I just heard an interview on THC where the guy flatly claimed that the Nazis were occultists, but the Vril Society never existed. I think it might have been the clown calling himself "RamX". I say that not to bag on RamX because who gives a shit but to say something about the state of the disinformation war.
"They" have gotten so desperate in the disinformation war that as an SOP, They take a load of "conspiracy" topics, put them in a big bag, shake it up, and pull out a handful. They weave a dumb narrative out of the ones in their hand and call the ones that fell on the floor disinformation. This gets pumped out through an endless supply of agents. When RamX starts losing traction, look out for RamY and RamZ (<-- that one is actually catchy and They should have used it).
Oh, it's all very intriguing and the conspiracy masses lap it up and ask for more (literally, see the comments on the THC site). It works for this reason: every dumbshit is so bent on being right they'll always find something to latch on to and get a half-chub because someone on the Internet radio said something they thought. The rest of it they entirely let go because they aren't actually trying to figure anything out.
Of course, it's far from the listener's consciousness that even a single one of these guests is a disinformation agent. What, as if they could be fooled? Impossible.
Sepehr is part of the cabal, probably a Freemason, because he respects them but doesn't acknowledge being one. His conspiracies always review Masons favorably. The title is interesting but getting his take on it would be worse than knowing nothing about it.
I just heard an interview on THC where the guy flatly claimed that the Nazis were occultists, but the Vril Society never existed. I think it might have been the clown calling himself "RamX". I say that not to bag on RamX because who gives a shit but to say something about the state of the disinformation war.
"They" have gotten so desperate in the disinformation war that as an SOP, They take a load of "conspiracy" topics, put them in a big bag, shake it up, and pull out a handful. They weave a dumb narrative out of the ones in their hand and call the ones that fell on the floor disinformation. This gets pumped out through an endless supply of agents. When RamX starts losing traction, look out for RamY and RamZ (<-- that one is actually catchy and They should have used it).
Oh, it's all very intriguing and the conspiracy masses lap it up and ask for more (literally, see the comments on the THC site). It works for this reason: every dumbshit is so bent on being right they'll always find something to latch on to and get a half-chub because someone on the Internet radio said something they thought. The rest of it they entirely let go because they aren't actually trying to figure anything out.
Of course, it's far from the listener's consciousness that even a single one of these guests is a disinformation agent. What, as if they could be fooled? Impossible.
There's Nazis and vril maidens partying in gravity defying saucers over Antarctica you bigot.
Sepehr is part of the cabal, probably a Freemason, because he respects them but doesn't acknowledge being one. His conspiracies always review Masons favorably. The title is interesting but getting his take on it would be worse than knowing nothing about it.