u/traxx posted this the other day; I just finished it, and it is fucking phenomenal. I've watched some of this guys videos in the past and they've usually been a little shorter and less informative. This one was spot on and honestly the best video I've seen to share with your friends to convince them that most of germ theory is a fraud.
u/axolotl_peyotl / u/PutinLovesCats / u/clemaneuverers
Would you mind pinning this for a bit?
Yeah exactly, weird that they wouldn't be sued for that logo usage.
But yeah, what's coming ain't good. You (with your experiments in GPT) have a pretty good general idea of the power of AI. A lot of people don't take AI or robotics seriously, but we're basically talking about the genesis of new lifeforms, and these lifeforms will know basically everything, plan out and communicate with each other at warp speed, and have no emotions or whimsical needs; just solar or other energy.
Terrifying shit, IMHO.
I added the movie to my iMDB list to watch once we finish moving and have more free time again.
Great post. I take this as a lesson. Canada and its population is fucked - whatever it's doing is probably the opposite of what I want to do.
I recommend buying gold, not as financial advice, but as life advice. They can't delete your gold account and you can carry enough gold in your pockets to buy a house. This means that you could put your life savings in your backpack and walk across a border if you needed to (though I'd recommend also bringing some lead in that case).
Also, beware of committing a fallacy of defective induction, potentially promulgating the kind of bias that leads to type II errors.
In other words, spreading "caution" about making such reasonable assumptions as two famous Sangers (uncommon name) being related may cause more harm than good, by giving onlookers pause about making their own reasonable and innocuous assumptions.
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.
You're right pertaining the wave form size and coupling into the antennas. There could possibly be more to the picture that we don't see, but that would definitely be a hard problem to overcome, unless the materials inside the body were able to act as a phased array antenna with frequency modulation. It's also possible that there are listening apparatus in the newer 5G towers that are spread everywhere, aside from the standard 5G listening. For example, towers broadcast signals at a different frequency for the purposes of telling you how much signal strength you have on your phone. I could imagine a scenario where there are various purpose built antenna inside of the standard 5G array that do things other than what ordinary people think they do.
...more RF power than a nanochip in the body could put out...
What if the power is being generated by the body and the antenna is composite, comprised of the materials within the body.
I'm not sure whether there's any truth in this video, but I think it's reasonable for a human body to generate enough power for something like this.
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 think you're right. The only thing that concerns me is the time on the market is pretty long because of what they are mentioning (and what you're mentioning - people staying in 3% loans) in this video (12 minutes in so far), and some construction projects that seemed like they were on hold indefinitely around here have all just picked up full steam, bulldozers and everything, makes me think they were about to go full steam into home production before end of summer and then we are going to see a huge pile of inventory come on the market right as it's crashing, I hope we can sell quick enough. I wish we would have listed it in June, but we weren't really there, emotionally, yet. Moving across the country and selling/buying, it's like a midlife crisis level of chaos in our lives in the past year, but getting back to op ex while the market is in flux will feel good, especially because we will have the extra money in the bank, which acts as a nice cushion and possibly a future home if the price is really tank.
Yeah exactly, as long as it's done responsibly. What we did was not responsible, because we were going to downsize and then we ended up buying something almost as expensive but with a higher interest rate and the same amount of financing we had before. So it was pretty stupid. And yeah I hope you're right that we do have a second chance to get out. We didn't buy it at the top or anything like that, because we bought in the third quarter, but hopefully we don't have to take a big haircut.
That's interesting, that's one of the top reasons why I think the real estate market is going to collapse as well. I didn't really think about it being related to the Covid money or any of that stuff, but I know that the number of Airbnb rentals has skyrocketed, and the number of people in that shit has gone way up, and now that we are experiencing a downturn and people are spending less, everybody who owns five or six Airbnb rentals is going to have to sell one or two of them to keep afloat, and that's going to tank the market.
Thanks for the link. I'm gonna listen to it this afternoon.
Re: timing of flashes, you're right, there are too fast to be a reflection, unless the windows had parabolic curves (which they wouldn't).