If you want to convince people who don't already believe this stuff, you're going to have to explain it clearly in words. This is just an image. Reading the comments it seems even people here are confused about it.
From the comments I've gathered the monument in the image is the Georgia Guidestones. From reading about them, they were commissioned by an pseudonymous person going by the name "R.C. Christian". So do you claim to know who that person/group was? Who? How do you know? How is that group related to the vaccines? And why would they put up a big monument announcing their evil intentions to the world 40 years before Covid even existed?
What does thinking logographically mean? Why is that a necessary step? If you want people to “meet you in the middle” I think direct answers to simple questions is a pretty reasonable request.
I'm going to just make this one reply instead of replying to all your posts since you're making a bunch.
To first give you an analogy for my perspective:
Imagine I came up to you and said I've got a really great business idea and I want you to loan me $100,000 so I can work on it for a while. You'd probably have some questions -- what's the business? Who are your customers? How big is the market? Imagine I say I can answer all your questions, but you won't understand the answers yet. To understand my answers, first you'll have to learn Arabic, read the Quran in its entirety, read all the hadiths, then you've got to get a PhD in astrophysics, and then you have to decode this riddle I've hidden on a bunch of websites. Would you do all that research before I've answered your simple questions in a way you could understand? Would you want to invest in that company?
I don't think you would. I'd need to convince you the company was doing something real and potentially profitable before you invested your time or money.
So that's what it feels like from my perspective.The questions I asked were pretty simple and obvious -- who do you think built the monument? How do you know they built it? Why did they build it? What does this have to do with the vaccines? -- and so far you've only answered them with more questions, or a list of seemingly-unrelated references.
Before I invest a bunch of time researching logographic thinking, Babylonians, Rothschilds, Saudi Arabia, MK ULTRA, etc etc etc -- I have to have some reason to think there's something valuable there.
I haven't seen anything that makes me think you have a real answer to my simple questions yet, so why would I invest more time in it?
But even if that’s true, why take the risk? How does putting up a weird monument in rural Georgia help them achieve their goals?
If I were in some shady global conspiracy with secret plots for population control, the last thing I would do would be to put up a bunch of coded references to my plans in public. It wouldn’t benefit me at all and it would increase my risks. It’d be like if the Mafia put up billboards confessing to their crimes in oblique riddles. That seems like Scooby Doo shit, not how actual criminal enterprises work.
If you want to convince people who don't already believe this stuff, you're going to have to explain it clearly in words. This is just an image. Reading the comments it seems even people here are confused about it.
From the comments I've gathered the monument in the image is the Georgia Guidestones. From reading about them, they were commissioned by an pseudonymous person going by the name "R.C. Christian". So do you claim to know who that person/group was? Who? How do you know? How is that group related to the vaccines? And why would they put up a big monument announcing their evil intentions to the world 40 years before Covid even existed?
What does thinking logographically mean? Why is that a necessary step? If you want people to “meet you in the middle” I think direct answers to simple questions is a pretty reasonable request.
I'm going to just make this one reply instead of replying to all your posts since you're making a bunch.
To first give you an analogy for my perspective:
Imagine I came up to you and said I've got a really great business idea and I want you to loan me $100,000 so I can work on it for a while. You'd probably have some questions -- what's the business? Who are your customers? How big is the market? Imagine I say I can answer all your questions, but you won't understand the answers yet. To understand my answers, first you'll have to learn Arabic, read the Quran in its entirety, read all the hadiths, then you've got to get a PhD in astrophysics, and then you have to decode this riddle I've hidden on a bunch of websites. Would you do all that research before I've answered your simple questions in a way you could understand? Would you want to invest in that company?
I don't think you would. I'd need to convince you the company was doing something real and potentially profitable before you invested your time or money.
So that's what it feels like from my perspective.The questions I asked were pretty simple and obvious -- who do you think built the monument? How do you know they built it? Why did they build it? What does this have to do with the vaccines? -- and so far you've only answered them with more questions, or a list of seemingly-unrelated references.
Before I invest a bunch of time researching logographic thinking, Babylonians, Rothschilds, Saudi Arabia, MK ULTRA, etc etc etc -- I have to have some reason to think there's something valuable there.
I haven't seen anything that makes me think you have a real answer to my simple questions yet, so why would I invest more time in it?
But even if that’s true, why take the risk? How does putting up a weird monument in rural Georgia help them achieve their goals?
If I were in some shady global conspiracy with secret plots for population control, the last thing I would do would be to put up a bunch of coded references to my plans in public. It wouldn’t benefit me at all and it would increase my risks. It’d be like if the Mafia put up billboards confessing to their crimes in oblique riddles. That seems like Scooby Doo shit, not how actual criminal enterprises work.
I mean it doesn’t seem very successful then… the world population has increased a little over 1% per year every year since 1980.