People who use the words 'conspiracy theory', 'misinformation', 'disinformation', 'malinformation', etc., etc., to dismiss ideas they don't want to consider (because the implications are too scary to even contemplate) are going to find it increasingly difficult to make sense of this world.

I'm not religious, at least not in the traditional sense of the word, but I do think we're living in a sort of 'end-of-times' scenario, where great 'revelations' are imminent.

(Except the world doesn't end and there's a bright future ahead.)

Two things are blatantly obvious, if you pay any attention whatsoever:

1.

Potentially true information is being suppressed (in various ways by various people) if it does not serve the dominant narrative.

2.

But, eventually, truth always prevails.

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Well said.

Truth wins in the end because reality wins in the end.

This is true in the same sense that in programming, functional code wins over dysfunctional code, over time.

Align with the universe as it is, and you stand on the right side of truth.

Couple of Bible snippets come to mind

Truth prevails, but not without struggle. People can turn their backs on truth for long periods before recognizing their error. We must patiently remind them, planting seeds along the way.