What are the current best conspiracy theories about Facebook that I should share with people to get them off of Facebook
That its Facebook.
A giant Corporation that pilfers your personal data and sells it to advertisers and various unsavory characters to use against you. All the while being owned and run by a borderline sociopath creep named Mark Zuckerberg, who will do anything to increase his power over them.
The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
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RingoHe/Hima distinct lack of substanceRegistered Userregular
Facebook literally makes you feel depressed... but maybe instead of using the actual research data, blame it on lizard people with regenerative microwave bananas
They're making you depressed intentionally in order to harvest your depression. Because sad people buy things which they can then advertise to you
Their business incentive is literally to get you to click more and spend more time on their platform, regardless of whether it is good for your physical or mental health. And all evidence says it's not. And also the evidence says that the main ways to drive engagement are bad for both people and society.
I find it hilarious that it's been a conspiracy theory since the 90s that Crypto AG was a front for the CIA.
Well, it wasn't a front for the CIA. It was a front for the CIA and BND.
"The western world sips from a poisonous cocktail: Polarisation, populism, protectionism and post-truth"
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
What are the current best conspiracy theories about Facebook that I should share with people to get them off of Facebook
That its Facebook.
A giant Corporation that pilfers your personal data and sells it to advertisers and various unsavory characters to use against you. All the while being owned and run by a borderline sociopath creep named Mark Zuckerberg, who will do anything to increase his power over them.
That’s okay, if you copy and paste / share this boiler plate sovcit disclaimer then you are protected from anything Facebook tries to do with your data.
I find it hilarious that it's been a conspiracy theory since the 90s that Crypto AG was a front for the CIA.
Well, it wasn't a front for the CIA. It was a front for the CIA and BND.
That entire article from the Washington Post was fantastic and really gripping read. It reminded me how much I was into spy stories as a kid and shed new light on foreign relations issues from history. Definitely recommend giving it a read if you have the time and subscription to the Post.
Facebook makes me feel happy because it’s full of puppies and babies. I guess the algorithm is faulty.
That's how I use reddit. I have a carefully curated selection of subs so that most of what I see is pets. Dogs and cats, puppies and kittens, parrots, cows frolicking in fields, and the occasional reptile.
Facebook I never even considered using because I don't care about the minutiae of other peoples day to day lives and (happily) expect others to do the same for me. That's just my personal preference, though. I get why lots of people want to share on a big communal website and I wish Facebook wasn't so shitty so they could have that.
Off-the-shelf "dietary supplement" colloidal silver runs about $30 for that size package. Buying the same thing from a lab supply company will run about half of that.
Colloidal silver is a very weak antibiotic and does nothing at all to viruses. It's a great way to stain your skin Smurf blue.
He's had at least two launches that put him in the hospital. That rocket was a death trap.
From his statements before the previous launches I don't think he was actually a flat earther. He's an amateur daredevil, and it's very hard to get major sponsors for a dangerous stunt even when you're a professional (he's been occasionally sponsored by a steak restaurant and a scrap yard, like for his world record jumping a limo over other limos). Every sponsor he talked to said the rocket couldn't do what he claimed and he was going to die. He tried to crowd fund it with space nerds, with the same results. Turns out that even though they'll crowd fund some crazy *sounding* stuff (like hijacking an abandoned but still operational NASA satellite) it's not crazy when people with actual knowhow are involved.
What he needed was a crowd funding source who didn't know anything about rockets, space, or gravity, but who THOUGHT they knew a lot about those things, and so after several tries he finally got enough money to get himself killed.
He's had at least two launches that put him in the hospital. That rocket was a death trap.
From his statements before the previous launches I don't think he was actually a flat earther. He's an amateur daredevil, and it's very hard to get major sponsors for a dangerous stunt even when you're a professional (he's been occasionally sponsored by a steak restaurant and a scrap yard, like for his world record jumping a limo over other limos). Every sponsor he talked to said the rocket couldn't do what he claimed and he was going to die. He tried to crowd fund it with space nerds, with the same results. Turns out that even though they'll crowd fund some crazy *sounding* stuff (like hijacking an abandoned but still operational NASA satellite) it's not crazy when people with actual knowhow are involved.
What he needed was a crowd funding source who didn't know anything about rockets, space, or gravity, but who THOUGHT they knew a lot about those things, and so after several tries he finally got enough money to get himself killed.
And those funds may have come from the Discovery/Science Channel, since they were filming the launch for a new show called "Homemade Astronauts".
