Finally, a Pizzagate Arrest! Now we are getting somewhere.

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
Lets not forget about the child sex ring discoveries in britain and austrailia.

There is evil in this world and unfortunately the US government is filled with these sickos.

Time will show you. Eventually the story will break past the "fake news" firewall.


^Owner of Comet Pizza posted this picture on his instagram of him covered in blood on the floor of Comet Pizza. Not to mention all the photos depicting sexualization of children and art depicting sex acts on top giant slices of pizza.

You all are on the wrong side of this issue. Child porn and Pedophilia is evil. Hillary, Obama, Biden and John Podesta are besties with a bunch of Pedos.
Lol.
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
I never thought she would show her face in here. Amazin' isn't it?

And no matter what, you will never get them to change their minds. They are so twisted up in their brain that they will explain anything - literally anything - away to continue believing it. Ok, maybe if you prove it... how would one do that? Perhaps 24 video of all the parties involved for the last 30 years? If you had it, they would say you faked it. Look at the guy who just did an independant investigation and found... a pizza restaurant. It took no time at all for the pizzagaters to say he was a government patsy.

The Trump transition team requested security clearance for one of these people!

Even now Pie and others have convinced themselves that the reason Trump backed off Hillary is to get them to think the heat was off so they can be netted in a "continuing investigation" that doesn't exist. Just wait. Snicker

Is there nothing these imbeciles won't believe? Probably not - but I don't believe they are mentally ill. Sure some are, but a lot are just dumb. Painfully dumb.
 

Big_Lou

Well-Known Member
I never thought she would show her face in here. Amazin' isn't it?

And no matter what, you will never get them to change their minds. They are so twisted up in their brain that they will explain anything - literally anything - away to continue believing it. Ok, maybe if you prove it... how would one do that? Perhaps 24 video of all the parties involved for the last 30 years? If you had it, they would say you faked it. Look at the guy who just did an independant investigation and found... a pizza restaurant. It took no time at all for the pizzagaters to say he was a government patsy.

The Trump transition team requested security clearance for one of these people!

Even now Pie and others have convinced themselves that the reason Trump backed off Hillary is to get them to think the heat was off so they can be netted in a "continuing investigation" that doesn't exist. Just wait. Snicker

Is there nothing these imbeciles won't believe? Probably not - but I don't believe they are mentally ill. Sure some are, but a lot are just dumb. Painfully dumb.
You put more thought into this than she's worth. Much more.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
The central belief of every moron is that he is the victim of a mysterious conspiracy against his common rights and true deserts. He ascribes all his failure to get on in the world, all of his congenital incapacity and damfoolishness, to the machinations of werewolves assembled in Wall Street, or some other such den of infamy. - H.L. Mencken

Conspiracy theories are popular because no matter what they posit, they are all actually comforting, because they all are models of radical simplicity. - William Gibson

For some individuals, an obsessive compulsion to believe, prove or re-tell a conspiracy theory may indicate one or more of several well-understood psychological conditions, and other hypothetical ones: paranoia, denial, schizophrenia, mean world syndrome.

Psychologists believe that the search for meaning is common in conspiracism and the development of conspiracy theories, and may be powerful enough alone to lead to the first formulating of the idea. Once cognized, confirmation bias and avoidance ofcognitive dissonance may reinforce the belief.

Conspiratorial accounts can be emotionally satisfying when they place events in a readily-understandable, moral context. The subscriber to the theory is able to assign moral responsibility for an emotionally troubling event or situation to a clearly-conceived group of individuals. Crucially, that group does not include the believer. The believer may then feel excused of any moral or political responsibility for remedying whatever institutional or societal flaw might be the actual source of the dissonance.

Humanistic psychologists argue that even if the cabal behind the conspiracy is almost always perceived as hostile there is, often, still an element of reassurance in it, for conspiracy theorists, in part because it is more consoling to think that complications and upheavals in human affairs, at least, are created by human beings rather than factors beyond human control. Belief in such a cabal is a device for reassuring oneself that certain occurrences are not random, but ordered by a human intelligence. This renders such occurrences comprehensible and potentially controllable. If a cabal can be implicated in a sequence of events, there is always the hope, however tenuous, of being able to break the cabal's power - or joining it and exercising some of that power oneself. Finally, belief in the power of such a cabal is an implicit assertion of human dignity - an often unconscious but necessary affirmation that man is not totally helpless, but is responsible, at least in some measure, for his own destiny.

According to one study humans apply a 'rule of thumb' by which we expect a significant event to have a significant cause. The study offered subjects four versions of events, in which a foreign president was (a) successfully assassinated, (b) wounded but survived, (c) survived with wounds but died of a heart attack at a later date, and (d) was unharmed. Subjects were significantly more likely to suspect conspiracy in the case of the 'major events' — in which the president died — than in the other cases, despite all other evidence available to them being equal. Connected with pareidolia, the genetic tendency of human beings to find patterns in coincidence, this allows the "discovery" of conspiracy in any significant event.

