jackson fitting PCL-R criteria of a sociopath (learned/made) or psychopath (born) with the signs of blame shifting, evasion, and superficial charm similar to Hillary Clinton. A normal human being might show some empathy or remorse. She did not.
She is probably used to people either accepting her nonsense or not being prepared.
Part of this comes from her normally having complete and total control over her environment by being a judge. In those instances where she does not have complete control she just typically isn't challenged.
I've seen this account misdirect in other places as well. The idea is to get the focus off of the important issue at hand--to drive people away from the discussion.
And finally, here's one that focuses just on the misdirection. It makes an important point that misdirection is deeper than merely creating a distraction.
The first video shows a professional magician doing a trick. Then his partner asks you to question every move made during the trick. He then goes on to explain them all as comprising the seven basic moves of magic, including misdirection. I think the most important line was, "Weren't there a few things you took for granted when watching that?"
The second video is newer with much better video quality. It's got a faster pace, but shows more and better misdirection--literally the smoke from "smoke and mirrors."
The third lays out how misdirection is more psychological and not simply, "Hey, look over there!" See if you can guess when it happened.
The total running time of all three videos is about ten minutes.
I'm getting vibes of Ketanji Brown Jackson fitting PCL-R criteria of a sociopath (learned/made) or psychopath (born) with the signs of blame shifting, evasion, and superficial charm similar to Hillary Clinton. A normal human being might show some empathy or remorse. She did not.
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Psychopathy_Checklist&oldid=657640926#Items
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychopathy_in_the_workplace#The_organizational_psychopath
She is probably used to people either accepting her nonsense or not being prepared.
Part of this comes from her normally having complete and total control over her environment by being a judge. In those instances where she does not have complete control she just typically isn't challenged.
Public schools worked
Endured it? Ha! I bet she enjoyed it.
And then she talks about authorization by congress.
Rumble link:
https://rumble.com/vy9ux7-ketanji-brown-jackson-replies-to-josh-hawley-questioning-her-over-lenient-s.html
Direct mp4:
https://sp.rmbl.ws/s8/2/l/B/M/B/lBMBd.caa.mp4
Ketanji Brown Jackson is a pedophile.
trolling a bit much? I expect this type of low brow from 4chan
I've seen this account misdirect in other places as well. The idea is to get the focus off of the important issue at hand--to drive people away from the discussion.
I'm really new to this board and was really wondering if this was part of the theme, or opposition of sorts.
I think it happens all over the Internet.
Here is an old video that has influenced the way I see things like this.
Penn & Teller - Lighting a Cigarette? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2azeC57Fn4c
Here's a faster-paced version with better video quality:
Penn & Teller - Smoking/Sleight of Hand Trick https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4U-kHdXgz0
And finally, here's one that focuses just on the misdirection. It makes an important point that misdirection is deeper than merely creating a distraction.
Penn & Teller Give a Lesson in Misdirection Using a Vanishing Chicken https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lo5BRAKvJoA
Learn what the word evidence means.
Anyway, don't let this shill
distractmisdirect you from the insights those videos provide.Check the videos I have provided; they're short.
The first video shows a professional magician doing a trick. Then his partner asks you to question every move made during the trick. He then goes on to explain them all as comprising the seven basic moves of magic, including misdirection. I think the most important line was, "Weren't there a few things you took for granted when watching that?"
The second video is newer with much better video quality. It's got a faster pace, but shows more and better misdirection--literally the smoke from "smoke and mirrors."
The third lays out how misdirection is more psychological and not simply, "Hey, look over there!" See if you can guess when it happened.
The total running time of all three videos is about ten minutes.
This was an interesting video. She did her best not to look bad.
I don't sense smugness at the end--more like humiliation.