Not at all. Quite right. However, the significant data point I'm considering here is the expression:
"control the narrative"
To my knowledge, the concept of "the narrative" is something that has gone mainstream primarily thanks to or under the influence of the Great Awakening. This concept was not very widely understood or appreciated before 2018. Even now, my brother who is by no means a normie, but also does NOT follow Q or very much else going on in the macro, including politics and all the nonsense, even he spoke about "narrative".
Elon directly mentioning this idea directly alludes to narrative warfare, because it implies a battle for control of said narrative.
Just staying grounded.
Definitely. Perhaps some jumped to the conclusion (in reading the post title) that Musk was talking about something else, like..... ? I'm not sure what "my way of thinking" is other than what I've jotted just above. It's that the use of the expression, the introduction of the concept, etc.... well, who talks about 'them controlling the narrative' these days....
Doesn't matter that the topic at hand was Space X.
But consider the tweet he was responding to:
I never realized how much the media hates Elon until this week......an incredible step forward for humanity, yet the media paints it as a failure. If NASA did the same thing, praise would dominate headlines. Something doesn’t add up.
So then, who is the THEY that Musk is talking about here. It's clearly "the Media". Musk is openly stating that Twitter is now referring to Twitter as a dangerous threat to the Media's ability to control the narrative. That's a very Great Awakening concept, if you ask me.
Notice also the direct allusion to "NASA" in the original tweet. There's another awakening concept: that NASA is part of the swamp.
Personally, I think the fact that the original tweet was a reply to someone on the issue of the SpaceX explosion isn't significant, and it wasn't the subject matter that I think is significant here. That Musk is openly using expressions like "control the narrative", and introducing that concept that "the Media do this" to millions of people, is.
It's a fine comment, but alas, I fear you may have triggered poor Jess.
Not at all. Quite right. However, the significant data point I'm considering here is the expression:
"control the narrative"
To my knowledge, the concept of "the narrative" is something that has gone mainstream primarily thanks to or under the influence of the Great Awakening. This concept was not very widely understood or appreciated before 2018. Even now, my brother who is by no means a normie, but also does NOT follow Q or very much else going on in the macro, including politics and all the nonsense, even he spoke about "narrative".
Elon directly mentioning this idea directly alludes to narrative warfare, because it implies a battle for control of said narrative.
Definitely. Perhaps some jumped to the conclusion (in reading the post title) that Musk was talking about something else, like..... ? I'm not sure what "my way of thinking" is other than what I've jotted just above. It's that the use of the expression, the introduction of the concept, etc.... well, who talks about 'them controlling the narrative' these days....
Doesn't matter that the topic at hand was Space X.
But consider the tweet he was responding to:
So then, who is the THEY that Musk is talking about here. It's clearly "the Media". Musk is openly stating that Twitter is now referring to Twitter as a dangerous threat to the Media's ability to control the narrative. That's a very Great Awakening concept, if you ask me.
Notice also the direct allusion to "NASA" in the original tweet. There's another awakening concept: that NASA is part of the swamp.
Personally, I think the fact that the original tweet was a reply to someone on the issue of the SpaceX explosion isn't significant, and it wasn't the subject matter that I think is significant here. That Musk is openly using expressions like "control the narrative", and introducing that concept that "the Media do this" to millions of people, is.
It's a fine comment, but alas, I fear you may have triggered poor Jess.