
My thoughts and prayers to anyone caught up in that.
ChurchOfSolipsism wrote: ALso, this is how SKykid usually posts
The game has ominous secret societies competing with each other to control the world through sinister means, including legal, illegal, and even mystical. It was designed as a "tongue-in-cheek rather than serious" take on conspiracy theories.
As a corollary, I feel I should say that I'm payed by the US government to post on forums and propagate sensibility and rationality.DEL wrote:^Well at least you guys aren't lambasting me this time round.
DEL wrote:EDIT:- Before I answer RGC's question about the Trillionnaire cabal and their control plan for the World, here's a card game that was first put on sale in 1995.
Let me repeat that1995
Popquiz: See if you can notice any coincidences?
First released 1995.
Check the last three cards in particular.
Now for the usual blind denial replies
DrTrouserPlank wrote:trivialisation of human deaths
That means they used old pressure cookers as bomb casings, I thought.PC Engine Fan X! wrote:There are reports that the FBI mentioned the two bombs that went off, were of the pressure cooker variety
DEL wrote: That aside, I came across a switched on guy on a forum tonight who had something interesting to say on people's views on conspiracy:
Quote: "It's simple, really. People do not want to be ousted from their comfort zone. If they are made to face reality, then they would have to change so many things about their daily lives that it would be catastrophic to their psyche. Best to just go on with business as usual and deny that anything has changed. And, for further comfort, they will point fingers and laugh at anyone who tries to bring the real world to their attention."
This is very true. Part of the reason conspiracy obsessed people remain the way they are is because they love having what they feel is a special secret knowledge, a sense of superiority in a "I know something YOUUUU don't know~~~" way (despite their claims being tenuous at best in most cases). Requiring hard, empirical evidence to back all it up would ruin the fun of perceiving every coincidence as a sign of some conspiracy.SharkSkin-Man wrote:The actual real world is far less of a 'comfort zone' than any of this New World Order waffle.
I see FED people.... pretty clear this is a coded message about a coup."It's simple, really. People do not want to be ousted from their comfort zone. If they are made to face reality, then they would have to change so many things about their daily lives that it would be catastrophic to their psyche. Best to just go on with business as usual and deny that anything has changed. And, for further comfort, they will point fingers and laugh at anyone who tries to bring the real world to their attention."
Like the entire Y2K expansion deck? But we're not acknowledging anything that doesn't support our arguments, so that doesn't count.Skykid wrote:I'll bet there are plenty of cards in the deck that don't happen to bear any relation to anything whatsoever.
ChurchOfSolipsism wrote: ALso, this is how SKykid usually posts
I think I'm gonna be re-posting this April 17th comment of mine a few more times this year.Since late last year I've been saying to my friends: "Watch North America in 2013. There's definitely something up."
Aurora and Wisconsin during the Olympics were the first in the wave of errr....incidents...that are still occurring.
I appreciate that you are looking for evidence RGC and I've posted about 2% of what I know, but if you're looking for a testimony from a freemason.....you've gotta know that they've taken a blood oath in their initial initiation ceremony that lays down in no uncertain terms that their brothers in the Order will dispatch them if they reveal any of the Craft's secrets.Just one testimony I think would be a start, please DEL.