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LifeFuel Social networks struggling to take down incel movement: "there's too many of them!"

RoastieBeef

RoastieBeef

Mythic
Joined
Nov 3, 2018
Posts
4,510
We're winning. Trillion dollar companies cannot take us down because we now outnumber them and also because we are outsmarting them .:dab:

We are too powerful and influential and they're scared!:feelshaha::feelshaha:

The incel rebellion has become a force to be reckoned
with




Despite years of strict moderation from the main social networks, the “incel” community remains as influential as it was in 2014, when an English 22-year-old killed seven people on the streets of Isla Vista, California, motivated by his hatred of women.
The murders were an eerie parallel of the shootings in Plymouth last week. Both killers were radicalised on social media, where they posted extensively about their hatred of women and their feelings of despair over their lack of sexual activity.
But in the years since 2014, all the main social networks have acted against the movement. Reddit, which was once home to some of the largest incel communities on the internet, has spent much of the past two years enforcing policies that had previously been only loosely applied.

Subreddits such as r/incels and r/theblackpill have been banned for violating “sitewide rules regarding violent content”. The latter was a gathering point for individuals who described themselves as having been “blackpilled”, a philosophy loosely linked to the incel community where members describe themselves as having been awakened to the true miseries of modern life.

In other communities that could easily cross the line into violent extremism, volunteer moderators :soy::foidSoy: work hard to keep the conversation from veering into dark places. The Forever Alone subreddit, for instance, is “a place where people who have been alone most of their lives could come and talk about their issues”. Its 10 volunteer moderators do not work for Reddit, but enforce a set of rules, which include “be polite, friendly and welcoming”, and a strict ban on “any incel references, slang or inference”.

The Reddit account of the Plymouth shooter was suspended on Wednesday, just hours before the attack, again for breaking the site’s content policy. A Reddit spokesperson said: “We take these matters very seriously. Our investigation is ongoing.”

Other platforms were slower to act. YouTube, where the shooter had an account and regularly posted vlog-style videos, also took down his account – on Saturday, citing the platform’s “offline behaviour” policy. That policy is also relatively new: as recently as 2019, YouTube was criticised for not taking down content from users such as Tommy Robinson, who were careful to only post videos that were within the rules of the platform, even as they more broadly engaged in behaviour that went far beyond what the service would allow.

“Our hearts go out to those affected by this terrible incident,” a YouTube spokesperson said. “We have strict policies to ensure our platform is not used to incite violence. In addition, we also have longstanding policies that prohibit those responsible for attacks like these from having a YouTube channel and have since terminated their channel from our platform.”

On Facebook, the incel movement isn’t banned outright. Only a small handful of designated “hateful ideologies” are so limited, including white supremacy and nazism. Many more movements are banned as designated “hateful organisations”, but such a restriction does not apply to the leaderless incel movement. Instead, however, the site’s limitations on hate speech largely apply: content promoting hate on the basis of someone’s sex or gender is banned, as is any content promoting violence.

Despite action from large social networks, the incel community remains influential online. Sites with loose or nonexistent moderation policies, such as 4chan and 8kun, have sizeable cohorts, and smaller, dedicated forums are able to set their own moderation policies.

Subreddits such as r/incels and r/theblackpill have been banned for violating “sitewide rules regarding violent content”. The latter was a gathering point for individuals who described themselves as having been “blackpilled”, a philosophy loosely linked to the incel community where members describe themselves as having been awakened to the true miseries of modern life.

In other communities that could easily cross the line into violent extremism, volunteer moderators work hard to keep the conversation from veering into dark places. The Forever Alone subreddit, for instance, is “a place where people who have been alone most of their lives could come and talk about their issues”. Its 10 volunteer moderators do not work for Reddit, but enforce a set of rules, which include “be polite, friendly and welcoming”, and a strict ban on “any incel references, slang or inference”.

The Reddit account of the Plymouth shooter was suspended on Wednesday, just hours before the attack, again for breaking the site’s content policy. A Reddit spokesperson said: “We take these matters very seriously. Our investigation is ongoing.”

Other platforms were slower to act. YouTube, where the shooter had an account and regularly posted vlog-style videos, also took down his account – on Saturday, citing the platform’s “offline behaviour” policy. That policy is also relatively new: as recently as 2019, YouTube was criticised for not taking down content from users such as Tommy Robinson, who were careful to only post videos that were within the rules of the platform, even as they more broadly engaged in behaviour that went far beyond what the service would allow.

