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GreatAwakening
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Reason: Fixed a typo.

I'm much like you.

I'm someone watching far on the sideline. I'm neither American or live in America. I'm from Sweden and haven't had that big of a political interest until some 2- 3 years ago when I felt like what the Swedish media told me did not match up with my actual experiences (long story short, over-immigration is affecting our country in a very bad way,) and America affects our country a lot. Before Trump, Sweden was going down (and still is holding on to) this very twisted far-left belief with men being women and women being men (people are free to do whatever they want with themselves but to force these things on us who don't believe it is too much,) to the point that if you actually have the wrong political belief, you lose your job, no joke. People lose their jobs over disagreeing with immigration policies and disagreeing over transmatter issues.

I got into the Q-theory not long ago at all, perhaps a week ago at most through the Swedish free-speech forum called Flashback.org.

It very much sounds like a fiction at first, like a cool story but "too good/unreal to be true."

But the more I read into it, the more I start to see what people were getting at, and I can say that a lot of what I've seen actually has been pretty mindboggling. Something just isn't right.

However, that goes both ways. I also feel a bit critical towards other types of theories.

Some things I feel is a bit over the top is the whole "cabal are satanistic, blood drinking pedophiles," it's like (if we assume this is all fiction) the writer wanted to have the absolute worst possible type of villain there is, to the point it became over the top. I would, if so, have fallen for the narrative more if it was more like human-trafficking pedophiles, moneygrubbers, etc, but blood drinking and Satanistic?

It becomes a very obvious religious narrative, a religious battle. I can understand this is America, and America is very religious, so a religious narrative will catch people's attention more.

But as someone, like me, from Sweden, who is not religious whatsoever, that narrative feels... strange and almost forced because it was a way to easier catch the attention of Christians. Of course as a Christian you'd want the Evil gone, the Satan worshipping bastards out of the picture and reclaim the glory to the one and only God.

But as said, someone outside that religious belief, it becomes a bit too much.

I will be honest that I don't buy the Q-theory that much, it's just something that too good to be true, and I've grown up learning that nothing can be too good to be true, but I happily wish to be proven wrong.

If the Q-theory is fake, it is what it is. But I would urge all of you to not falter because of it, if it turns out to be fake.. You all got a strong bond.

If the Q-theory is true, the American people have my best wishes, even if I can't do anything being in a far-away country.

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

I'm much like you.

I'm someone watching far on the sideline. I'm neither American or live in America. I'm from Sweden and haven't had that big of a political interest until some 2- 3 years ago when I felt like what the Swedish media told me did not match up with my actual experiences (long story short, over-immigration is affecting our country in a very bad way,) and America affects our country a lot. Before Trump, Sweden was going down (and still is holding on to) this very twisted far-left belief with men being women and women being men (people are free to do whatever they want with themselves but to force these things on us who don't believe it is too much,) to the point that if you actually have the wrong political belief, you lose your job, no joke. People lose their jobs over disagreeing with immigration policies and disagreeing over transmatter issues.

I got into the Q-theory not long ago at all, perhaps a week ago at most through the Swedish free-speech forum called Flashback.org.

It very much sounds like a fiction at first, like a cool story but "too good/unreal to be true."

But the more I read into it, the more I start to see what people were getting at, and I can say that a lot of what I've seen actually has been pretty mindboggling. Something just isn't right.

However, that goes both ways. I also feel a bit critical towards other types of theories.

Some things I feel is a bit over the top is the whole "cabal are satanistic, blood drinking pedophiles," it's like (if we assume this is all fiction) the writer wanted to have the absolute worst possible type of villain there is, to the point it became over the top. I would, if so, have fallen for the narrative more if it was more like human-trafficking pedophiles, moneygrubbers, etc, but blood drinking and Satanistic?

It becomes a very obvious religious narrative, a religious battle. I can understand this is America, and America is very religious, so a religious narrative will catch people's attention more.

But as someone, like me, from Sweden, who is not religious whatsoever, that narrative feels... strange and almost forced because it was a way to easier catch the attention of Christians. Of course as a Christian you'd want the Evil gone, the Satan worshipping bastards out of the picture and reclaim the flory to the one and only God.

But as said, someone outside that religious belief, it becomes a bit too much.

I will be honest that I don't buy the Q-theory that much, it's just something that too good to be true, and I've grown up learning that nothing can be too good to be true, but I happily wish to be proven wrong.

If the Q-theory is fake, it is what it is. But I would urge all of you to not falter because of it, if it turns out to be fake.. You all got a strong bond.

If the Q-theory is true, the American people have my best wishes, even if I can't do anything being in a far-away country.

3 years ago
1 score