Sad,
But I suspect that ~25% o f this board thinks that was a documentary.
>>2334273
I guess you are unaware of a very BIG drop of stock price of Facebook.
Some referred to it as a Death Spiral, and later Q followed up referring to "insider trading" before they drop.
Lead investigator for SEC is Peter Strzok's wife
The Jedi Mind Trick
But…. Nothing to see here. Move along
Really?
Do you see any shout outs to 8chan from them?
Maybe something else is making the difference you want to take credit for?
The bandwagon effect is a phenomenon whereby the rate of uptake of beliefs, ideas, fads and trends increases the more that they have already been adopted by others.
In other words, the bandwagon effect is characterized by the probability of individual adoption increasing with respect to the proportion who have already done so.[1]
As more people come to believe in something, others also "hop on the bandwagon" REGARDLESS OF THE UNDERLYING EVIDENCE OR LACK THEREOF.
What is the leaders name, from your extensive research?
What building are you talking about.
…:will probably be huge news whenever it's revealed."
Really?
Did that come to you in a dream or are you just psychic?
That was an secret signal to us.
She clearly was sending it directly to you.
Good catch, what did she signal you about?
Ahhh, no.
He already knows.
He challenged us to try and find our own evidence.
For our own information.
Do you have any tiny idea how military intelligence works.
This not like a tip hotline
How about old fashioned voting?
Did the C_A create this too?
Ideology
The Taliban's ideology has been described as an "innovative form of sharia combining Pashtun tribal codes,"[243] or Pashtunwali, with radical Deobandi interpretations of Islam favored by JUI and its splinter groups. Also contributing to the mix was the militant Islamism and extremist jihadism of Osama bin Laden.[244] Their ideology was a departure from the Islamism of the anti-Soviet mujahideen rulers[clarification needed] they replaced who tended to be mystical Sufis, traditionalists,[clarification needed] or radical Islamism[clarification needed] inspired by the Muslim Brotherhood (Ikhwan).[245]
According to journalist Ahmed Rashid, at least in the first years of their rule, the Taliban adopted Deobandi and Islamist anti-nationalist beliefs, and opposed "tribal and feudal structures," eliminating traditional tribal or feudal leaders from leadership roles.[246]
The Taliban strictly enforced their ideology in major cities like Herat, Kabul, and Kandahar. But in rural areas the Taliban had little direct control, and promoted village jirgas, so it did not enforce its ideology as stringently in rural areas.[247]
There was no C_A in 632 AD
According to the traditional Muslim view, there was no "historical development" of Islamic law and its major precepts were all known and passed down directly from the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[31] The emergence of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) also goes back to the lifetime of Muhammad.[3][4] In this view, his companions and followers took what he did and approved of as a model (sunnah) and transmitted this information to the succeeding generations in the form of hadith.[3][4] These reports led first to informal discussion and then systematic legal thought, articulated with greatest success in the eighth and ninth centuries by the master jurists Abu Hanifah, Malik ibn Anas, Al-Shafi‘i, and Ahmad ibn Hanbal, who are viewed as the founders of the Hanafi, Maliki, Shafiʿi, and Hanbali legal schools (madhhabs) of Sunni jurisprudence.[4]
Because they believe Astrology is real science and the Astral Plane is a real place
The astral plane, also called the astral world, is a plane of existence postulated by classical (particularly neo-Platonic), medieval, oriental, and esoteric philosophies and mystery religions.[1] It is the world of the celestial spheres, crossed by the soul in its astral body on the way to being born and after death, and is generally believed to be populated by angels, spirits or other immaterial beings.[2] In the late 19th and early 20th century the term was popularised by Theosophy and neo-Rosicrucianism.
Another view holds that the astral plane or world, rather than being some kind of boundary area crossed by the soul, is the entirety of spirit existence or spirit worlds to which those who die on Earth go, and where they live out their non-physical lives. Some writers conflate this realm with heaven or paradise or union with God itself, and others do not. P. Yogananda wrote in Autobiography of a Yogi, "The astral universe . . . is hundreds of times larger than the material universe . . .[with] many astral planets, teeming with astral beings." (p.416) When Alice Bailey writes of seeing "Masters . . . upon the inner spiritual planes [who]. . . work with Christ and the planetary hierarchy," she refers to a vision she had of the unseen astral realm that these and countless other beings inhabit. Christ being in that realm, it is hard to construe it as a non-heaven.[3]
The Barzakh, olam mithal or intermediate world in Islam, and the "World of Yetzirah" in Lurianic Kabbalah are related concepts.
You seem to have the North Star confused with the North Pole.
I think that star showed is on top of Santa's Workshop