That video was a bit of a ride. I hadn't seen it before and watching the it for the first time made me think the entire planet was going to explode, but his explanation at the end was very different.
I have experience in how to discuss important topics based on clearance levels and every conversation I've ever had, depending on the "environment", sounds exactly like how this man speaks. Every word needs to be chosen carefully.
Yes, absolutely - keeping an open mind about such things is the only position we can rationally take. The only issue I had with the concept of the timelines converging is events like the enemy nuking everything and hiding in Antarctica because that would definitely change the timelines because the white hats can't win if they're all dead... but then it occurred to me those timelines may not be possible if the white hats also have looking glasses.
Q does keep posting "Nothing can stop what is coming".
If you haven't already, you might enjoy researching the "crossword puzzle phenomenon" which is a strange and scientifically reproducible experiment dealing with shared human consciousness. For some unknown reason, computer generated crossword puzzles take longer for the first human to solve them and afterwards, generally speaking, people anywhere in the world can solve the same puzzles much faster. I haven't researched this in decades, but it's a fun / creepy phenomenon that potentially lends credibility to a lot of other psychic phenomenon.
Your looking glass video also reminded me of the Buddhist concept of tulpas / thought forms and the famous "Philip Experiment" from 1972 where a team of parapsychologists attempted to create a fictional thought form entity by inventing a fictional character and spending months focusing their attention on it and attempting to communicate with it as if it were real. Their results were (ahem) remarkable but widely criticized. I thought the concepts and study were fascinating even if the skeptics were right.
That video was a bit of a ride. I hadn't seen it before and watching the it for the first time made me think the entire planet was going to explode, but his explanation at the end was very different.
I have experience in how to discuss important topics based on clearance levels and every conversation I've ever had, depending on the "environment", sounds exactly like how this man speaks. Every word needs to be chosen carefully.
ARCHIVED: https://files.catbox.moe/e86yjs.mp4
Yes, absolutely - keeping an open mind about such things is the only position we can rationally take. The only issue I had with the concept of the timelines converging is events like the enemy nuking everything and hiding in Antarctica because that would definitely change the timelines because the white hats can't win if they're all dead... but then it occurred to me those timelines may not be possible if the white hats also have looking glasses.
Q does keep posting "Nothing can stop what is coming".
If you haven't already, you might enjoy researching the "crossword puzzle phenomenon" which is a strange and scientifically reproducible experiment dealing with shared human consciousness. For some unknown reason, computer generated crossword puzzles take longer for the first human to solve them and afterwards, generally speaking, people anywhere in the world can solve the same puzzles much faster. I haven't researched this in decades, but it's a fun / creepy phenomenon that potentially lends credibility to a lot of other psychic phenomenon.
Your looking glass video also reminded me of the Buddhist concept of tulpas / thought forms and the famous "Philip Experiment" from 1972 where a team of parapsychologists attempted to create a fictional thought form entity by inventing a fictional character and spending months focusing their attention on it and attempting to communicate with it as if it were real. Their results were (ahem) remarkable but widely criticized. I thought the concepts and study were fascinating even if the skeptics were right.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_experiment
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulpa