There should be no confusion at this stage. Whenever there’s a mass shooting reported in the news, we examine it to determine if it’s yet another simulation exercise presented as real to the public. Whatever the initial body count, our built-in skeptical framework places it at zero until evidence confirms the reportage (it hasn’t yet in any high-profile mass shootings).
There should be no confusion as to why the body count is zero until proven otherwise.
Let’s say, for example, there’s a mass shooting where the toll is pronounced at 50. Once the indicators of a simulation are exposed, as opposed to evidence to support the claim of 50 deaths, the number automatically drops to zero.
There’s no case in which a simulation exercise repurposed for propaganda purposes would involve killing real people, regardless of the reported death toll. Anyone maintaining that “some people” died is admitting to confusion. The mainstream worldview is a world of confusion that one leaves behind once they cease giving the MSM reportage the benefit of the doubt.
The “just asking questions” crowd is confused, and they spread confusion. We need answers, not loaded questions. The QAnon community is a product of this “question everything” approach that never leads to conclusions.
Here—at the IPS Think Tank—we have answers even though we continue to explore the questions raised by extracting false explanations. It’s essential to push back against the sowers of confusion and the confused.
The off-world stage perspective is far outside the fog of psywar, and those who proclaim confusion need to be challenged to explain the basis of their confusion.
Autohoaxers aren’t confused because they apply a skepticism that rejects mass media confusion and results in a distinctly undisturbed, unconfused state of mind.
In Ancient Greek philosophy, ataraxia, generally translated as 'unperturbedness', 'imperturbability', 'equanimity', or 'tranquility', is a lucid state of robust equanimity characterized by ongoing freedom from distress and worry. Wikipedia
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