The furtive fallacy is an informal fallacy of emphasis. Historian David Hackett Fischer identified it as the belief that significant facts of history are necessarily sinister, and that "history itself is a story of causes mostly insidious and results mostly invidious." It is more than a conspiracy theory in that it does not merely consider the possibility of hidden motives and deeds, but insists on them. In its extreme form, the fallacy represents general paranoia.

Michael Kelly, a Washington Post journalist and critic of anti-war movements on both the left and right, coined the term "fusion paranoia" to refer to a political convergence of left-wing and right-wing activists around anti-war issues and civil liberties, which he claimed were motivated by a shared belief in conspiracism or anti-government views.

Social critics have adopted this term to refer to how the synthesis of paranoid conspiracy theories, which were once limited to American fringe audiences, has given them mass appeal and enabled them to become commonplace in mass media, thereby inaugurating an unrivaled period of people actively preparing for apocalyptic millenarian scenarios in the United States of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. They warn that this development may not only fuel lone wolf terrorism but have devastating effects on American political life, such as the rise of a revolutionary right-wing populist movement capable of subverting the established political powers.
 

see4

Well-Known Member
A distraction.

Please. I know pedophillia exists and gets covered up. It's a fact. What is not yet a fact in my eyes is that Hilary Clinton or anyone in her inner circle had anything to do with child pornography or sex trade. Do you have any proof of that? You seem so sure of yourself. I'm wondering why.


If it is reported in a reputable news publication they are subject to rules. Fact checking. They need to print retractions when they fuck up the facts. I prefer that to johnnyguy87 telling me the sky is falling and it's the fault of Hillary or the Jews.
Don't bother debating these halfwits. Thing 1 and Thing 2 have a collective IQ just shy of mentally retarded.
 

HAF2

Well-Known Member
Republican buddy just texted me back saying:

"Once Clinton doesn't have obamas protection, I hope that is when trump will do something . Just hopeful thinking"

Fucking serious? My mind is blown. This was when I asked him if he was mad that trump is backing off or changing his opinion on all the things he based his campaign on. Like the fucking "lock her up" sham.

How can any trump supporter have an ounce of self respect now? He's already done a 180 on several issues he ran on. So did you support him then, or do you support him now? Can't be both.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
The central belief of every moron is that he is the victim of a mysterious conspiracy against his common rights and true deserts. He ascribes all his failure to get on in the world, all of his congenital incapacity and damfoolishness, to the machinations of werewolves assembled in Wall Street, or some other such den of infamy. - H.L. Mencken

Conspiracy theories are popular because no matter what they posit, they are all actually comforting, because they all are models of radical simplicity. - William Gibson

For some individuals, an obsessive compulsion to believe, prove or re-tell a conspiracy theory may indicate one or more of several well-understood psychological conditions, and other hypothetical ones: paranoia, denial, schizophrenia, mean world syndrome.

Psychologists believe that the search for meaning is common in conspiracism and the development of conspiracy theories, and may be powerful enough alone to lead to the first formulating of the idea. Once cognized, confirmation bias and avoidance ofcognitive dissonance may reinforce the belief.

Conspiratorial accounts can be emotionally satisfying when they place events in a readily-understandable, moral context. The subscriber to the theory is able to assign moral responsibility for an emotionally troubling event or situation to a clearly-conceived group of individuals. Crucially, that group does not include the believer. The believer may then feel excused of any moral or political responsibility for remedying whatever institutional or societal flaw might be the actual source of the dissonance.

Humanistic psychologists argue that even if the cabal behind the conspiracy is almost always perceived as hostile there is, often, still an element of reassurance in it, for conspiracy theorists, in part because it is more consoling to think that complications and upheavals in human affairs, at least, are created by human beings rather than factors beyond human control. Belief in such a cabal is a device for reassuring oneself that certain occurrences are not random, but ordered by a human intelligence. This renders such occurrences comprehensible and potentially controllable. If a cabal can be implicated in a sequence of events, there is always the hope, however tenuous, of being able to break the cabal's power - or joining it and exercising some of that power oneself. Finally, belief in the power of such a cabal is an implicit assertion of human dignity - an often unconscious but necessary affirmation that man is not totally helpless, but is responsible, at least in some measure, for his own destiny.

According to one study humans apply a 'rule of thumb' by which we expect a significant event to have a significant cause. The study offered subjects four versions of events, in which a foreign president was (a) successfully assassinated, (b) wounded but survived, (c) survived with wounds but died of a heart attack at a later date, and (d) was unharmed. Subjects were significantly more likely to suspect conspiracy in the case of the 'major events' — in which the president died — than in the other cases, despite all other evidence available to them being equal. Connected with pareidolia, the genetic tendency of human beings to find patterns in coincidence, this allows the "discovery" of conspiracy in any significant event.

