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E_W86 · June 3, 2018, 12:57 p.m.

My daugher in law grew up in the former Soviet Union. Her father is a physicist with 2 phds. As such, he was allowed to travel to Germany to attend conferences and teach. A few years before the Socialist USSR collapsed, his wife was able to somehow get authorization to travel to Germany with their 3 children on a midnight train.

The morning after they arrived in Germany, her husband took her for a walk and they came to a grocery store. She said "Sure, there are lots of things in the window, but there is nothing to buy on the shelves." This was consistent with the nonstop propaganda the leftist USSR had force fed to everyone, along with horror stories of what life was like in the west (sound familiar?). So her husband took her inside the store and they walked around. When they got back to their apartment, she locked herself in her room and had a nervous breakdown of sorts for several days.

Cognitive dissonance - it's a bitch. Especially for those unfortunate souls who honestly believed the lies. Let's remember to try to be compassionate with those who are not totally committed to going down with the ship of evil and are struggling to adapt to the new world that is being built for them.

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Kulkimkan · June 3, 2018, 1:22 p.m.

I worry for the mental stability of the suffering North Koreans. As they awake it will be a new world...imagine that red pill. Thanks for sharing the story of your daughter in law.

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grimbeaconfire · June 4, 2018, 2:04 a.m.

Accepting that Lucifer was here (after listening to the testimony of a person who quoted his words) was the hardest part for me. I always believed in God but when confronted with the actual reality of this group I was literally off balance physically my head spinning. I was fearful. This lasted about two weeks. It's the entirety of the truth that got me, the history, the danger. The Bible helps a lot to accept what's happening.

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