This was overdramatized. There was no real evidence shown of any of the claims. It was presented as a "Conspiracy Theory" rather than a clear presentation of evidence. This was designed to be laughed at.
Just like AJ's whole shtick.
You can't tell people the truth. You must show them the evidence in a way that they can see it.
people forget what AJ's role was. He was to tell of cabal plans while playing a crazy person, so that the media could label it all and people discard the info, as well as insert much bullshit into the mix of true things
I wonder on that...If Alex Jones had presented things in a more...'sane' way, how long would he have been able to keep talking?
Yet in spite of his crazy, raving madman schtick, "alex jones was right" has been a meme for a few years now.
Not saying that's what he was doing to stay under the radar, but with the advantage of hindsight, it would be the perfect way to slip under the radar...act a little kooky, sprinkle in some truth here and there, and suddenly you've got a captive audience, laughing at you sure, but decades later, they can remember that you said this exact crazy thing, and now it's actually coming to light that it's true... Notice they didn't actually try to shut him down until people started taking him seriously.
Heck, look at q. You guys for years were laughed off at harmless loons, but more and more info has been exposed that shows that you're at the very least on to something, and now you're the bogeyman that got a film bringing light to a horrendous crime put front and center.
Whether this is actually what happened or not, it's certainly a strategy worth exploring...
This was overdramatized. There was no real evidence shown of any of the claims. It was presented as a "Conspiracy Theory" rather than a clear presentation of evidence. This was designed to be laughed at.
Just like AJ's whole shtick.
You can't tell people the truth. You must show them the evidence in a way that they can see it.
people forget what AJ's role was. He was to tell of cabal plans while playing a crazy person, so that the media could label it all and people discard the info, as well as insert much bullshit into the mix of true things
And yet... We must not let it pass notice that he was right.
I wonder on that...If Alex Jones had presented things in a more...'sane' way, how long would he have been able to keep talking?
Yet in spite of his crazy, raving madman schtick, "alex jones was right" has been a meme for a few years now.
Not saying that's what he was doing to stay under the radar, but with the advantage of hindsight, it would be the perfect way to slip under the radar...act a little kooky, sprinkle in some truth here and there, and suddenly you've got a captive audience, laughing at you sure, but decades later, they can remember that you said this exact crazy thing, and now it's actually coming to light that it's true... Notice they didn't actually try to shut him down until people started taking him seriously.
Heck, look at q. You guys for years were laughed off at harmless loons, but more and more info has been exposed that shows that you're at the very least on to something, and now you're the bogeyman that got a film bringing light to a horrendous crime put front and center.
Whether this is actually what happened or not, it's certainly a strategy worth exploring...