His first couple launches were from before that, I think his 2018 launch was filmed for the show but was almost as uneventful as one could expect from a steam rocket with the approximate accuracy of an XCom player unit.
He's had at least two launches that put him in the hospital. That rocket was a death trap.
From his statements before the previous launches I don't think he was actually a flat earther. He's an amateur daredevil, and it's very hard to get major sponsors for a dangerous stunt even when you're a professional (he's been occasionally sponsored by a steak restaurant and a scrap yard, like for his world record jumping a limo over other limos). Every sponsor he talked to said the rocket couldn't do what he claimed and he was going to die. He tried to crowd fund it with space nerds, with the same results. Turns out that even though they'll crowd fund some crazy *sounding* stuff (like hijacking an abandoned but still operational NASA satellite) it's not crazy when people with actual knowhow are involved.
What he needed was a crowd funding source who didn't know anything about rockets, space, or gravity, but who THOUGHT they knew a lot about those things, and so after several tries he finally got enough money to get himself killed.
Well, he proved them right, didn't he. They laughed at Einstein, they laughed at the Wright brothers, but they also laughed at Bozo the Clown.
I mean, who would have thought that rocket science was hard?
Sic transit gloria mundi.
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MortiousThe Nightmare BeginsMove to New ZealandRegistered Userregular
Or that there's a universal down which gravity acts towards - a common flat earth argument is why things don't fall off the sides or bottom of the ball.
If I didn’t have a conscience I’d seriously consider grifting flat earthers into paying for “expeditions” to find the edge of the world and bring back proof. Sounds like a great way to crowd fund a vacation while maybe turning a profit. Surely beats killing yourself with a steam powered rocket.
The true believer FErs just claim the edge is perfectly guarded by some impregnable malign force because reasons and thus there's no way of getting near it, no?
If I didn’t have a conscience I’d seriously consider grifting flat earthers into paying for “expeditions” to find the edge of the world and bring back proof. Sounds like a great way to crowd fund a vacation while maybe turning a profit. Surely beats killing yourself with a steam powered rocket.
Stretch goal needs to be for them to invite a flat earth expert along too, trip goes from the Sydney to Cape Town to Teirra del Fuego then to back to Sydney after a brief trip to the Antarctic. I'll meet you in LA before we start the trip together to Oz so I can set off from Dubai. Adds more than a few hours to my initial travels, but means I get to take one of the few trans-polar flights before we kick this whole thing off. Not to mention we can do some ancient Greek shadow measuring from sticks outside of London, near the Equator in Dubai and then in the Southern hemisphere.
Further stretch goals need to be for tree planting, as this will be a carbon heavy trip and I don't want to know what climate change is going to do to the ice dams on the edge of the world.
...I might start to even price this up, and look for some activities to do on the way to make the trip a little more entertaining. I do know a few people in TV production, might be the right time to make use of those contacts.
[edit]Wait, this thing writes itself. Episode 1 is on a Flat Earth cruise around the Caribbean to set the hypothesis and work out the ground rules. Episode 2 is then setting the premise of the expedition, and also talking to historians about how the ancients navigated by the stars and introduce us to the instruments that we'll use to verify our position during the trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific cruises. Also how the ancient greeks measured the curvature of the Earth, with episode 2 ending with us arriving in Dubai to do the equatorial stick shadow measurements. Episode 3 is the team meeting up in LA and then setting off from Sydney to Cape Town. Episode 4 is then around Cape town and perhaps more travelogue-y. Episode 5 is the crossing to South America and a trip to Antartica. Episode 6 is then the return to Australia and the final calculations based off the measurements we've made.
Season 2 then looks to tackle the issues raised by flat earthers about Season 1 (perhaps doing Northern Hemisphere), and starts again on the Flat Earther Cruise at a showing of the highlights of Season 1.
Tastyfish on
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SteevLWhat can I do for you?Registered Userregular
Posts
That its Facebook.
A giant Corporation that pilfers your personal data and sells it to advertisers and various unsavory characters to use against you. All the while being owned and run by a borderline sociopath creep named Mark Zuckerberg, who will do anything to increase his power over them.
That its stealing all your data and manipulating you?
Check out my site, the Bismuth Heart | My Twitter
Their business incentive is literally to get you to click more and spend more time on their platform, regardless of whether it is good for your physical or mental health. And all evidence says it's not. And also the evidence says that the main ways to drive engagement are bad for both people and society.
Well, it wasn't a front for the CIA. It was a front for the CIA and BND.
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
That’s okay, if you copy and paste / share this boiler plate sovcit disclaimer then you are protected from anything Facebook tries to do with your data.
