1
Hand_Of_Node 1 point ago +2 / -1

I didn't buy it at $32, and still wouldn't.

3
Hand_Of_Node 3 points ago +4 / -1

I remember back when a bushel of bitcorn was only $32, and it looked like it was about to take off. Have followed it since, but I'd never put a dime into vaporware money.

by qbqb
2
Hand_Of_Node 2 points ago +3 / -1

No niggers. Stop posting this shit.

by qbqb
0
Hand_Of_Node 0 points ago +1 / -1

That looks like Catholic garb. So you know they're child rapers, and engage in "drug-fueled homosexual orgies" at the palace they built with centuries of grifting.

If you're mixed up with those satan worshipers, separate yourself.

by DrLeaks
4
Hand_Of_Node 4 points ago +5 / -1

Amish whistling in their fields behind their plow horses.

by qbqb
0
Hand_Of_Node 0 points ago +1 / -1

Both of those characters appear to be wearing anti-Christian costumes.

-1
Hand_Of_Node -1 points ago +1 / -2

Over on that Qtard site? Image has even been deleted...

I don't know why you'd assume any of the info you've seen in the media is accurate and truthful, or that government workers are incredibly competent. People with those names may or may not have died. Maybe their death is filed under their real name, instead of the one they prefer to use? All that mysteriously missing letter reveals is that the search you requested doesn't return a record.

-1
Hand_Of_Node -1 points ago +1 / -2

You're watching a show.

No, I'm actually not. But they sure seem popular.

As for the show element you mention, all the response indicates is that the "name was NOT FOUND", with the implied reason being insufficient information supplied by the applicant. We all know government workers and databases are the paragon of efficiency and thrift, but it might help to pretend they're not when interacting.

1
Hand_Of_Node 1 point ago +2 / -1

We can choose to discover and acknowledge reality, or we can hold onto our fantasies and comfort beliefs.

humanity’s collective retardation.

The severity of this problem can't be overstated.

2
Hand_Of_Node 2 points ago +3 / -1

They've apparently been pretty effective at getting the word out. No one is doing anything about any of it. Nor will they. The masses have always been an exploitable resource for cognitively superior people, and that's never going to change.

0
Hand_Of_Node 0 points ago +1 / -1

insane people (goyim) are “interesting”?

IMO, yes. Unusual events and behaviors are 'new', and now there's a thing called 'news' because these new things typically attract interest from humans.

I don't know the purpose of the Qtard op, but the numbers and intensity of belief indicate it probably had some success.

“insane conspiracy idiots”?

To be fair, and accurate, most of them were probably just suffering from poor cognition and associated social issues. My favorite ironic quote from 'Q': You're watching a show.

1
Hand_Of_Node 1 point ago +2 / -1

By remembering most people are in the lower 95%, and there was never any hope they would act contrary to their masters desires. Was a great run there for awhile, but the owners have decided to go a different direction.

0
Hand_Of_Node 0 points ago +2 / -2

Because crazy people are interesting. Remember when 10,000 Qtards suddenly showed up on voat? Many of them were literally insane, and it was the craziest and most fascinating thing ever. jewish space lasers burning a path across California for the bullet train. Serialbrain2 going full skitzo with his jewish numbers, adding and subtracting times stamps on tweets, and even some crazy stuff that proved something or other.

Malfunction is different and interesting.

2
Hand_Of_Node 2 points ago +3 / -1

Or we'd be thinking of leaving dot win because of the dramatic surge in e-drama by the reddit kids.

-3
Hand_Of_Node -3 points ago +1 / -4

Headline contains the Greatest fallacious rhetoric I've seen so far today. OP is #1!

Also, in this part of California we're having a severe shortage of empty shelves. Although to be fair, Trader Joe's was completely out of dolmas the other day.

0
Hand_Of_Node 0 points ago +1 / -1

When someone looks out at the world and sees all manner of suffering and injustice, stretching back for thousands of years and continuing today, he invariably blames such problems on someone else's hatred, greed, or stupidity. Rarely will someone consider the possibility that his own belief system is the cause of the pain and suffering he sees around him. But in most cases, it is. The root cause of most of society's ills--the main source of man's inhumanity to man--is neither malice nor negligence, but a mere superstition--an unquestioned assumption which has been accepted on faith by nearly everyone, of all ages, races, religions, education and income levels. If people were to recognize that one belief for what it is--an utterly irrational, self-contradictory, and horribly destructive myth--most of the violence, oppression and injustice in the world would cease. But that will happen only when people dare to honestly and objectively re-examine their belief systems. "The Most Dangerous Superstition" exposes the myth for what it is, showing how nearly everyone, as a result of one particular unquestioned assumption, is directly contributing to violence and oppression without even realizing it. If you imagine yourself to be a compassionate, peace-loving, civilized human being, you must read this book.

The promo blurb. According to comments, he identifies "belief in authority" as the issue, when it's more fundamentally human stupidity, or poorly formed and developed brains.

"Someone tell me what to do because I don't work well enough to figure it out on my own."

Anyway, he stretched that out into a whole book.

-1
Hand_Of_Node -1 points ago +1 / -2

Electronics and electricity itself have done more damage to our species than jews.

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