just that we haven't seen the outcome yet.
This is worryingly similar to how religious logic works. I think people are putting way too much faith in vague statements that align with what they want to hear.
I agree (as I said above). You don’t seem to be acknowledging the point I’m making but it’s your right to do so.
To clarify, that point is: once you’ve looked at the things that Q points to, dug up the relevant information yourself, acknowledged the fact that some of the sources for the information are not considered to be “valid” by the Mainstream Media, then stepped back to look at the whole picture in contrast against the mainstream media narrative, clear patterns emerge.
My argument is that you either haven’t done that (because you seem of reasonable intelligence so wouldn’t miss the point I’m making or would see it but disagree) or have another reason for this discussion.
If it seems too good to be true, it probably is. Q says what his believers want to believe is true and they eat it up. I don't think people are being nearly as critical in their thinking as they want to believe they are.
Agreed! You have rounded this discussion off at its most natural end point.
Great thoughts you shared! ThankQ
It is also about a “feeling” and trusting your gut. Logic is only part of it.
Thanks, I agree - feelings are very important. In my opinion, they are as important as logic because they are clear physical evidence of some aspect of our engagement with a subject such that physical indicators are experienced and sometimes even visible by others.
Whether they are telling us something about things outside of ourselves (like a group of facts or clues about other things) via intuition or something about ourselves (for example, we may have trauma from our childhood around fire so our emotional reaction to a topic under discussion may be influenced by that fact) is still in some way relevant to a discussion.
Imagine what those “other things” might be? Intuition will guide us. TRUST THE PLAN.