The sandy hook conspiracy

Out of context: Reply #19

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  • Horp0

    I'm a big follower of conspiracy theories. I never believe in any of them, but like movie making and story telling the conspiracies that we as a society concoct and ferment provide a window on cultural and societal trajectory that can not be see quite as clearly via research into conventional behaviours and beliefs.

    Almost always, conspiracies in the cracks we percieve when considering events from a far detatched viewpoint via imperfectly grabbed and presented coverage and opinion.

    Thank god none of these events are so perfect that they do not elicit public scrutiny. The day something awful happens and nobody even bothers asking questions will be the day that any hidden conspirators working shock-theatre tricks to instigate change on a national or global level will have finally got their game down pat... that's if we assume they exist of course.

    But I also its not implausible for events like these to be theatre. Its well documented throughout history that theatrical shock has been the only way to mobilise entire nations and herd them into radical changes of belief.

    Its not without precedent, although I have to say I don't believe in the conspiracy theory of Sandy Hook any more than I believe in any of the other conspiracy theories of a similar nature.

    • conspiracies (take root) in the cracks, is what I meant to sayHorp
    • the black hands, lusitania, gulf of tonkin, jfk, rfk, mlk, 9/11, maliGeorgesII
    • all of south americaGeorgesII
    • and because I'm in italy,
      look up "operation gladio"
      GeorgesII
    • yup, what G said, most wars were started this way, with false flag opsmoldero

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