>>6589932
I have an interesting connection to mention re: Italy. I am an "anti-vaxxer". Having seen first hand what the "full CDC schedule" does to human children I don't think we have a preventive health program in the US, I think we have a clandestine eugenics program in full swing. In 2016 the movie "Vaxxed: From Cover-up to Catastrophe" revealed CDC fraud in a study of the MMR and autism risk. I believed at the time that the film was a game-changer. This movie was shown in Italy and when the pharmaceutical companies pressured Italian lawmakers to implement a draconian mandatory vaccination scheme the Italians revolted, bringing in new leadership. I found a Scientific American study from April 2017 that contains some curious information (the story is behind a paywall on the internet). The piece is entitled "Inside the Echo Chamber: Computational Social Scientists are Studying How Conspiracy Theories Spread Online-And, What, If Anything, Can Be Done to Stop Them" and was written by Walter Quattrociocchi. Here's a quote (p. 63 from the April 2017 story)
"We observed the same dynamics in a study of 55 million Facebook users in the U.S. Users avoid cognitive discord by consuming information that supports their preexisting beliefs, and they share that information widely. Moreover, we found that over time people who embrace conspiracy theories in one domain-say, the (nonexistent) connection between vaccines and autism-will seek out such theories in other domains. Once inside the echo chamber, the tend to embrace the entire conspiracy corpus."
Wow. Anons, we are winning!