Dude intelligent people are insanely rare. I would estimate 1 in 500 Americans are bright enough to understand Q's mission. The rest are so brainwashed they'll believe anything if they perceive that the majority is going along with it. That's the unfortunate fact.
It's not really lack of intelligence (but I tend to be really optimistic about such things) but a conditioning issue, which is why it's really important to smash the MSM machine and big Social Media and all that.
When I went to junior college back in the late 90s/early 2000s, we had to take a Logic course. It was awesome and I wish more schools would have that on their curriculum. Aligning with the theme of this post, while it was easy for some, many struggled to pass that class.
Agree. I took intro to logic along with discrete math for my comp sci degree. These classes were the best. I especially liked the intro to logic where we would diagram syllogisms and fallacies. It got complicated, but made me think! Schools don’t teach people to think, but instead teach people to regurgitate knowledge whether it is true or false.
Dude intelligent people are insanely rare. I would estimate 1 in 500 Americans are bright enough to understand Q's mission. The rest are so brainwashed they'll believe anything if they perceive that the majority is going along with it. That's the unfortunate fact.
I think you are spot on. It has zero to do with higher education. As a matter of fact, higher education institutions is where the DUMBEST are born.
Yep, I call it having common sense which as we know isn't so common anymore.
It's not really lack of intelligence (but I tend to be really optimistic about such things) but a conditioning issue, which is why it's really important to smash the MSM machine and big Social Media and all that.
When I went to junior college back in the late 90s/early 2000s, we had to take a Logic course. It was awesome and I wish more schools would have that on their curriculum. Aligning with the theme of this post, while it was easy for some, many struggled to pass that class.
Agree. I took intro to logic along with discrete math for my comp sci degree. These classes were the best. I especially liked the intro to logic where we would diagram syllogisms and fallacies. It got complicated, but made me think! Schools don’t teach people to think, but instead teach people to regurgitate knowledge whether it is true or false.