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Reason: None provided.

Something in the water? With the exception of Colorado and New Mexico (credit to anon Simple_Doot for the correction), every other blue state has a coastline (ocean or Great Lake) with many of their major cities located on the coast. (Twenty-two states don't have a coastline, including DC). I wonder if their water processing varies significantly from that of red states/red areas of states, more fluoride or something else deliberately snuck in under the radar to affect the greatest number of people possible.

I suspect control of the narrative (fake news) in population-dense areas plays a big role. In getting the greatest number of gullible souls under their matrix control, they initially began by focusing resources where they would have the greatest impact for their nefarious purposes. Yes, the tell-a-visions are all now showing the same narratives for the major outlets, but typically smaller towns have local news stations, local newspapers, etc where opinions aren't as "curated" (suppressed) and reporting perhaps more fair and balanced.

Ever wonder why local newspapers all seemed to be systematically turned to unreadable garbage? They wanted everyone online where they could control the narrative so reached their tentacles further out from the cities. A couple decades ago, magazines having nothing to do with medical topics (cooking magazines, for example) began being inundated with big pharma ads when restrictions against them marketing directly to consumers (vs only physicians) were lifted.

Yes, there are several other facets of country vs urban lifestyles that lend themselves to societal differences as you allude to (more "grounded"/connected to the earth and actual production, greater reliance on developing human connections for assistance vs relying on government, more honor for the wisdom of elders vs trendy propaganda spouted by self-appointed "experts", etc). You bring up a good point.

8 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Something in the water? With the exception of Colorado and New Mexico (credit to anon Simple_Doot for the correction), every other blue state has a coastline (ocean or Great Lake) with many of their major cities located on the coast. (Twenty-two states don't have a coastline). I wonder if their water processing varies significantly from that of red states/red areas of states, more fluoride or something else deliberately snuck in under the radar to affect the greatest number of people possible.

I suspect control of the narrative (fake news) in population-dense areas plays a big role. In getting the greatest number of gullible souls under their matrix control, they initially began by focusing resources where they would have the greatest impact for their nefarious purposes. Yes, the tell-a-visions are all now showing the same narratives for the major outlets, but typically smaller towns have local news stations, local newspapers, etc where opinions aren't as "curated" (suppressed) and reporting perhaps more fair and balanced.

Ever wonder why local newspapers all seemed to be systematically turned to unreadable garbage? They wanted everyone online where they could control the narrative so reached their tentacles further out from the cities. A couple decades ago, magazines having nothing to do with medical topics (cooking magazines, for example) began being inundated with big pharma ads when restrictions against them marketing directly to consumers (vs only physicians) were lifted.

Yes, there are several other facets of country vs urban lifestyles that lend themselves to societal differences as you allude to (more "grounded"/connected to the earth and actual production, greater reliance on developing human connections for assistance vs relying on government, more honor for the wisdom of elders vs trendy propaganda spouted by self-appointed "experts", etc). You bring up a good point.

8 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Something in the water? With the exception of Colorado and New Mexico (credit to anon Simple_Doot for the correction), every other blue state has a coastline (ocean or Great Lake) with many of their major cities located on the coast. (Only fifteen states don't). I wonder if their water processing varies significantly from that of red states/red areas of states, more fluoride or something else deliberately snuck in under the radar to affect the greatest number of people possible.

I suspect control of the narrative (fake news) in population-dense areas plays a big role. In getting the greatest number of gullible souls under their matrix control, they initially began by focusing resources where they would have the greatest impact for their nefarious purposes. Yes, the tell-a-visions are all now showing the same narratives for the major outlets, but typically smaller towns have local news stations, local newspapers, etc where opinions aren't as "curated" (suppressed) and reporting perhaps more fair and balanced.

Ever wonder why local newspapers all seemed to be systematically turned to unreadable garbage? They wanted everyone online where they could control the narrative so reached their tentacles further out from the cities. A couple decades ago, magazines having nothing to do with medical topics (cooking magazines, for example) began being inundated with big pharma ads when restrictions against them marketing directly to consumers (vs only physicians) were lifted.

Yes, there are several other facets of country vs urban lifestyles that lend themselves to societal differences as you allude to (more "grounded"/connected to the earth and actual production, greater reliance on developing human connections for assistance vs relying on government, more honor for the wisdom of elders vs trendy propaganda spouted by self-appointed "experts", etc). You bring up a good point.

8 days ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Something in the water? With the exception of Colorado, every other blue state has a coastline (ocean or Great Lake) with many of their major cities located on the coast. (Only thirteen states don't). I wonder if their water processing varies significantly from that of red states/red areas of states, more fluoride or something else deliberately snuck in under the radar to affect the greatest number of people possible.

I suspect control of the narrative (fake news) in population-dense areas plays a big role. In getting the greatest number of gullible souls under their matrix control, they initially began by focusing resources where they would have the greatest impact for their nefarious purposes. Yes, the tell-a-visions are all now showing the same narratives for the major outlets, but typically smaller towns have local news stations, local newspapers, etc where opinions aren't as "curated" (suppressed) and reporting perhaps more fair and balanced.

Ever wonder why local newspapers all seemed to be systematically turned to unreadable garbage? They wanted everyone online where they could control the narrative so reached their tentacles further out from the cities. A couple decades ago, magazines having nothing to do with medical topics (cooking magazines, for example) began being inundated with big pharma ads when restrictions against them marketing directly to consumers (vs only physicians) were lifted.

Yes, there are several other facets of country vs urban lifestyles that lend themselves to societal differences as you allude to (more "grounded"/connected to the earth and actual production, greater reliance on developing human connections for assistance vs relying on government, more honor for the wisdom of elders vs trendy propaganda spouted by self-appointed "experts", etc). You bring up a good point.

8 days ago
2 score
Reason: Original

Something in the water? With the exception of Colorado, every other blue state has a coastline (ocean or Great Lake) with many of their major cities located on the coast. (Only fourteen states don't). I wonder if their water processing varies significantly from that of red states/red areas of states, more fluoride or something else deliberately snuck in under the radar to affect the greatest number of people possible.

I suspect control of the narrative (fake news) in population-dense areas plays a big role. In getting the greatest number of gullible souls under their matrix control, they initially began by focusing resources where they would have the greatest impact for their nefarious purposes. Yes, the tell-a-visions are all now showing the same narratives for the major outlets, but typically smaller towns have local news stations, local newspapers, etc where opinions aren't as "curated" (suppressed) and reporting perhaps more fair and balanced.

Ever wonder why local newspapers all seemed to be systematically turned to unreadable garbage? They wanted everyone online where they could control the narrative so reached their tentacles further out from the cities. A couple decades ago, magazines having nothing to do with medical topics (cooking magazines, for example) began being inundated with big pharma ads when restrictions against them marketing directly to consumers (vs only physicians) were lifted.

Yes, there are several other facets of country vs urban lifestyles that lend themselves to societal differences as you allude to (more "grounded"/connected to the earth and actual production, greater reliance on developing human connections for assistance vs relying on government, more honor for the wisdom of elders vs trendy propaganda spouted by self-appointed "experts", etc). You bring up a good point.

8 days ago
1 score