In "Mirage Men", Richard Doty was an intelligence officer who misled public-figures into believing they were a "special contact" who've been given classified information regarding secret alien/government deals. The public figures were wealthy individuals whose "job" was to disseminate the super secret information to the public. Only when the super secret evidence was supposed to be disclosed, for some reason it never appeared.
The public figure millionaires were ruined and humiliated.
Sound familiar?
>What less in does this teach us."
He's obviously using text to speech and didn't correct it.
>How you figure that?
Because " less in" phonetically sounds like "lesson" and in the chance he fat fingered "lesson" , it seems unlikely it would correct it to "less in"
>I think it's intentional for comms.
It seems unlikely that the president's son is sending "comms" publicly to anons - risking enemy deciphering. Chances are enemies are just as intelligent as anons.
>Naw manโฆhe does to many "mistakes" to not be intentional.
If intentional, what does it mean? If you can't figure out what it means, what good is it? If intentional, why risk an enemy knowing what it means?
Makes no sense, anon.
There are no secret comms being sent from the Trump household. How do we know? Because nobody has any reasonable explanation or interpretation of past "comms".
They are simply spelling mistakes - because they're all human.