Unless either A) peeps start dropping like flies, pretty soon, B) something really quick hits (e.g., some genetically modified, airborne fungal spores), or C) nukes (or similar), then Deagle was nonsense.
That said... it still creeps me out. Something semi-corroborating that also creeps me out is the fact that the Georgia Guide Stones were suspiciously destroyed in the middle of all this.
Pretty much everyone around me are normies/NPC's. Its very disheartening that almost every little factoid or bit of knowledge that is the baseline data set for "conspiracy theorists" isn't even on normies' radar screen.
Exactly. Trying to explain a vast conspiracy theory (e.g., Covid and CBDC are part of a plan) to most people is like swimming from the Pacific Ocean up a river, through many dams, making it all the way up to a fishery in the mountains. There are so many problems along the way that there's very little chance of actually making it. You've got a breakdown all the little teeny details along the way and then the person has to assume that you are correct in order to understand each next item along the way. All they've got to do is get lost in a single item and everything is lost on them.
Exactly, this.
Unless either A) peeps start dropping like flies, pretty soon, B) something really quick hits (e.g., some genetically modified, airborne fungal spores), or C) nukes (or similar), then Deagle was nonsense.
That said... it still creeps me out. Something semi-corroborating that also creeps me out is the fact that the Georgia Guide Stones were suspiciously destroyed in the middle of all this.
I was more than a little creeped out by how many people had never heard of the Georgia Guildstones.
Pretty much everyone around me are normies/NPC's. Its very disheartening that almost every little factoid or bit of knowledge that is the baseline data set for "conspiracy theorists" isn't even on normies' radar screen.
Exactly. Trying to explain a vast conspiracy theory (e.g., Covid and CBDC are part of a plan) to most people is like swimming from the Pacific Ocean up a river, through many dams, making it all the way up to a fishery in the mountains. There are so many problems along the way that there's very little chance of actually making it. You've got a breakdown all the little teeny details along the way and then the person has to assume that you are correct in order to understand each next item along the way. All they've got to do is get lost in a single item and everything is lost on them.
True that.