“Our hearts go out to those affected by this terrible incident,” a YouTube spokesperson said. “We have strict policies to ensure our platform is not used to incite violence. In addition, we also have longstanding policies that prohibit those responsible for attacks like these from having a YouTube channel and have since terminated their channel from our platform.”

On Facebook, the incel movement isn’t banned outright. Only a small handful of designated “hateful ideologies” are so limited, including white supremacy and nazism. Many more movements are banned as designated “hateful organisations”, but such a restriction does not apply to the leaderless incel movement. Instead, however, the site’s limitations on hate speech largely apply: content promoting hate on the basis of someone’s sex or gender is banned, as is any content promoting violence.

Despite action from large social networks, the incel community remains influential online. Sites with loose or nonexistent moderation policies, such as 4chan and 8kun, have sizeable cohorts, and smaller, dedicated forums are able to set their own moderation policies.
 
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Maybe they should consider lowering their standards if they want to reduce incels
 
Takbir!

The cucks try in vain to destory us but inshallah we will prevail God willing.
 
We should develop bots to automatize the blackpill , It should be a good weapon against this clownworld.
 
and more men are becoming sexless lmao. i wonder how this will play out when more men can't get a gf and start noticing that women keep going for taller/more attractive guys.
 
and more men are becoming sexless lmao. i wonder how this will play out when more men can't get a gf and start noticing that women keep going for taller/more attractive guys.
Big tech is scared of the truth being spread to billions.

We should make a Hindu version of this website. There's around 1 billion men in India and Pakistan that will never have sex and they have no idea why :feelshaha:
 
will this site be in risk
Big tech is scared of the truth being spread to billions.

We should make a Hindu version of this website. There's around 1 billion men in India and Pakistan that will never have sex and they have no idea why :feelshaha:
vast majority of them will ascend before end of 20s imo
 
will this site be in risk

vast majority of them will ascend before end of 20s imo
No, there is a large gender imbalance in a lot of places, and a lot of the urban, middle-class foids do not want to become mothers, rather pursue an education and career development.
@Lookscel can confirm or deny what I said.
 
No, there is a large gender imbalance in a lot of places, and a lot of the urban, middle-class foids do not want to become mothers, rather pursue an education and career development.
@Lookscel can confirm or deny what I said.
but most of well educated foids will settle down eventually,even there is a gender imbalance,say it's 120:100, still 80% of men can get a girl,1 billion will never have sex? certainly not
 
If we were more organized and publicized we could beat globohomo, a reminder that Taliban started with just 50 people
 
No, there is a large gender imbalance in a lot of places, and a lot of the urban, middle-class foids do not want to become mothers, rather pursue an education and career development.
@Lookscel can confirm or deny what I said.

but most of well educated foids will settle down eventually,even there is a gender imbalance,say it's 120:100, still 80% of men can get a girl,1 billion will never have sex? certainly not
Yup I can confirm this
 
These people really like searching for the needle in a haystack.
 
will this site be in risk
Very possibly yes, eventually they're going to do to .is what they did to parler by having every internet infrastructure company in the west shut it down at the exact same time.

No, there is a large gender imbalance in a lot of places, and a lot of the urban, middle-class foids do not want to become mothers, rather pursue an education and career development.
@Lookscel can confirm or deny what I said.
I used to work with a bunch of curry immigrants. They told me that Indian men think they're all location-cels because the media over there tells them that white girls are all extremely thirsty for Indian dick :feelshaha:.
 
We're winning. Trillion dollar companies cannot take us down because we now outnumber them and also because we are outsmarting them .:dab:

We are too powerful and influential and they're scared!:feelshaha::feelshaha:

The incel rebellion has become a force to be reckoned
with




Despite years of strict moderation from the main social networks, the “incel” community remains as influential as it was in 2014, when an English 22-year-old killed seven people on the streets of Isla Vista, California, motivated by his hatred of women.
The murders were an eerie parallel of the shootings in Plymouth last week. Both killers were radicalised on social media, where they posted extensively about their hatred of women and their feelings of despair over their lack of sexual activity.
But in the years since 2014, all the main social networks have acted against the movement. Reddit, which was once home to some of the largest incel communities on the internet, has spent much of the past two years enforcing policies that had previously been only loosely applied.

Subreddits such as r/incels and r/theblackpill have been banned for violating “sitewide rules regarding violent content”. The latter was a gathering point for individuals who described themselves as having been “blackpilled”, a philosophy loosely linked to the incel community where members describe themselves as having been awakened to the true miseries of modern life.

