Agreed.
They also reject vaccine-poison.
They also reject insurance-scams.
Their insurance is their community.
When a house burns down, the community (500-1000 people) come together and rebuilt it in no time.
Compare that to insurance scam.
Agreed.
They also reject vaccine-poison.
They also reject insurance-scams.
Their insurance is their community.
When a house burns down, the community (500-1000 people) come together and rebuilt it in no time.
Compare that to insurance scam.
Or here: the Amish literally moving a shed.
Let's assume theY demand digital ID for you to access their internet.
Will you comply or will you tell them to fuck off and stop using their internet?
a new internet, ok.
with new computers, without the compromised tech, with new operating systems and not controlled garbage like Windows or Linux?
I highly doubt it.
but let's even play pretend, all of it is at the same time 100% self-made and not depending on ISPs or banks or any corporations?
I highly doubt it.
>stone age
lmao
most of the internet sucks and is literally destroying everything.
>it's about the routing.
no, it isn't.
Internet standards suck ass.
Internet was MADE for surveillance.
Internet browsers suck ass.
It's a security nightmare, intentionally made.
And then you got shit hardware and shit operating systems on top of that with trillions of security issues and planned obsolescence, creating tons of e-waste on top of that.
And for what?
For shitphone zombies, who scroll shit "content" endlessly while wasting their lives.
Or so that you can place an order at amazon, so that in the end only huge corporations remain.
Wow, such a great modern piece of shit.
Fuck all of that, seriously.
>building their own computers
So you make your own GPUs and CPUs and mainboard?
>artifical choice between the big 2
it's big 3, your Shitix aka Linux is also a controlled choice, literally funded by IBM, Goog-El and Microsoft and more corporations and also insecure as fuck.
>We the people
lmao
not on their internet
That's simply the truth.
Your internet access goes through an ISP.
That ISP can demand at any time that you need to deliver digital ID or whatever. They can even stop your internet access until you authenticate yourself. In most countries you already need to show your passport to even get an internet access and they can change terms at any time for any reason.
It's not your internet, zoomer.
It's the internet of the military and banks, it's a surveillance tool plus brainwash tool. It's also nice that you can easily change information on it. With physical books you can't do that.
That's why it's not a stupid idea to not be dependent on their internet.
this also means not using shitcoin, but instead doing the opposite.
In general it's a good idea to do the opposite of increasing internet usage, because that's what the powers want.
The Amish have no problems without internet, in fact they are doing better. Way better.
They could literally do a long term study comparing 100% unvaxxed Amish vs. 100% vaxxed Non-Amish retards.
(don't forget "Vitamin" K shots too, in fact any shots)
In any case, the Amish not all dying out shows that there's something obviously wrong with the vaxx narrative.
That's not internet then.
And you can't connect to their internet, unless there is at least one pos that connects your NPC-to-NPC network to their internet, which of course can get easily shut down.
Also be in the wild, no NPC around, no "network". What a great idea.
I also trust random strangers even less than ISPs, same for software and hardware.
"they avoid our smart surveillance tech, they are tech deniers"
similar to the science-deniers aka vaxx refusers aka mavericks
in reality the "science deniers" were the only once who actually applied actual science to it and questioned things.
It's all literally inverted.
Current "science" is literally a religion.
Father Fauci claims something and you just gotta believe.
In that regard science-denier also makes sense.
"you denied what the pope said, HERETIC!!!"
>mel brooks
It wasn't notable'd, that is all.
It was posted in 2024, but baker ignored it.
This time baker seems to ignore it too.
What's the problem with a parasite notable?
>no symptoms
weird that the guy says something about schizophrenia link and that a rat infected with that parasite is high on dopamine, and finds cat urine attractive and basically sexually arousing, and when you give the rat the drug against schizophrenia, which blocks dopamine receptors, that behavior stops and it goes back to normal again.
He also talks about stress and that accelerating the aging of chromosomes.
Also says something about a very interesting study about severe human chronic psychosocial stress.
It seems you haven't even watched the video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rv38taDUpwQ
Determined: Life without Free Will with Robert Sapolsky
Have you ever looked back on a moment and wondered if you made the right choice? Professor Robert Sapolsky has, but he believes that there was no actual choice at that moment. Professor Sapolsky has staked out an extreme stance in the field: we are nothing more than the sum of our biology, over which we had no control, and its interactions with the environment, over which we also had no control. Explore what it looks like to reject the notion of free will and how doing so can be liberating rather than paralyzing and despairing.
About the Speaker
Professor Robert Sapolsky is the John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor and a professor of biology, of neurology, and of neurosurgery. Over the past thirty years, he has divided his time between the lab, where he studies how stress hormones can damage the brain, and in East Africa, where he studies the impact of chronic stress on the health of baboons.
Sapolsky's research is featured in the National Geographic documentary "Stress: Portrait of a Killer." For more information on this documentary and Robert's research, please visit http://killerstress.stanford.edu
Professor Sapolsky has authored several books and regularly contributes to magazines and journals such as Discover, Science, Scientific American, Harper's, and The New Yorker. He was recently featured in Stanford Magazine's "As If You Had a Choice."
This event is hosted by the Stanford Alumni Association in partnership with the Stanford Alumni Club of Minnesota.
Watched a 1 hour video within 13 minutes?