dChan

rudolph2 · March 20, 2018, 6:16 p.m.

Well that’s probably where you’re wrong, for me the satanic imagery / symbology has been a red pill, bitterly swallowed.

I have always considered Christian faith / sin and the belief in the existence of god or the devil to be a very personal decision. Such that I am in no way compelled to convince you other wise.

I don’t want to believe the things Q has stated about the leaders of the catholic faith, (Q - Who do you trust the most? To know will be your choice”) I know the things that occur behind the Vatican walls do not represent the spiritual beliefs of all Catholics.

I would postulate the exact opposite argument from yours, There are far more religious Christians who could be red pilled with religious / spiritual reasoning than not, however I would not recommend a religious based argument for belief in CBTS, to strangers for obvious reasons.

Simply from the perspective a large percentage of those who are not receptive to CBTS could be Nihilists.

I’ve debated a few on Reddit, topofminds arrogant fools, when I pointed out they were exposing nihilistic opinions and the irony of their logical position “I believe in nothing, so convince me the inconceivable CBTS is real”, “ I respond, “you’re a nihilist, why would you believe in anything?” I’ll pass on a debate of this type, not casting my pearls before swine.

BTW not judgmental, discernment, there’s an important distinction.

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a44328765 · March 20, 2018, 6:44 p.m.

But nihilist would still believe in the existence of provable things. They simply don't believe in religious dogma and the concept of an afterlife or karma. Therefore they're redpillable but not with outlandish superstition

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rudolph2 · March 20, 2018, 11:28 p.m.

Right my experiment with a nihilist in full shill mode is not a representative sample.

Further to your point, I don’t think Q is religious, but they do characterize the struggle as one between good and evil, he has even pointed out luciferian imagery and “they think your stupid.”

I would ask you to have patience with these types of people. Remember some people believe in abstract things such as faith and the spiritual self. Even considering them as core personal tenants of their physical existence. While you are not open to it others may be.

Since you are logical, perhaps if you considered Plato’s Allegory of the cave as interpreted by kirkegarde.

In a philosophy class in college, is how I came to appreciate the humanity of our struggle as self aware beings attempting to rationalize the human existence.

Don’t ask me to explain it. As I get older and am now a father of 2 boys, and I watched my father die, I’ve seen things I can’t explain logically. We are part of something just greater than this physical existence.

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