In other communities that could easily cross the line into violent extremism, volunteer moderators :soy::foidSoy: work hard to keep the conversation from veering into dark places. The Forever Alone subreddit, for instance, is “a place where people who have been alone most of their lives could come and talk about their issues”. Its 10 volunteer moderators do not work for Reddit, but enforce a set of rules, which include “be polite, friendly and welcoming”, and a strict ban on “any incel references, slang or inference”.

The Reddit account of the Plymouth shooter was suspended on Wednesday, just hours before the attack, again for breaking the site’s content policy. A Reddit spokesperson said: “We take these matters very seriously. Our investigation is ongoing.”

Other platforms were slower to act. YouTube, where the shooter had an account and regularly posted vlog-style videos, also took down his account – on Saturday, citing the platform’s “offline behaviour” policy. That policy is also relatively new: as recently as 2019, YouTube was criticised for not taking down content from users such as Tommy Robinson, who were careful to only post videos that were within the rules of the platform, even as they more broadly engaged in behaviour that went far beyond what the service would allow.

“Our hearts go out to those affected by this terrible incident,” a YouTube spokesperson said. “We have strict policies to ensure our platform is not used to incite violence. In addition, we also have longstanding policies that prohibit those responsible for attacks like these from having a YouTube channel and have since terminated their channel from our platform.”

On Facebook, the incel movement isn’t banned outright. Only a small handful of designated “hateful ideologies” are so limited, including white supremacy and nazism. Many more movements are banned as designated “hateful organisations”, but such a restriction does not apply to the leaderless incel movement. Instead, however, the site’s limitations on hate speech largely apply: content promoting hate on the basis of someone’s sex or gender is banned, as is any content promoting violence.

Despite action from large social networks, the incel community remains influential online. Sites with loose or nonexistent moderation policies, such as 4chan and 8kun, have sizeable cohorts, and smaller, dedicated forums are able to set their own moderation policies.

Subreddits such as r/incels and r/theblackpill have been banned for violating “sitewide rules regarding violent content”. The latter was a gathering point for individuals who described themselves as having been “blackpilled”, a philosophy loosely linked to the incel community where members describe themselves as having been awakened to the true miseries of modern life.

In other communities that could easily cross the line into violent extremism, volunteer moderators work hard to keep the conversation from veering into dark places. The Forever Alone subreddit, for instance, is “a place where people who have been alone most of their lives could come and talk about their issues”. Its 10 volunteer moderators do not work for Reddit, but enforce a set of rules, which include “be polite, friendly and welcoming”, and a strict ban on “any incel references, slang or inference”.

The Reddit account of the Plymouth shooter was suspended on Wednesday, just hours before the attack, again for breaking the site’s content policy. A Reddit spokesperson said: “We take these matters very seriously. Our investigation is ongoing.”

Other platforms were slower to act. YouTube, where the shooter had an account and regularly posted vlog-style videos, also took down his account – on Saturday, citing the platform’s “offline behaviour” policy. That policy is also relatively new: as recently as 2019, YouTube was criticised for not taking down content from users such as Tommy Robinson, who were careful to only post videos that were within the rules of the platform, even as they more broadly engaged in behaviour that went far beyond what the service would allow.

“Our hearts go out to those affected by this terrible incident,” a YouTube spokesperson said. “We have strict policies to ensure our platform is not used to incite violence. In addition, we also have longstanding policies that prohibit those responsible for attacks like these from having a YouTube channel and have since terminated their channel from our platform.”

On Facebook, the incel movement isn’t banned outright. Only a small handful of designated “hateful ideologies” are so limited, including white supremacy and nazism. Many more movements are banned as designated “hateful organisations”, but such a restriction does not apply to the leaderless incel movement. Instead, however, the site’s limitations on hate speech largely apply: content promoting hate on the basis of someone’s sex or gender is banned, as is any content promoting violence.

Despite action from large social networks, the incel community remains influential online. Sites with loose or nonexistent moderation policies, such as 4chan and 8kun, have sizeable cohorts, and smaller, dedicated forums are able to set their own moderation policies.
I don't want to sound pessimist but Japan has the highest rate of Incels and they haven't solved the problem. I fear that things will remain the same on the West.
 
That's actually because there's now such a high number of involuntarily celibate men out there. kinda scary/sad tbh
 
We should develop bots to automatize the blackpill , It should be a good weapon against this clownworld.
:bigbrain:
I don't want to sound pessimist but Japan has the highest rate of Incels and they haven't solved the problem. I fear that things will remain the same on the West.
Japanesecels aren't blackpilled.
 
