The cabal makes people insane by horribly abusing them and then says, "You can't believe a word this guy says. He's insane." We need to know much more to reach any conclusions.
I'm not saying what you're saying is untrue, but I am going to say it seems irrelevant here.
Aaron Carter was insane. He surely was abused, sure, and turned to drugs to remedy it. Maybe they forced drugs on it. That's probably all true.
But nothing he had to say that we brushed off as the words of a madman were "exposing" anything. They were just innocuous shit. Most of his stories involved him being somewhere interesting he wasn't or did something with someone he didn't. All just stuff to make him sound more interesting than he is, and most of the time the stories were self refuting if you just listen to the whole thing.
You ever talk to someone and they start a story about something that happened to that that you can quickly surmise is untrue? But you don't want to make it awkward by calling them out on it... but then you also recognize that if you ask any questions, as you normally would in normal conversation, that you'll likely unintentionally expose their lie by making them think of a reasonable answer? So you just nod along and try to change the subject? That's what watching Aaron Carter speak was like. It was truly hilarious.
The cabal makes people insane by horribly abusing them and then says, "You can't believe a word this guy says. He's insane." We need to know much more to reach any conclusions.
I'm not saying what you're saying is untrue, but I am going to say it seems irrelevant here.
Aaron Carter was insane. He surely was abused, sure, and turned to drugs to remedy it. Maybe they forced drugs on it. That's probably all true.
But nothing he had to say that we brushed off as the words of a madman were "exposing" anything. They were just innocuous shit. Most of his stories involved him being somewhere interesting he wasn't or did something with someone he didn't. All just stuff to make him sound more interesting than he is, and most of the time the stories were self refuting if you just listen to the whole thing.
You ever talk to someone and they start a story about something that happened to that that you can quickly surmise is untrue? But you don't want to make it awkward by calling them out on it... but then you also recognize that if you ask any questions, as you normally would in normal conversation, that you'll likely unintentionally expose their lie by making them think of a reasonable answer? So you just nod along and try to change the subject? That's what watching Aaron Carter speak was like. It was truly hilarious.