Of course they are created. They don't spontaneously generate themselves out of the ether. Human beings create them.
For example, the famous Triple Zero Delta of Feb. 17, 2019. That incredible trio of zero deltas was created when Q got Trump to post to social media within less than 60 seconds (i.e., 'zero minutes') after Q did—THREE TIMES IN ONE DAY.
The odds against this happening spontaneously are beyond calculation. The Triple Zero Delta confirms, as well as or better than any other Q proof, that Trump and Q were definitely working together.
The odds against this happening spontaneously are beyond calculation.
Millions of things happen in the world every day. Basically you get to pick and choose which of these millions of things things are connected. And it feels important because we are irrational.
If you are subscribing to the principle that everything happens by coincidence, then you are not thinking critically about this, any more than the person who says there is "no such thing" as coincidence. The key question is:
"How many coincidences before it's mathematically impossible?"
Of course they are created. They don't spontaneously generate themselves out of the ether. Human beings create them.
For example, the famous Triple Zero Delta of Feb. 17, 2019. That incredible trio of zero deltas was created when Q got Trump to post to social media within less than 60 seconds (i.e., 'zero minutes') after Q did—THREE TIMES IN ONE DAY.
The odds against this happening spontaneously are beyond calculation. The Triple Zero Delta confirms, as well as or better than any other Q proof, that Trump and Q were definitely working together.
A delta is just a measurement between two things
Millions of things happen in the world every day. Basically you get to pick and choose which of these millions of things things are connected. And it feels important because we are irrational.
If you are subscribing to the principle that everything happens by coincidence, then you are not thinking critically about this, any more than the person who says there is "no such thing" as coincidence. The key question is:
"How many coincidences before it's mathematically impossible?"
Q
That is actually a meme designed to turn off critical thinking