>>14118
>It's really hard for me to believe that "most people are good" as Q put it once.
Not if you accept the MSM narrative, which collects every negative thing they can find and packages it together. Not if you restrict your focus to the activities of the small percentage of the population that are psychopaths/sociopaths and are concentrated at the highest levels of most social institutions.
I read the book WorldWalk which describes a four-year journey on foot around our planet by the author. One of his objectives was to see if the negative picture of humanity painted by the MSM was accurate. His way of testing that was, every time he walked into a new inhabited place, he would randomly approach someone and ask for a drink of water. For most of his journey, he was never refused and usually his request would lead to a friendly and hospitable experience. He noticed that poor people were usually the most generous.
The first time he was refused a drink of water was when he had returned to the U.S., Pacific Northwest. He knocked on the door of a house and was greeted by a man holding a gun. When he asked for water he was told to get off the man's property.
My experience with world travel has confirmed that most of humanity just wants to live in peace and do the best they can for their family and community.