(from PrayingMeduc)
Transitioning From a Culture of Trusting Others to Trusting Ourselves
The title of this article is bound to raise a few eyebrows. I am not proposing that we should ignore the biblical admonition to trust God. Nor do I intend to argue against the fact that the human heart is deceitful. The narrow question I'll address here is where we get the information we use to understand current events.
For as long as I can remember, I’ve trusted members of the press to investigate current events and report their findings. Recently, I learned that my trust was misplaced. The media have been feeding me half-truths. Having been made aware of this, I began looking for a different source of information.
In 2018, I stumbled upon Q—an anonymous entity who encouraged people to dig through publicly available news articles, videos, and government documents to uncover the truth for themselves.
As I thought about the questions Q asked, and plowed through the linked documents, I learned that the media had been covering up institutionalized corruption.
A new view of the world began taking shape in my mind. Not surprisingly, it was completely different from the model the media portrays.
The Research
Q has posted hints on hundreds of subjects. I learned that I could usually find the truth of a matter if I did a little digging.
Because I didn't have time to research every subject myself, sometimes, I'd look at the work of other researchers (anons). I’d examine their research and conclusions and see if they had connected the dots correctly. If they had, I would share their work with others.
The anons that follow Q have created a sweeping narrative of culture that opposes the one disseminated by society’s corrupt overlords.
A sublime truth emerged from all of this. I realized I didn’t need anyone to tell me how the world works. I discovered that truth for myself by doing my own research. Q merely suggested where I should look for information.
Many people still prefer to get their information from someone else—especially if a source appears to have information not available to the public.
As I've said previously, I'm not interested in sources of information that are not in the public domain. Such information cannot be verified, is easy to fake, and is often proven false at a later time. One cannot build an accurate picture of current events based on rumors and anonymous sources.
We got ourselves into this predicament because we trusted others to tell us the truth and they betrayed us. Many are still betraying us, though we're unaware of it because their claims can neither be verified nor falsified.
I’ve learned (along with millions of anons) that we don’t need others to tell us what’s happening in the world. We can uncover the facts ourselves. And that is the primary goal of Q’s operation. Q did not intend to make us dependent on intelligence insiders for information. He trained us to become citizen journalists—free thinking people who do their own research and come to their own conclusions.
We are, at this moment, transitioning from a time when we trusted in others to tell how the world works to a time when we must trust ourselves.
People often ask how do I know which subjects to focus on and which to ignore. All my research and every Q decode is guided by the Holy Spirit. Although I’ve come to trust my research, it would be useless if not for the guidance of God. When Q says “trust yourself,” he is not telling us to ignore our relationship with God. It is God's Spirit that leads us into all truth.
Think for yourself.
Research for yourself.
Trust yourself.
Clickbait opinions are designed to attract reader to subscribe and/or follow and/or shape a pre-designed narrative.
FOLLOW THE FACTS.
SHEEP NO MORE.
Q
I agree 100% with your comment about what happens when your beliefs don't match 100% with the majority of those here. And if you're not in lock step with them, you're a shill.
And God forbid if you ask someone where they're getting their info on something. For example, someone was saying that VAERS showed 200,000 people dying from the Covid vaccine. So I went to the VAERS site, and it lists less than 6,000 deaths from the Covid vaccine. But people get absolutely hostile if you ask them where they're getting their info on something. I think it's because they realize, too late, that random internet memes isn't a high quality source for VAERS info when anyone can go to the VAERS website to check for themselves.
This entire mantra of "Do the research" is bullshit, for all the reasons you've listed above.
It’s also worth noting that VAERS is basically like Wikipedia or IMBD. Literally anyone can submit a report that they’ve had an adverse reaction. You could do it yourself right now if you wanted to. They lay out how easy it is on the site:
https://vaers.hhs.gov/reportevent.html
VAERS is designed so that medical professionals can look for trends and such. It’s completely raw data, and since literally anyone can submit a report, it’s not considered reliable data on its own. It needs to be processed and vetted by people who actually know how to use this kind of data.
Trusting VAERS as a reliable source on which to base your beliefs about vaccines is no different than basing your beliefs about Donald Trump completely upon whatever his Wikipedia page currently says. Except that Wikipedia is moderated and monitored, while VAERS just collects data from anyone who clicks the button.
excellent point