Agreed. Another problem many in our ranks have is blindly trusting rando streamers who claim all of this outlandish shit with little to no empirical evidence.
I can remember many slow (or none at all) Q drop days where the PSB24/7 stream would discuss crap like the mud flood. At it's height, that was a channel that had 100,000+ Q followers and researchers subscribed (assuming YT didn't suppress their sub/view counts).
So that's 100K of us that on dead drop days might've listened to Radix, Thumper, and Deadcat ramble on adnausem, hypothesizing about these type of rabbit holes.
In all honesty, it feels a bit like the flat Earth psyop. Purely distraction, used as a discrediting example against the community for the normies to label us as they are instructed to do so (programming). Im not doubting much of history has been covered up, rewritten, or even lost. But this whole impossible architecture narrative is incredibly weak to my perception. Glad others here can logically see the numerous holes in these convoluted theories.
See, I feel like there's actually much more compelling evidence for flat Earth than there is for the Tartaria theories. Whether that itself is ultimately nonsense or not is besides the point. I'm someone who is genuinely open-minded and willing to entertain the possibility that everything I've been taught is free-game. I don't think anything should be off limits as far as asking questions goes. If nothing else I find these ideas to be fun thought experiments!
That being said, I'm not just dismissing mudfloods/Tartaria out of hand because it goes against what I've been taught. I've actually looked into it myself and I just really didn't find the theory that convincing. I do think mudfloods have happened but that doesn't mean they were deliberately engineered as a planetary scale genocide or whatever. And the observation that buildings in different countries share similar styles of architecture isn't even that difficult to explain. Conventional history about Europeans borrowing their Renaissance styles from antiquity is not exactly that mind-bending.
To me this just seems like a simple occam's razor affair.
Agreed. Another problem many in our ranks have is blindly trusting rando streamers who claim all of this outlandish shit with little to no empirical evidence.
I can remember many slow (or none at all) Q drop days where the PSB24/7 stream would discuss crap like the mud flood. At it's height, that was a channel that had 100,000+ Q followers and researchers subscribed (assuming YT didn't suppress their sub/view counts).
So that's 100K of us that on dead drop days might've listened to Radix, Thumper, and Deadcat ramble on adnausem, hypothesizing about these type of rabbit holes.
In all honesty, it feels a bit like the flat Earth psyop. Purely distraction, used as a discrediting example against the community for the normies to label us as they are instructed to do so (programming). Im not doubting much of history has been covered up, rewritten, or even lost. But this whole impossible architecture narrative is incredibly weak to my perception. Glad others here can logically see the numerous holes in these convoluted theories.
See, I feel like there's actually much more compelling evidence for flat Earth than there is for the Tartaria theories. Whether that itself is ultimately nonsense or not is besides the point. I'm someone who is genuinely open-minded and willing to entertain the possibility that everything I've been taught is free-game. I don't think anything should be off limits as far as asking questions goes. If nothing else I find these ideas to be fun thought experiments!
That being said, I'm not just dismissing mudfloods/Tartaria out of hand because it goes against what I've been taught. I've actually looked into it myself and I just really didn't find the theory that convincing. I do think mudfloods have happened but that doesn't mean they were deliberately engineered as a planetary scale genocide or whatever. And the observation that buildings in different countries share similar styles of architecture isn't even that difficult to explain. Conventional history about Europeans borrowing their Renaissance styles from antiquity is not exactly that mind-bending.
To me this just seems like a simple occam's razor affair.
I concur. The simplest answer is usually correct!
Also, kudos on your name if referencing the MTG card! 😉
I do (or did) play MTG, but interestingly enough that's not where I got the name from! That one's actually just a coincidence lol
Uh, earth is flat. Look into it.