To me the scary thing isn't holding heterodox opinions on however many subjects, but the preemptive foreclosure of the option that perhaps a vast conspiracy isn't the correct answer to all situations.Desert wrote: ↑Sun Feb 27, 2022 9:05 amWhen one can deny a worldwide pandemic and an invasion in progress, it's evidence that the total radicalization in the QAnon/Infowars/far-right disinformation ecosystem is complete. It's both sad and evil. Unfortunately, arguing will not help, because the propaganda sources are too plentiful, entertaining, and profitable.Maddy wrote: ↑Sun Feb 27, 2022 7:19 am When a story line is advanced by all of the New World Order political puppets (and right on cue, on the heels of the dissolving CoVid narrative) and when that story line is adopted hook, line and sinker by the mainstream media and the Hollywood elites, you can pretty reliably figure that the truth lies somewhere else.
Here's a very different perspective, put forward by Paul Craig Roberts, former U.S. Treasury Secretary: https://usawatchdog.com/no-shooting-war ... g-roberts/
If there's something going on that there's general agreement about, then that's a golden opportunity to try to heal some of the rifts going on. To decide ahead of time that because there seems to be general agreement about something, that something else must really be going on, is to have rift-making as one's main goal, rather than living together as a nation, rather than the pursuit of truth. It is to grasp at ever more tenuous theories, only because the preconception is that one or the other such crazy theory has to be right.
I don't know how crazy the alternate theories are or aren't, because I have no idea what the alternate theories are. The only one I've seen was the prediction that there wouldn't be shooting.