The furtive fallacy is an informal fallacy of emphasis. Historian David Hackett Fischer identified it as the belief that significant facts of history are necessarily sinister, and that "history itself is a story of causes mostly insidious and results mostly invidious." It is more than a conspiracy theory in that it does not merely consider the possibility of hidden motives and deeds, but insists on them. In its extreme form, the fallacy represents general paranoia.

Michael Kelly, a Washington Post journalist and critic of anti-war movements on both the left and right, coined the term "fusion paranoia" to refer to a political convergence of left-wing and right-wing activists around anti-war issues and civil liberties, which he claimed were motivated by a shared belief in conspiracism or anti-government views.

Social critics have adopted this term to refer to how the synthesis of paranoid conspiracy theories, which were once limited to American fringe audiences, has given them mass appeal and enabled them to become commonplace in mass media, thereby inaugurating an unrivaled period of people actively preparing for apocalyptic millenarian scenarios in the United States of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. They warn that this development may not only fuel lone wolf terrorism but have devastating effects on American political life, such as the rise of a revolutionary right-wing populist movement capable of subverting the established political powers.
We are going to know a lot more about this form of human induced delusion before too long. Not too long ago, I was unaware of how many holocaust deniers are out there. It's still a bit hilarious but the laughing will stop when goons start showing up and shooting. As the comet gate story shows, there is a sinister side to all of this. Also we can be sure that Trump or worse are watching and working on how to use these people for their own ends.

I laugh at Pie as much as anybody (maybe more) but what she's saying is a harbinger of some very unfunny events that I think are going to unfold sooner than later. If anything, this false news-secret conspiracy theory phenomenon is a powerful tool for intimidating and silencing the opposition. Not only that but Pie and her ilk post stuff that - as one poster said - makes me wish I could scrub my eyeballs to remove the filth.
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
Just wait, she'll post a video as proof. Usually some pictures with a voice over.
There is not one person here who has voiced conservative views that isnt eventually villified, targeted and attacked by the mob here.

Pie doesnt deserve any of it. This is systematic and done against anyone who does not agree with the mob rule around here. And if they dont break, eventually they are banned for doing the same things that are done to them.

I wish your grandparents got to read what you wrote on these forums, I am sure most of them would be horrified and disgusted.
 

HAF2

Well-Known Member
There is not one person here who has voiced conservative views that isnt eventually villified, targeted and attacked by the mob here.

Pie doesnt deserve any of it. This is systematic and done against anyone who does not agree with the mob rule around here. And if they dont break, eventually they are banned for doing the same things that are done to them.

I wish your grandparents got to read what you wrote on these forums, I am sure most of them would be horrified and disgusted.
I agree that no memeber deserves to have mean personal things said about them. But the issues being pushed by said memeber evoke strong emotions in people. Saying that all mainstream media is lies and everyone that believes it is too dumb to realize the truth, is just a passive aggressive blanket insult that I've often received from right swinging people. The conversation ends at a standstill. You're dumb and your media is wrong. No you are! It's not helping anything and the lines just get drawn in the sand.
 

Big_Lou

Well-Known Member
There is not one person here who has voiced conservative views that isnt eventually villified, targeted and attacked by the mob here.

Pie doesnt deserve any of it. This is systematic and done against anyone who does not agree with the mob rule around here. And if they dont break, eventually they are banned for doing the same things that are done to them.

I wish your grandparents got to read what you wrote on these forums, I am sure most of them would be horrified and disgusted.
You could always just LEAVE if it's so awful here and you feel so persecuted....

170287290_960.jpg


Just_cec1e3_2082263.jpg
 

Big_Lou

Well-Known Member
Is that little one Trumps hand?
No way, FAR too large/masculine to be Drumpf's.

trump_small_hands.jpg

I agree that no memeber deserves to have mean personal things said about them. But the issues being pushed by said memeber evoke strong emotions in people. Saying that all mainstream media is lies and everyone that believes it is too dumb to realize the truth, is just a passive aggressive blanket insult that I've often received from right swinging people. The conversation ends at a standstill. You're dumb and your media is wrong. No you are! It's not helping anything and the lines just get drawn in the sand.
(Pssssssst - he's a dickless trailer court nazi. Save the keystrokes for something a bit more human. ;))
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
I agree that no memeber deserves to have mean personal things said about them. But ....
The rhetoric has gotten increasingly more hateful against pie for months now. I have been watching it. The personal attacks are off the charts now.

You either believe that personal attacks shouldnt happen or not.

I dont expect anything to change, I just wanted to point out how psychotic it is in here.
 

tangerinegreen555

Well-Known Member
There is not one person here who has voiced conservative views that isnt eventually villified, targeted and attacked by the mob here.

Pie doesnt deserve any of it. This is systematic and done against anyone who does not agree with the mob rule around here. And if they dont break, eventually they are banned for doing the same things that are done to them.

I wish your grandparents got to read what you wrote on these forums, I am sure most of them would be horrified and disgusted.
tl;dr

@.nobody.
 
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