Anonymous ID: f8a60d July 7, 2020, 7:28 a.m. No.9883687   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3707 >>3748 >>3797

>>9883552

Think of it like this.

 

Many people were "woken up" by AJ starting years ago. AJ got his info from his MOS bakers, most likely, but what AJ does with that info is what creates the "Conspiracy Theorist" image of a wacko nut job with tin foil on his head, while sitting in a bunker with millions of rounds of ammo and MREs in west Texas. Underground.

 

The MSM, when good people expose something that actually is sinister, takes over the story from an "authoritative" standpoint, and then proceeds to label a majority of it as a spoof of something much less evil, or a parody (see late night talk shows), and then proceeds to label anyone that buys into those stories as, you guessed it, AJ types of wacko nut jobs.

 

This is how it works. It's coordinated, planned, scripted, and broadcast 24/7/365 to everyone to guide their thinking. Then the public turns back to sportsball, gambling, sex, drugs, politics, and church on Sunday to cleanse themselves so they can start all over again on Monday at their job so they can trade opinions on the late night shows and movies and music that makes fun of it all.

 

That's your "matrix" in a nutshell.

Anonymous ID: f8a60d July 7, 2020, 7:39 a.m. No.9883779   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3854

>>9883707

>>9883715

>>9883725

The point remains: Folks that were fully vested into TV evangelism, daytime soap operas, MSM narratives, bingo night at the local lodge, the lodges themselves, or their careers or saving for retirement - many of them never heard the names you've mentioned.

 

I think Alex was an attempt to wrap all those people's messages up into a crazy package, and though the message rang clearly with many, the rest of the public looked at all that as ultra-kooky nonsense, and a reason for the need for authoritative sources of news. It played right into their hands perfectly.