Anonymous ID: 26e854 Feb. 1, 2021, 7:12 a.m. No.12789262   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9288

>>12789210

Yes and no.

 

Impressionable young folk are "brainwashed" by pop culture, social media, movies, shows, and MTV. Q's post, "they thought you would follow the stars" is just as much for adults as it is younger folks. Adults in the lives of these young folks need to find a way to reach out to them that doesn't push them away. Any parent of teenagers could imagine the struggle.

 

Let's say she's being "authentic". She's a successful actress, and doing well for herself, now. Did she already know how to get in the game beforehand, or was she truly shocked/awed into being abused somewhat unwillingly? The public indoctrination is part of the gray area of challenging the societal norms that avg people hold dear. What I mean by that is how the shills play off the narratives. For example:

Let's say she's partly authentic. The shills will proclaim "she knew what she was getting into", so she's not authentic. Other folks will hear this, take it to heart, and lash out against these women to discredit the #MeToo stuff. In the court of popular opinion, the mantra becomes "she knew what she was getting into", until it doesn't matter in the public eye what they went through, and despite the age at which the abuse happened.

 

When they dangle the celebrity abuse in front of anons, they are trying to steer the conversation to numb the senses of normality; attempts to shift the overton window. Don't let them. Even if she's not being authentic, take it as serious, and push on to try to get this abuse stopped.