tradswede
ꨄ
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- Joined
- May 29, 2018
- Posts
- 18,739
- Online time
- 6d 17h
I notice normies have been trained to think everything has to be about money. They translate the concept of wealth into money.
So I am one of these incels who performs multiple copes, and I've had confrontations with normies and they often assume my copes are my job and that I'm rich and 'making money'.
I'm making no money. It seems like saying money is fake gains some consensus but I wonder how many people have actually internalized the notion and how many instead repeat it without believing it. Because if you say 'money is fake' it almost sounds like trusim as if to say 2+2=4. So you can say it but do you believe it? Maybe normies learn 2+2=4 as a repetition, they go to school and someone enforces the idea that 2+2=4, so for normies it becomes another belief they must accept.
I also talked to flat earthers, they insist on the idea that the school system indoctrinates us to think the earth is a "spinning ball". Which is true, the school system does indeed teach us to think that. So since the belief is not sufficiently supported with evidence or the evidence is not conclusive for a portion of students, the flat earthers end up posturing as 'skeptics' and 'great thinkers' because they are able to correctly point out that the spinning earth belief is a government mandated idea.
Despite this, it is simple, and the earth is undoubtedly a 'spinning ball,' yet very few people can prove it. Just like 2+2=4 or the concept that 'money is fake'. Simple ideas are often the hardest to prove. So I would say it is not entirely irrational for people to deny the reality that is in front of them
So I am one of these incels who performs multiple copes, and I've had confrontations with normies and they often assume my copes are my job and that I'm rich and 'making money'.
I'm making no money. It seems like saying money is fake gains some consensus but I wonder how many people have actually internalized the notion and how many instead repeat it without believing it. Because if you say 'money is fake' it almost sounds like trusim as if to say 2+2=4. So you can say it but do you believe it? Maybe normies learn 2+2=4 as a repetition, they go to school and someone enforces the idea that 2+2=4, so for normies it becomes another belief they must accept.
I also talked to flat earthers, they insist on the idea that the school system indoctrinates us to think the earth is a "spinning ball". Which is true, the school system does indeed teach us to think that. So since the belief is not sufficiently supported with evidence or the evidence is not conclusive for a portion of students, the flat earthers end up posturing as 'skeptics' and 'great thinkers' because they are able to correctly point out that the spinning earth belief is a government mandated idea.
Despite this, it is simple, and the earth is undoubtedly a 'spinning ball,' yet very few people can prove it. Just like 2+2=4 or the concept that 'money is fake'. Simple ideas are often the hardest to prove. So I would say it is not entirely irrational for people to deny the reality that is in front of them