It's the best ideology, because the only requirement is being male and short/ugly

70% of male population
If we were more organized and publicized we could beat globohomo, a reminder that Taliban started with just 50 people
Serious?
 
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We're winning. Trillion dollar companies cannot take us down because we now outnumber them and also because we are outsmarting them .:dab:

We are too powerful and influential and they're scared!:feelshaha::feelshaha:

The incel rebellion has become a force to be reckoned
with




Despite years of strict moderation from the main social networks, the “incel” community remains as influential as it was in 2014, when an English 22-year-old killed seven people on the streets of Isla Vista, California, motivated by his hatred of women.
The murders were an eerie parallel of the shootings in Plymouth last week. Both killers were radicalised on social media, where they posted extensively about their hatred of women and their feelings of despair over their lack of sexual activity.
But in the years since 2014, all the main social networks have acted against the movement. Reddit, which was once home to some of the largest incel communities on the internet, has spent much of the past two years enforcing policies that had previously been only loosely applied.

Subreddits such as r/incels and r/theblackpill have been banned for violating “sitewide rules regarding violent content”. The latter was a gathering point for individuals who described themselves as having been “blackpilled”, a philosophy loosely linked to the incel community where members describe themselves as having been awakened to the true miseries of modern life.

In other communities that could easily cross the line into violent extremism, volunteer moderators :soy::foidSoy: work hard to keep the conversation from veering into dark places. The Forever Alone subreddit, for instance, is “a place where people who have been alone most of their lives could come and talk about their issues”. Its 10 volunteer moderators do not work for Reddit, but enforce a set of rules, which include “be polite, friendly and welcoming”, and a strict ban on “any incel references, slang or inference”.

The Reddit account of the Plymouth shooter was suspended on Wednesday, just hours before the attack, again for breaking the site’s content policy. A Reddit spokesperson said: “We take these matters very seriously. Our investigation is ongoing.”

Other platforms were slower to act. YouTube, where the shooter had an account and regularly posted vlog-style videos, also took down his account – on Saturday, citing the platform’s “offline behaviour” policy. That policy is also relatively new: as recently as 2019, YouTube was criticised for not taking down content from users such as Tommy Robinson, who were careful to only post videos that were within the rules of the platform, even as they more broadly engaged in behaviour that went far beyond what the service would allow.

“Our hearts go out to those affected by this terrible incident,” a YouTube spokesperson said. “We have strict policies to ensure our platform is not used to incite violence. In addition, we also have longstanding policies that prohibit those responsible for attacks like these from having a YouTube channel and have since terminated their channel from our platform.”

On Facebook, the incel movement isn’t banned outright. Only a small handful of designated “hateful ideologies” are so limited, including white supremacy and nazism. Many more movements are banned as designated “hateful organisations”, but such a restriction does not apply to the leaderless incel movement. Instead, however, the site’s limitations on hate speech largely apply: content promoting hate on the basis of someone’s sex or gender is banned, as is any content promoting violence.

Despite action from large social networks, the incel community remains influential online. Sites with loose or nonexistent moderation policies, such as 4chan and 8kun, have sizeable cohorts, and smaller, dedicated forums are able to set their own moderation policies.

Subreddits such as r/incels and r/theblackpill have been banned for violating “sitewide rules regarding violent content”. The latter was a gathering point for individuals who described themselves as having been “blackpilled”, a philosophy loosely linked to the incel community where members describe themselves as having been awakened to the true miseries of modern life.

In other communities that could easily cross the line into violent extremism, volunteer moderators work hard to keep the conversation from veering into dark places. The Forever Alone subreddit, for instance, is “a place where people who have been alone most of their lives could come and talk about their issues”. Its 10 volunteer moderators do not work for Reddit, but enforce a set of rules, which include “be polite, friendly and welcoming”, and a strict ban on “any incel references, slang or inference”.

The Reddit account of the Plymouth shooter was suspended on Wednesday, just hours before the attack, again for breaking the site’s content policy. A Reddit spokesperson said: “We take these matters very seriously. Our investigation is ongoing.”

Other platforms were slower to act. YouTube, where the shooter had an account and regularly posted vlog-style videos, also took down his account – on Saturday, citing the platform’s “offline behaviour” policy. That policy is also relatively new: as recently as 2019, YouTube was criticised for not taking down content from users such as Tommy Robinson, who were careful to only post videos that were within the rules of the platform, even as they more broadly engaged in behaviour that went far beyond what the service would allow.

