It's because we need to wake up totally retarded people. The Smart Ones woke up 20 years ago on 9/11. This is the short bus.
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I live in one of the most brainwashed places in the United States.
This has nothing to do with "logic." This has to do with "axioms". Logic is an extension of axioms. You take your axioms, and you apply logic to it to come to logical conclusions. People are generally very logical, they just don't realize what their assumptions (axioms) are, or how powerful they are in influencing thought and belief.
If the axiom is, "There can be no such thing as a conspiracy theory" then logic dictates that all things that are happening fall under that axiom, and the brain makes it work, because that axiom holds sway. People have been holding on to that axiom forever. It is the primary brainwashing mechanism. It is reinforced in every single news program going back forever. "There can be no such thing as a conspiracy theory" is the axiom that rules the world. If you apply that axiom to any evidence, you can make it work out just fine.
It is only until you are ready to question the axiom itself that logic will dictate a different outcome.
Brainwashing doesn't touch logic. It creates and controls the axioms, the core, unprovable beliefs. Brainwashing lets the brain create the logic from the input of the beliefs. The beliefs are created by reinforcement. The media says it all day long every day. All your friends say it all day long every day because they all listen to the media, just like you (not you you, the general you). It is a constant narrative. This instilment of belief by reinforcement (Mockingbird Media, the place where they all agree) makes it much more powerful and persistent than just "confusing logic."
Looking up the evidence, it is non trivial to get to the "beyond a reasonable doubt" stage. It isn't like its clear, on the contrary, the evidence is obfuscated by mountains of rhetoric and conflicting statements, and hidden on page 352 of a 528 page document, all designed to make it really hard to find, and perpetually confuse the issue. In addition each person has to go through and look for themselves which then comes back full circle to the next problem.
There is no reason to look at this evidence, because "There can be no such thing as a conspiracy theory," therefore there is nothing to see there. If you look, and think that the government and media are ALL lying, together in a big fat conspiracy, you are nothing more than a conspiracy theorist, a shameful bottom dweller, because "there can be no such thing as a conspiracy theory," and everyone knows it.
It is perfectly logical.
its also why the awakening is such a shock, people realize they have believed a false axiom and that rattles them, what else did they get wrong. Think about when you have been proven wrong, its scary. Most of us who are awake constantly challenge our axioms, if we are wrong lets correct and move forward.
The first time a fundamental (core) belief of mine was shown to be unequivocally wrong I was 15. It was a harsh lesson, but I have never held onto any beliefs since then as anything other than speculative possibilities. My beliefs since have always been completely mutable, based on available evidence with an attempt to shun bias. (While bias definitely played a part, I was always on guard for that influence, though at times that guard was perhaps not as good as it should have been). My life decisions were in general based on levels of "reasonable doubt," not belief in my own personal "truths," because I had none.
Such a system may seem scary to many, but it is actually incredibly freeing. It allows a person to simply listen to what the Universe/God/That Which Is has to say, instead of going around telling It what It Is all the time.
Having said that, when I first really understood that there really was a gigantic conspiracy to rule the world (at the time I didn't realize it had BEEN ruled for millennia by the same group), it was quite the shock. When I first found out about the terrors of children I didn't sleep for a week and had deep sobbing sessions three times during that first week (not really much of a crier normally). So maybe I did have stronger beliefs than I had thought.
That is how strong that particular program ("there's no such thing as a conspiracy") is. Breaking that program is no mean feat. The size of the conspiracy must be shown in a way that all can see. Thus the current state of our world.
It's gonna get real scary in the not too distant future. It's hard to not feel pity for those who are still asleep, or even worse, those who have partially awakened but believe Q is a "Conspiracy Theory." That would be a very scary place to be.