We all had our first red pill that woke us up.
Many required a series of red pills to get where they are today.
What was your first red pill, and what was your emotions?
We all had our first red pill that woke us up.
Many required a series of red pills to get where they are today.
What was your first red pill, and what was your emotions?
9/11 was the first major awakening I had. I can't say I took the red pill all at once. With each event I questionned, I swallowed another piece of the red pill. I don't even know that I've taken the whole red pill at this point and I'm prepared to be shocked in the future. My feeling is that I've been chosen for this moment in time. I don't exactly know what that entails but I hope I'm up for the task.
I agree we have been chosen. I think we are soon to find out more. What an exciting time to be alive. Don’t get me started on 9/11, ‘Building 7!’
It is interesting to think of the Q drops as a kind of anon filtration system.
Like the first Q drop about HRC’s arrest being so easily debunked. That gave everyone triggered by conspiracy theories an immediate out. You know the type of people who put up angry, stubborn defenses against anything that counters their paradigm? Those people left Q immediately.
Then all the open-ended questions were a way to weed out the impatient. People who wanted to be spoonfed. People who wouldn’t even pause to sit back and play out in their mind the answers to Q’s questions. So all the people not inclined to think abstractly, they left.
Then the abbreviations. Was that a filter? Is there some percentage of the population, or some personality type, who is especially good at holding dozens if not hundreds of abbreviations in their mind at once, almost like a form of mathematics? Are there certain types of people who literally could not read the drops without an abbreviation key, got frustrated, and left?
The riddles too were important, and I noticed there was a breed of personality that HATED Q for the riddles. To me the riddles are what made it fun and entertaining and interesting. But other people, it drove them nuts. It frustrated them so much and they left. Was that also intentional?
Also, the Q drops were strangely good at purging most of the truly hateful anons. Was that done through the messaging about division? I’ve always noticed that in a total inversion of what the corporate media says about Q, reading the Q drops makes people feel less angry, not more. The way Q speaks and what he says, it starts to make you feel stupid for ever being hateful to anyone. Did that filter out all the people who couldn’t let go of their hate?
Building 7 was so obvious, it's amazing most people can't see it. Or should I say refuse to see it.