I wonder why she says it'll only turn "some" people into zombies? I wondered if they were planning ahead, so that when people don't turn into zombies they can say "we only said SOME and the ones that turned were taken away by the government" - or something along those lines!In about 2 hours we get to see if people in the States turn into zombies and start killing each other.
I believe the thought is that it's going to activate the mrna (chip? dna code? or something) in the covid vax. So if you haven't had one or if you're one of the people that got one of the (alleged) fake ones, it won't affect you. I'll be interested to see how many drop dead or turn into a rageful killing machine, and how many are spared.I wonder why she says it'll only turn "some" people into zombies? I wondered if they were planning ahead, so that when people don't turn into zombies they can say "we only said SOME and the ones that turned were taken away by the government" - or something along those lines!
Mind you, I remember some people kicking up a fuss about the emergency test here. There were lots of people saying emergency alerts should be deactivated on phones because it was a government conspiracy to control us all. I don't think anyone mentioned zombies, though.
They give the government far too much credit. If today's speech from Rishi is anything to go by, they haven't got a fucking clue. They can't even build a railway line - Project Zombie would never run to cost or budget either. We're gonna be OK.
The world needs more articles like this, I think.V. interesting article about a former 'truther' and his process of disentangling himself from a mega CT mindset:
Escape from the rabbit hole: the conspiracy theorist who abandoned his dangerous beliefs
For 15 years, Brent Lee spent hours each day consuming ‘truther’ content online. Then he logged off. Can he convince his former friends to question their worldview?www.theguardian.com
Thanks for posting this - so interesting.V. interesting article about a former 'truther' and his process of disentangling himself from a mega CT mindset:
Escape from the rabbit hole: the conspiracy theorist who abandoned his dangerous beliefs
For 15 years, Brent Lee spent hours each day consuming ‘truther’ content online. Then he logged off. Can he convince his former friends to question their worldview?www.theguardian.com
Absolutely fascinating and such a unique perspective. It’s so rare for people who have fallen into conspiracy theories to actually pull themselves back out again.V. interesting article about a former 'truther' and his process of disentangling himself from a mega CT mindset:
Escape from the rabbit hole: the conspiracy theorist who abandoned his dangerous beliefs
For 15 years, Brent Lee spent hours each day consuming ‘truther’ content online. Then he logged off. Can he convince his former friends to question their worldview?www.theguardian.com
To be fair, Helms Deep sounds like something that could have been around the same time as Hastings, Stamford Bridge etc. - if you've never seen or read LOTRThere was a survey years ago about what people thought was fiction and what was real.
A small, but very real percent of people surveyed thought that -
- the Titanic a fictional story
- War Of The Worlds really happened
- the Battle Of Helms Deep was a real historical event
No totally! I was thinking the same, if you don’t know LOTR it sounds very real! So if you just saw the words “Battle of Helms Deep”, it would seem legit.To be fair, Helms Deep sounds like something that could have been around the same time as Hastings, Stamford Bridge etc. - if you've never seen or read LOTR(I mean sounds real in name only to be clear. Not the orcs, elves etc haha)
To be fair, it's quite understandable that they might have been swayed by Mr Wayne's splendid 1978 presentation of Mr Wells' initial claim of such, I believe many people were at one time in posesion of the now-obsolete dual thirty-three-and-a-third Long Play circular formatted document set.But I love the idea that maybe a tiny percent of people think the war ot the worlds really happened, aliens have already been to earth, we won and moved on.
This topic is fascinating. And I agree that fictional battle names can sound realistic, eg Culloden, Marston Moor, Stamford Bridge battles were all real but Helms Deep sounds like it just about could be, if a bit of a stretch. The fact that most historical battles are the actual places where they happened is a big giveaway I guess.There was a survey years ago about what people thought was fiction and what was real.
A small, but very real percent of people surveyed thought that -
- the Titanic a fictional story
- War Of The Worlds really happened
- the Battle Of Helms Deep was a real historical event
I used to work in a bong shop, we had all kinds of weird things including an 'alien baby' in a jar. It was plastic of course, we would brew up some tea to make the water look all creepy.To be fair, it's quite understandable that they might have been swayed by Mr Wayne's splendid 1978 presentation of Mr Wells' initial claim of such, I believe many people were at one time in posesion of the now-obsolete dual thirty-three-and-a-third Long Play circular formatted document set.
Also, if it had happened there would be all sorts of alien bits and bobs (powdered, pickled, novelty key tags etc) on ebay, and further proof that it didn't happen is the complete absence of any kind of 'pimp my alien assault tripod' TV show.
Well, bacteria won, we didn'tBut I love the idea that maybe a tiny percent of people think the war ot the worlds really happened, aliens have already been to earth, we won and moved on.
I‘m just going to pretend I meant “we” as in EarthlingsWell, bacteria won, we didn't
I believed you, SideyB! But yes, 'I‘m just going to pretend I meant “we” as in Earthlings
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