...when associated with Q posts by timestamp (2504) and date (293) suggest a possible clue as to what was communicated through the Timberwolf funeral envelopes.
So the Secret Service publicly says farewell to a President they protected. This is remarkable? What "possible clue"? Since a clue is only suggestive by definition, this is a "possible suggestion"? Such things are indistinguishable from flights of fancy. Sometimes, "clues" are false leads.
Suggestions and symbolism are a looser form of communication. Indirect. It's what the cabal has used for a long time.
Compare it to UDP vs TCP packets. Written and spoken language are TCP--validated and pretty much guaranteed to arrive. Symbolism is sent and you won't know for sure if the recipient got it.
Sometimes the communications are interpreted incorrectly or mistakenly, as you describe, but logically it does not wash that 100% of the symbolism is meaningless.
Symbolism is like a picture: it takes a thousand words to explain it.
Information theory defines communication as an information transfer process that reduces uncertainty about a proposition. No uncertainty is reduced by inarticulate symbols, and an event pulled out of context isn't even a symbol. You are on target only if you exactly know the meaning. Without the "exactness," then, yes, the symbol is meaningless.
You have a fantasy about what "the cabal has used." I've seen this so often. Someone floats a speculation, it gains currency, and then people simply take it as proven fact because everyone is parroting it. I guess that's pretty good---if you are a parrot.
Look, someone needs to explain the meaning of this post, or it remains mysterious garbage. This is not information.
The secret service email referenced in this link:
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/george-h-w-bush-secret-service-detail-bids-farewell-timberwolf-n945266
...when associated with Q posts by timestamp (2504) and date (293) suggest a possible clue as to what was communicated through the Timberwolf funeral envelopes.
So the Secret Service publicly says farewell to a President they protected. This is remarkable? What "possible clue"? Since a clue is only suggestive by definition, this is a "possible suggestion"? Such things are indistinguishable from flights of fancy. Sometimes, "clues" are false leads.
Suggestions and symbolism are a looser form of communication. Indirect. It's what the cabal has used for a long time.
Compare it to UDP vs TCP packets. Written and spoken language are TCP--validated and pretty much guaranteed to arrive. Symbolism is sent and you won't know for sure if the recipient got it.
Sometimes the communications are interpreted incorrectly or mistakenly, as you describe, but logically it does not wash that 100% of the symbolism is meaningless.
Symbolism is like a picture: it takes a thousand words to explain it.
Information theory defines communication as an information transfer process that reduces uncertainty about a proposition. No uncertainty is reduced by inarticulate symbols, and an event pulled out of context isn't even a symbol. You are on target only if you exactly know the meaning. Without the "exactness," then, yes, the symbol is meaningless.
You have a fantasy about what "the cabal has used." I've seen this so often. Someone floats a speculation, it gains currency, and then people simply take it as proven fact because everyone is parroting it. I guess that's pretty good---if you are a parrot.