MWO: Adamski
That entire article from the Washington Post was fantastic and really gripping read. It reminded me how much I was into spy stories as a kid and shed new light on foreign relations issues from history. Definitely recommend giving it a read if you have the time and subscription to the Post.
And this is certainly impressive
That's how I use reddit. I have a carefully curated selection of subs so that most of what I see is pets. Dogs and cats, puppies and kittens, parrots, cows frolicking in fields, and the occasional reptile.
Facebook I never even considered using because I don't care about the minutiae of other peoples day to day lives and (happily) expect others to do the same for me. That's just my personal preference, though. I get why lots of people want to share on a big communal website and I wish Facebook wasn't so shitty so they could have that.
Off-the-shelf "dietary supplement" colloidal silver runs about $30 for that size package. Buying the same thing from a lab supply company will run about half of that.
Colloidal silver is a very weak antibiotic and does nothing at all to viruses. It's a great way to stain your skin Smurf blue.
I am intensely annoyed that that guy isn't at risk of winding up in prison over something like that.
*web search*
Fraud
The launch did not go well
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-51602655
From his statements before the previous launches I don't think he was actually a flat earther. He's an amateur daredevil, and it's very hard to get major sponsors for a dangerous stunt even when you're a professional (he's been occasionally sponsored by a steak restaurant and a scrap yard, like for his world record jumping a limo over other limos). Every sponsor he talked to said the rocket couldn't do what he claimed and he was going to die. He tried to crowd fund it with space nerds, with the same results. Turns out that even though they'll crowd fund some crazy *sounding* stuff (like hijacking an abandoned but still operational NASA satellite) it's not crazy when people with actual knowhow are involved.
What he needed was a crowd funding source who didn't know anything about rockets, space, or gravity, but who THOUGHT they knew a lot about those things, and so after several tries he finally got enough money to get himself killed.
Rock Band DLC | GW:OttW - arrcd | WLD - Thortar
And those funds may have come from the Discovery/Science Channel, since they were filming the launch for a new show called "Homemade Astronauts".
Well, he proved them right, didn't he. They laughed at Einstein, they laughed at the Wright brothers, but they also laughed at Bozo the Clown.
I mean, who would have thought that rocket science was hard?
I am assuming there's now a bunch of blogs about how "they" sabotaged the rocket to silence him.
It’s not a very important country most of the time
http://steamcommunity.com/id/mortious
He proved it. Head first into the ground.
Checkmate, globists.
Basically equivalent to stating the earth is a flat object that behaves exactly like a sphere in every way due to bizzare spacetime warping effects.
Depending on how they phrase it, the "flat" Earth is then either a torus or a sphere edit: or a cylinder.
Stretch goal needs to be for them to invite a flat earth expert along too, trip goes from the Sydney to Cape Town to Teirra del Fuego then to back to Sydney after a brief trip to the Antarctic. I'll meet you in LA before we start the trip together to Oz so I can set off from Dubai. Adds more than a few hours to my initial travels, but means I get to take one of the few trans-polar flights before we kick this whole thing off. Not to mention we can do some ancient Greek shadow measuring from sticks outside of London, near the Equator in Dubai and then in the Southern hemisphere.
Further stretch goals need to be for tree planting, as this will be a carbon heavy trip and I don't want to know what climate change is going to do to the ice dams on the edge of the world.
...I might start to even price this up, and look for some activities to do on the way to make the trip a little more entertaining. I do know a few people in TV production, might be the right time to make use of those contacts.
[edit]Wait, this thing writes itself. Episode 1 is on a Flat Earth cruise around the Caribbean to set the hypothesis and work out the ground rules. Episode 2 is then setting the premise of the expedition, and also talking to historians about how the ancients navigated by the stars and introduce us to the instruments that we'll use to verify our position during the trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific cruises. Also how the ancient greeks measured the curvature of the Earth, with episode 2 ending with us arriving in Dubai to do the equatorial stick shadow measurements. Episode 3 is the team meeting up in LA and then setting off from Sydney to Cape Town. Episode 4 is then around Cape town and perhaps more travelogue-y. Episode 5 is the crossing to South America and a trip to Antartica. Episode 6 is then the return to Australia and the final calculations based off the measurements we've made.
Season 2 then looks to tackle the issues raised by flat earthers about Season 1 (perhaps doing Northern Hemisphere), and starts again on the Flat Earther Cruise at a showing of the highlights of Season 1.
My Backloggery
I volunteer as tribute.