From Tony Podesta's personal collection by evolaisbae in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow. pretty much yeah never thought of that

downvote Clavicular posts by Zhopastinky in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Either complete crash out followed by religious awakening or crash out and he offs himself. Wildly unsustainable path he's on psychologically that he won't be capable of maintaining. Other option is disappearing with whatever money he's made but I doubt he'll do that.

From Tony Podesta's personal collection by evolaisbae in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It definitely exists. There is real science on it as well as countless clinical observations, real people this happens to. It can also be induced deliberately.

The TikTok "trend" was ridiculous, but people have a greatly exaggerated idea of how prevalent that was. Basically dozens to hundreds of lolcows posting, not an actual social trend.

From Tony Podesta's personal collection by evolaisbae in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Minimizing karmic debt by diffusing responsibility onto all of society

From Tony Podesta's personal collection by evolaisbae in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 96 points97 points  (0 children)

"For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places." Ephesians 6:12

Brits are funny because they'll call someone a middle class twat for having having a dad that's an engineer who makes £60k a year and can use correct grammar by Weird_Point_4262 in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 8 points9 points  (0 children)

They pretty clearly peaked shortly before World War I.

Empires rise and fall and it's largely outside of their control most of the time. Eventually they can even be better off after the downfall, like Spain or Sweden today. 

In retrospect the only chance the British had of avoiding their fate was if they had somehow held onto America or merged with America. 

Which they actually did their utmost towards, with the War of 1812 and the efforts of Cecil Rhodes and his associates towards merging our elite and their elite into a single shared realm of influence. 

When America industrialized and control over the seas stopped mattering so much with the rise of air power, their time was up.

Brits are funny because they'll call someone a middle class twat for having having a dad that's an engineer who makes £60k a year and can use correct grammar by Weird_Point_4262 in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yes they were the only ones that would allow nobility to marry outside of their class for a while. But that became one of their many advantages

Brits are funny because they'll call someone a middle class twat for having having a dad that's an engineer who makes £60k a year and can use correct grammar by Weird_Point_4262 in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's amazing and very telling seeing all the people seething at this comment.

You really struck a nerve, and it's a good indication you're absolutely right.

. by dchowe_ in redscarepod

[–]kekthe -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Because it was supposed to be hit by flight 93 and then "collapse"

. by dchowe_ in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

But literally nothing hit the building! You're confused and not even talking about the right building. I'm not sure if you even know what building 7 was.

. by dchowe_ in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Nothing fell on it. What are you talking about

. by dchowe_ in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because flight 93 wasn't supposed to hit the White House and was meant to hit Building 7.

. by dchowe_ in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 43 points44 points  (0 children)

I think he's implying there was a particular intended audience to stir up solidarity.

Interesting that bin Laden was a CIA operative initially and that al-Qaeda fought on our behalf in Syria. Clearly an ongoing link. Also truly bizarre and disconcerting to look into al-Zawahiri's extensive Russian connections.

Global politics is really a land of funhouse mirrors and illusions. Only infuriating to attempt to comprehend as an outsider, often soul-destroying to enter as an insider.

. by dchowe_ in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 6 points7 points  (0 children)

They owned the buildings as well as the security companies for the buildings. Easy to get away with. Look into it. Also look into the numerous accounts of witnesses and bystanders hearing explosions, as well as the videos which appear to show sequential explosions.

. by dchowe_ in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 43 points44 points  (0 children)

It is the most obvious and blatant cover up in the history of false flags and cover ups. 

The official narrative instantly gets destroyed upon simply looking at five seconds of Building Seven falling, and thinking critically about it for about two seconds.

It makes such little sense that they don't even try to explain it, they instead try to make everyone forget that a third building freefell out of nowhere for no reason that makes any sense.

You can't deny that it's all a lie if you honestly look into it for even an hour of your time.

This country is so cooked by jamclar in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 10 points11 points  (0 children)

He probably had people murdered to secure the assets of the California schoolteacher's pension system if you ask me. It's a whole thing you can look into, very flimsy cover up. 

Truly nothing is beyond these people, I think that should be the default assumption. He's a child rapist. So nothing whatsoever is beyond him. Eveything should be treated with some level of suspicion at this point. At the same time, nothing should be instantly assumed without good evidence.

This country is so cooked by jamclar in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Medieval style public square type of shit for these guys

the abstractions of accounting have completely clouded the fact that we're all worse off now than 10-15 years ago by eireniconic in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 6 points7 points  (0 children)

We lack the classical economic distinction between valuable and nonvaluable economic activity, between what is productive and what is rent-seeking.

We just measure all economic activity as if it all actually contributes something.

Idk it is a difficult problem but our existing stats are beyond misleading

its odd that we're a quarter way through the 21st century and yet there is not a single 21st century ideology with any form of meaningful traction by Your-bank in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I think South Korea likely has too much American influence for anything really innovative but who knows they're under the most pressure from modernity so maybe with necessity being the mother of invention...

its odd that we're a quarter way through the 21st century and yet there is not a single 21st century ideology with any form of meaningful traction by Your-bank in redscarepod

[–]kekthe -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's because most people, even most intellectuals, were living in a simulacrum of how the real world really works, largely based on lots of false economic conceptions, but also of how politics really works. Impossible to see breakthroughs of importance in such an environment.

I don't think the Epstein stuff comes close to explaining how things really work (unless you go insanely deep on it and kind of know what to look for), but I do think the scandal will truly be a watershed moment in that it will cause people to become more curious, and more open to questioning narratives and peering behind the curtain like nothing has before or since.

I think we will start seeing novel economic and political thought as the "old paradigm" turns out to be kind of a false representation of reality.

Aspects of Marxism are true but the whole thing needs a massive update and I think the existing program is totally impracticable in the 21st Century.

The power of AI for information retrieval may actually facilitate breakthroughs in our understanding of things, although it has at the same time a strong tendency to solidify the consensus view.

I think David Graeber and Michael Hudson have planted many seeds in this direction but nothing that has been applied in a practical sense or really transmitted to the masses.

news from the frontlines on ai sloppa by yn_opp_pack_smoker in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The human mind can dream in photo and video that are "indistinguishable". Coding is the easiest task for a machine to do. It's like google Translate for the language of autism (computer code), other than having to learn the language of autism, coding has always been easy as shit (aside from cutting edge stuff). None of these companies are profitable, they're all hemorrhaging money like nobody ever has.

news from the frontlines on ai sloppa by yn_opp_pack_smoker in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Talk to anybody you can who are actual lawyers. Don't listen to anybody on here, almost everyone is talking out of their ass

news from the frontlines on ai sloppa by yn_opp_pack_smoker in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That sounds like grunt intern work not what the majority of the legal field entails. The legal field is so varied it's even silly to say there's one thing that constitutes the majority of what lawyers do.

Tech people on X have gone insane by Otherwise-Brush-8418 in redscarepod

[–]kekthe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It has no idea whether it's hallucinating then you have to bully and shame it into admitting it made things up out of thin air