Anonymous ID: 6d8c43 Feb. 15, 2018, 5:47 p.m. No.391847   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2066

Today's posts are a lot to digest. The line that stood out for me was Q's command to "Build Proofs". Let's look at this from a scientific point of view. In science, you start with a theory. In our case it is a conspiracy theory. For example, we think that recent mass shooters were influenced by some sort of Mkultra style government project. This is a theory. Or a hypothesis. The next step is to do research to prove our theory true or false. We do this by sending the hive mind out into the internet.

 

In our initial mission, we flooded social media with shock memes. It got a lot of curiosity and attention. The people that were attracted aren't going to be happy with just a theory backed up by our interpretation of some cryptic hints typed by an anonymous person.

 

When those doubters start to trickle here, we need to offer them PROOF not THEORIES.

 

I propose that we write hundreds of fact sheets. Each sheet should be only one page long. Throw in a few colorful boxes, and photos. Keep the reading level at fifth grade or below. Write in a style that lawyers or academics would use. Ask one highly focused question, then give an answer with proof. In the example above, write a one page fact sheet asking "What is Mkultra?", then offer a brief, easy to read summary with a link to the government report. Another fact sheet might ask, "Can cellphones be used for mind control?", and answer yes. Then, it cites scientific studies from revered academic journals to support the answer

 

We need one single place to store all these fact sheets (suggestions and help, please?), where they won't get lost in shill posts. Normies could read them directly, and anons could use them as talking points when attacked by nomies with vague "yeah, but…" comments, and as the basis for more informative memes. Of course, everything needs to be backed up off-line, too.

 

I am willing to help write some of these fact sheets, but I have a technical problem. I am an advanced Inkscape user. I am concerned that creating an inkscape file and posting it here will accidentally leave a trail back to my location. Can someone please explain in 5th grade language how to move a file from a computer to this board without leaving a trail of location data?