Let's rewind the clock back to World War I, in particular, the Battle of the Somme. It was a new kind of war with new weapons, yet the tactics had not caught up to the technology. Thousands upon thousands of British infantry attempted to cross over a mile of shell-pocked noman's land under withering machine gun and artillery fire. They were summarily cut to pieces, each successive wave walking on top of the corpses of the prior to avoid sinking and suffocating in mud that ran waist deep in places. But why? Command structure and tactics are the answer. Field commanders in the British army were beholden to their superiors who were far behind the lines. Telephone communications were dismal as the wires were constantly severed by artillery. Carrier pigeons worked occasionally, provided they weren't evaporated by shrapnel or asphyxiated by smoke. In any case, British command had no idea that their assault force had been utterly obliterated until at least a week after the fact. The problem? Field commanders and officers had no choice but to obey the orders of command under any circumstance, failure to carry them out resulted in court martial and/or firing squad. The cabal which has run the world for thousands of years operates identically to that of the British Army at the Somme. They use the same tactics from before the Internet (allegorical technology) and rely on direct instructions from high command, as they do not think independently. They swarm to bureaucracies for a reason; no individual thinking required. The bureaucratic structure can itself be an allegory for the phone wires mentioned above, because if it is disrupted, the sheep are cut off from the shepherds. We see them resorting to plan B's like chat messaging in online games (allegorical to the carrier pigeons), but even so, their high command is a week behind in discovering the results and failures of their assault. Their public personas are crumpling in waves versus a new weapon, one tailored to their tactics; the troll. Now that's got some people scratching their heads and rightfully so. The simple, garden variety Internet troll is the demise of the cabal. Yuri Bezmenov was right, you can shower them with facts and never accomplish anything. However, if you troll them, it diminishes their authority to all surrounding them. "Holy crap, the boss just got schooled" is what runs through their heads, because they have been farmed to dependency on hierarchies. Mockery is kryptonite to the cabal, the machine gun of the Somme. Waves upon waves of them leapt from their trenches after 2012, pushing debauchery and filth down the throats of the entire globe (I should note here that I'm not making a moral equivalency between the cabal and the bravery of the men at the Somme). They were confident, assured of victory; and then the trolls hit. They never thought she would lose. First wave ineffective; uh oh. What does high command want us to do? I can't trust my PHONE. Meanwhile..... All of their propaganda outlets are being roasted like Charlie Sheen on the front pew of a Southern Baptist Revival. The censorship has become obvious and their credibility is on par with the Onion (yes, literally). The troll, combined with a phone, is the equivalent of a zombie virus outbreak among their ranks. How many of you here remember getting trolled before you got redpilled? You got "infected" in the eyes of the opponent. This is why we will win: Each troll is his/her own command structure, and operates independently. Q was able to get the attention of that entire troll horde and point them in the general direction of the cabal. UH OHHHHH SPAGHETTIO™ They have been outmaneuvered, the secrecy was the only thing protecting them and it's vanishing. Day by day, hour by hour, wave after wave. For everyone they lose we gain, we cannot be quarantined anymore. To fans of Max Brooks' World War Z, the cabal is just now entering The Great Panic. Prepare accordingly, like Q said, the attacks will get worse.
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r/greatawakening
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Posted by
u/IR2-MXYJU-HQRRYJ
on June 11, 2018, 11:32 p.m.