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Originally posted by Sinny
Originally posted by Char-Lee
Originally posted by Destinyone
Originally posted by Sinny
reply to post by Char-Lee
O.0
Okay then
Nobody repond to this guy, he's got it all figured out... Maybe one day we will to
Gotcha...he gets fed no more bandwidth from me.....glad we have that settled....
Des
Hah and i got a reprimand for a one liner....
Well making this two.
ha. I like your thinking, on (this) matter
Darn it! Took me ten minutes to break my own rule.. See what I'm like?!edit on 30-7-2012 by Sinny because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Destinyone
Originally posted by WiindWalker
Originally posted by Sinny
reply to post by Char-Lee
While I do believe there is an all powerful elite that plot against us, I do also believe they present certain sinister things in plain sight (e.g 9/11 etc).. and that Madonna Superbowl fiasco was most curious, as is some of the things surrounding the Olympics, its foolish to jump the gun and blindly believe David Icke
I never said that David was 100% correct. I was pulling his info so that we could comment on it.
OK. My comments. While David, at one time in his past, seemed to be a good, balanced researcher...he's wandered off the beaten path. Don't know for what reasons, maybe he was running out of paying crowds with his old material. Maybe he just started losing it, it does happen in his field.
The twisted path he's plodding down now, makes no sense to serious ufologists. He's taking the most outrageous claims from various sects, rolled them all into one ball of Icke, and expects people to just believe him because of who he is.
That's my personal opinion...not expecting anyone else to hold my same views.
Des
Originally posted by Brad Jones
It's a representation of Lucifer and all his demons and dark forces being released. Last time I checked this was a conspiracy site for people that were unplugged and could see through the lines, instead you have a bunch doubters that take everything at face value.
Confirmation bias refers to a type of selective thinking whereby one tends to notice and to look for what confirms one's beliefs, and to ignore, not look for, or undervalue the relevance of what contradicts one's beliefs
During the 2008 U.S. presidential election, Valdis Krebs at orgnet.com analyzed purchasing trends on Amazon.
People who already supported Obama were the same people buying books which painted him in a positive light. People who already disliked Obama were the ones buying books painting him in a negative light.
Just like with pundits, people weren’t buying books for the information, they were buying them for the confirmation.