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MickBurke
e581f0bdd08ba97dc6f043d730f9f04fcdfeb92c0f992b6e4c79c3780a441fb2
I thrive in incomprehensibility.

american politics

american sports

american 'culture'

The degenerates are held up and most highly honored.

I think that's it!!

I just checked one in my go bag that was doing it and it appears to be coming from the very bottom, supporting your theory!

Totally makes sense and resolves a riddle that I've been confounded by for almost 15 years!

Hey, Just tried this with my product code and got this. Any suggestions?

1,000 sats to whoever can explain this to me.

Mag is full, rounds feed just fine, one round comes out another feeds to the top... but somehow, despite the fact that the follower is pressed tightly against the bottom round, and that pressure transfers all the way to the top round, some how there's a round loose and floating around in there (sound on to hear it)...

#AskNostr

#Gunstr

https://m.primal.net/Lsxu.mp4

This guy has distinct energy...

nostr:note1yqw3l9q52z3rp24ysvkm2l6nc8h64kvr4cyqsqaqzntleqwn9glq76d780

Send it up to PA when you're done with it!

So I was watching Lord of the Rings (while I work, I don't have that kind of time to waste!) and I recalled something from a recent episode of The Survival Podcast with nostr:npub15879mltlln6k8jy32k6xvagmtqx3zhsndchcey8gjyectwldk88sq5kv0n. Don't recall which episode it was, or whether Jack said it or a guest, but it was a point that I'd never even considered and the crux of it was this:

Not so long ago, if someone wanted to instigate war, they couldn't just start chucking warheads at another nation, they had to go find 100,000 or so men who also 'believed in' the reasoning enough to leave their homes and go fight a war. If they didn't find those people, there was no war.

How many wars would we see now if that was still the case?

#GrowNostr

If you've got to have unelected bureaucrats... They might be best case...

So I just realized this was literally the first halloween in at least 50 years, that I didn't consume ANY candy.

Thanks nostr:npub15879mltlln6k8jy32k6xvagmtqx3zhsndchcey8gjyectwldk88sq5kv0n and nostr:npub1kyk7ac33apd7cx0nun3laevf84zfhr8pt8kj4h8v7cpx9t72d4gqkyea0g

Replying to Avatar Guy Swann

The best way to find out when the establishment is hiding something or when a "conspiracy theory" is true, is to carefully read the "fact check" that is pushed everywhere.

If you know what to look for you'll spot them quickly. How many times they add an unimportant or needlessly specific detail to a claim and then only refute that detail. Or that throughout the entire thing it's a series of mild caveats with no hard data, or obvious hand waving like "both sides were there" without addressing the difference between them or going out of their way not to mention the massive discrepancy.

A simple example from the other day:

The Claim = "There are zero cases of autism or chronic illnesses in Amish community because they are unvaccinated"

The Fact Check = "Some Amish get vaccinated too. There are definitely cases of Amish having cancer, chronic illnesses, and autism."

What they DID do:

• Used "zero cases" as their very easy metric to shut down because its an impossible claim, rather than addressing the obvious point of the claim, that there's a vast difference.

• Pointed to some specific person saying this thing and the loose information they had to back it up at that specific time. "He based this off interviewing a few dozen Amish, NoT SciEnCe." Rather than again, actually talking about the issue or looking at real data.

What they did NOT do:

• They never discussed the vast difference between the two populations.

• They never shared investigations or brought up information about whether there was actually a difference between the vaccinated or unvaccinated Amish, even disregarding the difference from the wider population.

• They shared the same old post-hoc uncontrolled studies of vaccinated populations, without any data from the Amish or a less vaccinated population to compare to, in order to justify the same old "it's safe" narrative.

Basically it was a lesson in political framing and narrative posturing. The fact is, either they directly refused to bring up the hard data and actually address the issue, OR they couldn't find any real data to support their "fact check" (ie. they had zero facts to actually refute the problem posed) revealing the legitimacy of the concern, rather than it being a falsehood.

---------------------------------

It's important for us to understand that everything you read from everyone has a degree of unreliability. The "conspiracy theorists" are incentivized to believe and find info that proves that every disease since the beginning of time was caused by Big Pharma. While the establishment is going to twist and caveat everything into confusing nonsense and simply try to make anyone who says anything that deviates from The Narrative™️ seem crazy, strawman their claim, or associate them with someone with no credibility. This is universal.

It's often in the defense that you will find the threads you should pull on. It's what they DONT refute. What they refuse to provide data on. Or the issue they avoid talking about that will reveal where they have no foundation to stand on.

For the people who know what to look for, you'll find the "fact checkers" themselves to be one of your best resources for finding out whether or not they are completely full of shit.

I vaguely remember one from a few years back that was even more obvious.

The story was that some PHD from somewhere wrote a paper that completely debunked some 'official science'.

The fact check reported that the PHD "did not write his PHD thesis on this 'official science'".

No one anywhere ever even suggested that he had or that the paper in question was his PHD thesis.

One sure clue is when they answer a question that nobody asked or that has nothing to do with the actual mater.

'Everything popular is wrong.' -Oscar Wilde

Wow! Thanks! I was hoping for maybe a discount. Very gracious, and much appreciated!