thanks baker
> only option
This mentality was outlined in the Report from Iron Mountain. That is, the proclivity for anons to solve problems themselves without the assistance of others. I have this trait, in spades, and it has served me well at times. But no man is an island.
The solution, the best solution, is to team-up with other anons IRL. This is hard, and made harder by the tendency of normies to remain within the boundaries of the system. But this is changing, rapidly, as the culture shifts and the Great Awakening spreads. It will become easier to make informal arrangements with IRL anons in order to secure the things you cannot produce by yourself.
Black markets will circumvent [their] efforts to contain us.
> NRA is not solid on 2A at all
They're a shill organization. I should know, I've been to enough of their fundraisers.
> DRAFTS
Filling your ranks with unwilling participants is a bad idea. There is a much better way. Pic related.
> become meaningless
The oath to "preserve, protect and defend" didn't become meaningless. It started out that way.
> important for us to help protect this nation and the innocent people of this world
Nice trips.
> why all the gas in the atmosphere isn't vacuumed off into space
Gravity plus the magnetosphere.
> posts on an anonymous message board about a a tweet about a meme about stealing a meme about stealing a meme
At a certain point, it's not worth the screencap.
>make steel
> total madmax
Look for a guy who mines gold. His tailings will be full of black sands, and a potter's kiln can be used to create a bloom from them.
Which goes to my point - other people can push you out of a "Mad Max" scenario, just as they can prevent one from occurring in the first place. That's why we classify this as an "information war" - the conflict can easily be ended by its victims if they are made aware of the transgressions being perpetuated against them.
> Ghislaine Maxwell going to be let off
I don't recall reading about this, but I predicted it would habben.
> Five moar years
Early on, when anons were filled with surety that the conflict would be over in a short while, I was incredulous. I knew that it would take years-and-years to fix the things that are broken. Many of the problems are generational, and they simply can't be fixed without an underlying culture change. That takes time, and anyone trying to convince you otherwise is just selling snake oil. But the disinfo-narrative of "quick and clean" served its purpose, and anons continue to gather.
It's the fact that this is still going, after all these years, which provides the most hope.
> Building narrative that the Russian nuclear arsenal can be ignored
Horseshit. There is no way that Ivan allowed all of his nuclear capability to fall into disrepair. If only a small percentage of Putin's nukes work, then it's game-over for Western Europe should they choose to escalate.
The board moves so quickly nobody is going to appreciate it if you write a soliloquy.
This.