Truth !?
(media.greatawakening.win)
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Well said. Honestly I think this applies the most to the older crowd (not trying to be ageist here...hear me out). Those who have lived the longest have watched the news the longest. Those are the ones who have been conditioned the most to trust what they hear on the news - it used to be that they actually did deliver facts and information you could rely on. The longer you do anything, the harder it is to stop doing that. That would include putting your trust in the news. So for those who have been watching the MSM news the longest, they will have the hardest time believing that what they're told is a lie.
Aside from that, some people simply can't mentally handle what is going on - those of us here have had our eyes opened for quite some time; some longer than others. It's horrible what's happening. It's unbelievable sometimes that this much evil is running around and affecting our lives. We should try to have some compassion for those who have a harder time handling this - it would be better to help ease someone into it (and ultimately have them be red-pilled) than to be rough with them and turn them back toward the sheep. Just my opinion.
I disagree that they're not evil. These are people, man of them, who live off the work of others, demand special treatment due to their "difference", whatever the hell that might be, and have an absolute blinding hatred for a man who is trying to save this country. These people are actively supporting those who hold all of us, including them, in contempt. You cannot support evilness without being evil yourself.
With regard to the absolute blinding hatred for the man who is trying to save our country, I'm not going to disagree with you at all. Anyone with that kind of hate in their heart for someone like Donald Trump (to whom I assume you are referring) probably is evil. I think this thread was more discussing those willing to accept the covid "vaccine" though - I'm not so sure it was dealing specifically with those suffering from TDS. At least, my comment was.
Thanks for the reply, I see your point. Maybe it's just hard for me to separate the stupid from the evil.
I understand completely. One of the comedians from the "redneck" tour - Jeff Foxworthy, Ron White, etc. - I forget the other 2 names, but one of them suggested that dumb people wear a sign so the rest of us can spot them easily. Wouldn't that be nice - would sure make separating them easier! :) Have a great day!
I’ll agree with the older crowd to an extent, but as a millennial, my generation grew up with knowing nothing but this world we are in, and if it’s all you know, it’s hard to believe none of it is true.
Fair enough; but as a millennial, you have knowledge of the internet and the opportunity to find out so much more than the TV news will tell you. Older people (I'm talking those in their late 60s and 70s+) had to learn how to use computers late in their lives (whereas you and I had instruction in grade school) and some didn't learn at all. They're nowhere near as tech savvy as your age group is. That's not to knock them; in contrast, you probably never learned shorthand. You may not know what the heck shorthand is (though if you do, I'm impressed) - I'm Gen X and was at the tail end of learning shorthand; it was fizzling out with my age group already. It's just a generational thing. Believe me, I work for a 68 year old attorney who has had to get used to using computers in his work, and I don't see him ever being proficient with them (thank God, otherwise I wouldn't have a job).
So I guess what I'm saying is that your age group affords you an avenue through which to find information that those older people don't have as much access to. But I have to agree, when it's all you know, it's very hard to let go of what you believed to be the truth. Especially when the truth is as ugly as it is.
Very interesting viewpoint and a great addition to this conversation :) Thank you!
I can definitely agree with that. My grandma is based as hell though, but there will always be outliers. In my experience, as being 6 on 9/11 I pretty much grew up post 9/11. I didn’t know enough about the world to understand what happened, other than my country needed me to love it. (Yes I understand 9/11 now in its dreadful entirety) Many of my classmates I have been friends with on various platforms don’t care enough to look for the truth, because they’ve been told the truth is “conspiracy” without understanding the word. The last 4 years they were at that age of “I’m young and I know everything” most of them are just happy to think they don’t have to pay attention to politics anymore because “orange man gone” My generation doesn’t care enough to search. They’ve been brainwashed by 6 second videos one after the other. Their attention span is shot, so anything that requires reading and logical thinking, gets tossed out for funny cat videos. I think the older generation has been in the world long enough to use their heads, the younger generations have no excuse not to find the truth as you’ve said, but I don’t think they have the balls to admit they may be wrong, or the care to even search for a better world. They just care about what people tell them the world is, and don’t think about what it could be.
I know exactly what you're talking about. I have a stepdaughter who is exactly as you describe. Thinks she knows everything and in reality, knows almost nothing. Likes to shoot guns with us at the range but hated Trump. ??? I don't know how anyone who likes to shoot could vote for biden. My husband and I were doing some estate planning, and the question of which kids to leave which bang-bangs came up. I said I'm not leaving her any of mine until she puts her head on straight and realizes who is trying to protect our 2A rights and who is trying to take them away. As to 9/11, you were a kid - nobody could expect you to fully understand all that until you grew up (and even now most people don't realize what really happened). I recall that day like it was yesterday, and it was absolutely horrible. I was on the 21st floor of a building at work in downtown Cleveland (where flight 93 flew right over us), looking out the window and praying I didn't see an airplane. Then we were evacuated, and that was chaotic. I was 26 and my daughter was 10, so you're just a little younger than she is. The false flag of all false flags. I cried for the whole world that day.