“Our hearts go out to those affected by this terrible incident,” a YouTube spokesperson said. “We have strict policies to ensure our platform is not used to incite violence. In addition, we also have longstanding policies that prohibit those responsible for attacks like these from having a YouTube channel and have since terminated their channel from our platform.”

On Facebook, the incel movement isn’t banned outright. Only a small handful of designated “hateful ideologies” are so limited, including white supremacy and nazism. Many more movements are banned as designated “hateful organisations”, but such a restriction does not apply to the leaderless incel movement. Instead, however, the site’s limitations on hate speech largely apply: content promoting hate on the basis of someone’s sex or gender is banned, as is any content promoting violence.

Despite action from large social networks, the incel community remains influential online. Sites with loose or nonexistent moderation policies, such as 4chan and 8kun, have sizeable cohorts, and smaller, dedicated forums are able to set their own moderation policies.
Strength in numbers, even their computer quantum algorithms can't stop us which ought to tell you just how many of us around the world there really is. Checkmate. :feelsdevil:
 
We. have. to. prevail. at. the. end. There HAS to be a way to do it.
 
We are like a hydra, even if you cut off one head two more will rise in it's place.

We should continue spreading the blackpill, making accounts on every social media platform we can find. If they want to get rid of us, they can try, but we will only continue to spread the truth.
 
xhbdgxzxno401.gif
 
Yeah I actually saw this article but it really is based when you think about it. Cucks banned us from all the mainstream platforms and it only made us stronger, more free to express the reality we witness as they have forced incels to create our own forums moderated by and for incels themselves.

As much as these cucked social justice warrior jewified tech companies want to suppress biological reality they simply cannot. The blackpill is truth and reveals itself in the everyday experience of every sub 6 male who is honest with themselves instead of being gaslit. All these forums really do is to question that gaslighting delusion and making sense of their past experiences of lookism that they may have not have recognized as what they in fact are.

Everything else that normies associate with the blackpill: misogyny, misanthropy, the schadenfreude of witnessing normies suffer—is simply the natural consequence of experiencing lookism and social ostracization and recognizing it as such instead of coping away in the subconscious effort of avoiding that initially overwhelming realization. It is the same reason why IT and bluepilled normies are drawn to this forum. They can't look away because we are a distorted reflection of them, the manifestation of all their degenerate flaunting of erotic-romantic pleasure and their denigration of those who aren't attractive or neurotypical enough to experience the same. We only exist because of their failures of basic empathy and understanding, and so we do not offer them the pleasantries they refused us.

Even if the internet overlords wiped all our domains and censored every blackpill keyword low status men would rediscover the essence of the blackpill in due time. They may simply struggle to make sense of it or define it and to trace its causation to the biosocial realities of hypergamy, social dominance, etc. Reality cannot be censored.
 
If we were more organized and publicized we could beat globohomo, a reminder that Taliban started with just 50 people

That's a good ideas!

That's actually because there's now such a high number of involuntarily celibate men out there. kinda scary/sad tbh

:bigbrain:

Japanesecels aren't blackpilled.
Should we start the incel translation project? Many of us are ethnics that can translate posts and content from the site. Also since many of us have plenty of time to spend of the internet we can make social media accounts to start to bomb ethnic sites with blackpill information. We need to have reach, that is the key.

Another possibility is to some how branch the site into indian, japanese, spanish, etc landing pages so that people that open the site can readily access this information. That is the key to expansion, many males that are also in the same situation world wide. With a small push we can expand more world wide. Sounds like a big dream but I think we can do it, its all about getting the information out there and the site, since mainstream media regulates "extremist" content, incels.is might become like a database.

We can go to ethnic twitter posts with men that are complaining about being rejected and introduce ourselves and mission. Also places like discord servers and any other social media sites our current member base is active in. Its low effort as fuck tbh, but powerful. Also as ethnics that only know their native language join they can talk to their groups.

TBH we can even have bigger reach then other grassroots movements due to being a global issue not just white nationalism in US, Europe, etc.
 
Should we start the incel translation project? Many of us are ethnics that can translate posts and content from the site. Also since many of us have plenty of time to spend of the internet we can make social media accounts to start to bomb ethnic sites with blackpill information. We need to have reach, that is the key.

