Chris Liss on Nostr: One last thought, and I’ll probably write this up in a longer piece: put yourself ...
One last thought, and I’ll probably write this up in a longer piece: put yourself in the shoes of the WEF, deep state, or whoever you think is pulling the strings.
You have to get away with absconding with all the money, injecting billions with poison, fomenting all kinds of filthy and murderous psyops and coups, in the Information Age, where bitcoin, NOSTR and other freedom tech is advancing apace.
Are you really so confident you’re going to win? That you’re going to beat back earnest and sincere people waking up to reality by the thousands every day — and make no mistake, once someone wakes up, they don’t go back to sleep.
The idea that “they’re going to do this to you, and then you won’t be able to dissent or opt out or hide or whatever.” It’s defeatist propanganda, exactly what I’d want you to believe if I were them.
I covered sports for a living for 25 years, and I can assure you even the biggest favorites were underdogs against the entire field. No matter how good the coaching and the scheme, games rarely went precisely to plan. There were always upsets, unforeseen shocks and unpredictable second, third and nth order effects.
No one knows what’s going to happen. Not me, but not Klaus Schwab or Bill Gates, either.
If I were coaching an underdog, I don’t know what specific strategy I would use, but I would absolutely make sure my players didn’t think the other team was definitely going to win.
You have to get away with absconding with all the money, injecting billions with poison, fomenting all kinds of filthy and murderous psyops and coups, in the Information Age, where bitcoin, NOSTR and other freedom tech is advancing apace.
Are you really so confident you’re going to win? That you’re going to beat back earnest and sincere people waking up to reality by the thousands every day — and make no mistake, once someone wakes up, they don’t go back to sleep.
The idea that “they’re going to do this to you, and then you won’t be able to dissent or opt out or hide or whatever.” It’s defeatist propanganda, exactly what I’d want you to believe if I were them.
I covered sports for a living for 25 years, and I can assure you even the biggest favorites were underdogs against the entire field. No matter how good the coaching and the scheme, games rarely went precisely to plan. There were always upsets, unforeseen shocks and unpredictable second, third and nth order effects.
No one knows what’s going to happen. Not me, but not Klaus Schwab or Bill Gates, either.
If I were coaching an underdog, I don’t know what specific strategy I would use, but I would absolutely make sure my players didn’t think the other team was definitely going to win.