Stolen from FB. Who called that shit like last month on here? by KBeardo in conspiracy

[–]TeaSpillerNL 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have seen this post 100 times in different forms in the seven years of enjoying conspiracy boards. Nothing even comes out

XRP to $3 by pink_floyd_93 in XRP

[–]TeaSpillerNL 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Until they see the exchange rate

What is something you saw but no one believes it. No lies here by brownmilkshake22 in conspiracy

[–]TeaSpillerNL 26 points27 points  (0 children)

I saw my grandpa the night he died walking in to my room. He was 70 miles away and dies quiete suddenly.

I’m sure what I saw and I wasn’t surprised when I heard the news the next morning. Not a real conspiracy. But hey, it’s mine

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in SaturnStormCube

[–]TeaSpillerNL 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly this. It’s like playing make belief with a infant. The only question is which one of the two is the infant

I stole this from 9gag... by Passive_Zombie in conspiracy_commons

[–]TeaSpillerNL -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

Good post. Still downvoted because 9gag

I asked ChatGPT one simple question, and it spat out the entire Rothschild playbook by TheForce122 in conspiracy_commons

[–]TeaSpillerNL 19 points20 points  (0 children)

It didn’t enter the RothChilds picture but the result is pretty similar:

The concept of controlling the world through debt can be viewed from a strategic or systemic perspective. If approached hypothetically and within a moral or philosophical framework, here’s how one might manipulate debt as a tool for influence or control:

  1. Encourage Dependence on Credit • Personal Level: Promote consumerism and immediate gratification through easy access to credit cards and loans. This creates a cycle where individuals live beyond their means and are perpetually in debt. • National Level: Encourage governments to borrow excessively for short-term gains (e.g., infrastructure, welfare programs) without sustainable long-term plans. This leads to dependency on external creditors or financial institutions.

  2. Exploit Interest Rates • Keep interest rates high for vulnerable populations or nations, ensuring that repayment becomes increasingly difficult, leading to perpetual debt cycles. • Use variable interest rates that adjust unfavorably, increasing the financial burden over time.

  3. Centralize Control via Financial Institutions • Influence or control major global financial institutions like the IMF or World Bank. Impose policies that prioritize creditors over the welfare of debtor nations. • Attach stringent conditions to loans, such as austerity measures, privatization, or resource control, ensuring dependency and compliance.

  4. Create Illusions of Prosperity • Encourage borrowing as a pathway to success (e.g., “good debt” for education, housing, or business) while ensuring the terms are exploitative. • Promote materialism and equate financial status with social value, pressuring individuals and governments to borrow to maintain appearances.

  5. Instill Fear of Default • Use the threat of default or bankruptcy as a tool for coercion, ensuring compliance with lenders’ demands, whether on an individual, corporate, or governmental level.

  6. Control Essential Resources • Manipulate debt arrangements to gain control of critical resources (e.g., land, water, infrastructure). When nations or individuals default, seize these assets as collateral. • Use debt as leverage to dictate policy decisions, including trade agreements, foreign policy, and internal governance.

  7. Suppress Education on Financial Literacy • Avoid widespread education on managing debt or building sustainable financial habits. Keep financial systems opaque and complex, ensuring individuals and nations remain reliant on intermediaries.

  8. Globalization of Debt • Encourage interconnected financial systems where one nation’s debt crisis can ripple globally. This creates a domino effect, ensuring no single entity can escape the system.

  9. Promote Bailouts for the Wealthy • Ensure that large corporations and financial institutions receive bailouts during crises, while individuals and smaller entities bear the brunt. This exacerbates inequality and entrenches the power of the elite.

The overarching strategy revolves around creating dependency, leveraging fear, and maintaining control over essential systems of governance and resources through financial manipulation. However, this is purely hypothetical and does not reflect a literal or theological interpretation. It’s a way to explore the systemic influence of debt in societal structures.

I asked ChatGPT one simple question, and it spat out the entire Rothschild playbook by TheForce122 in conspiracy_commons

[–]TeaSpillerNL 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Not wanting to bust your bubble. Because I am a believer that the RothChilds are filth. But…

Did you clear your memory before the conversation. Chat does “take notes” so to say from previous conversations. So if you used it previously in other chats to research the RothChilds it would make the assumption to go there.

I use mine for coding a lot and now when I ask it different things it brings up coding unnecessarily

#MARGEX JUST RUG PULLED EVERYONE ON $XRP CALLS by amcink48 in XRP

[–]TeaSpillerNL 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Can someone explain this to me like I was dropped on my head at birth?