Another possibility is to some how branch the site into indian, japanese, spanish, etc landing pages so that people that open the site can readily access this information. That is the key to expansion, many males that are also in the same situation world wide. With a small push we can expand more world wide. Sounds like a big dream but I think we can do it, its all about getting the information out there and the site, since mainstream media regulates "extremist" content, incels.is might become like a database.

We can go to ethnic twitter posts with men that are complaining about being rejected and introduce ourselves and mission. Also places like discord servers and any other social media sites our current member base is active in. Its low effort as fuck tbh, but powerful. Also as ethnics that only know their native language join they can talk to their groups.

TBH we can even have bigger reach then other grassroots movements due to being a global issue not just white nationalism in US, Europe, etc.
High iq. Sandcels like me need to make other sandcels swallow the fesikhpill, because the middle east is starting to get cucked.
 
I think it's ironic that inceldom, which has so long been mislabeled a "movement" (it's a state of being, as if anyone would choose to "join" it jfl), may actually become a kind of movement, as our ranks swell to a size where we have some clout
 
Ah, the I.N.C.E.L. movement :feelskek::feelskek:
 
the problem is that they are going about this the dumbest way possible by trying to lump every ugly loner as some kind of terrorist. This is simply an irresponsible answer to a real problem that affects a HUGE number of men. The shame police only makes ugly loners feel motivated to fulfill their typecast "school shooter" role.

In all honesty Japan has always handled their huge incel population masterfully by not criticizing them, but helping them cope, and making them feel that inceldom is a normal part of culture. There is little shame about having weird fetishes there. Its only recently that inceldom in Japan is getting worse now that globohomo is seriously gripping it's shame tentacles on the based domestic culture over there.
 
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Banning discussion of something that most men see every day is futile
 
You could see in 2019 that we were winning the online culture war. Good see that the trend is going strong.

If we were more organized and publicized we could beat globohomo, a reminder that Taliban started with just 50 people
The Taliban are unwitting agents of globohomo, a proxy force of Pakistan - who is a servant of the globalists. Nothing that big, like Afghanistan being taken over by donkeyfucking Hajis from Waziristan, happens by accident. President Ghani is an agent of the World Bank. He and his predecessor, Karzai (agent of Unocal), have been actively sabotaging the Afghan national efforts since they were both installed by the US. In the past 20 years the Afghan army and police have been capturing thousands Taliban fighters (many suicide bombers) and both presidents would release them on executive orders. He was constantly issuing orders to his military and police commanders to not engage the Taliban since early this year. During the months leading up to the August takeover he fired the head of security for Kabul airport and had his own man in charge of the place so he could quickly and smoothly escape the country, which he did.

Afghanistan was gifted to the Taliban by globohomo. For what purpose? Stay tuned.
 
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We are like a hydra, even if you cut off one head two more will rise in it's place.

We should continue spreading the blackpill, making accounts on every social media platform we can find. If they want to get rid of us, they can try, but we will only continue to spread the truth.
:feelshehe:
 
The uprising has begun.
 
Strength in numbers, even their computer quantum algorithms can't stop us which ought to tell you just how many of us around the world there really is. Checkmate. :feelsdevil:
Indeed brother it's time to rise up and finally get the retards a taste of their medicine
 
Rising numbers… Truth is out there…
 
Afghanistan was gifted to the Taliban by globohomo. For what purpose? Stay tuned.
Probably an informal pivot to acknowledging the rising power of Asia absent a formal defeat of the US in war by a country that is a major world power.
 
Rising numbers… Truth is out there…
yes the growth in the number of incels in recent years beyond proving the blackpill will also increase the number of blackpilled incels
I wish
 
Indeed brother it's time to rise up and finally get the retards a taste of their medicine
All good things come to those who wait and are patient, my patience has been running for over two decades now, in waiting I've learn to self educate myself on a variety of things in the process. Self reflection can illuminate many things in the world fren. :feelsjuice:
 
they can't stop us, when at least 30% of men under 30 aren't even having sex once per year and the number is rising

We are the future
 
All good things come to those who wait and are patient, my patience has been running for over two decades now, in waiting I've learn to self educate myself on a variety of things in the process. Self reflection can illuminate many things in the world fren. :feelsjuice:
Mr marquisdesade you are truly wisecel:fuk::feelsohh:
I hope you luck in your travels
 
Mr marquisdesade you are truly wisecel:fuk::feelsohh:
I hope you luck in your travels
Wisdom, intelligence, information, and knowledge is power fren, more of us need to be that way. It is the future going fourth. :feelsjuice:
 
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