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[–]MarquisBoniface[S] 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Case in point to how serious this issue is, I made a post at Tuckercarlson-dot-win only to get (predictably) targeted by the "totally not a psyop shill"

UFOS are the one thing Tucker is right about. There used to be a ufo outside one of the Essene camps in Israel.

If we used the UFO flying technology it'd solve our energy crisis. They use more of a vibrational technology that was present on Atlantis before it sunk. See the newest posts by Allan Cronshaw on facebook discussing it.

TL:DR: If UFO's/Aliens were real and they were actually discovered by parts of the government, and those Aliens wanted to remain hidden, all talk of them would just be deplatformed and silenced quite easily

If the Aliens were too stupid to figure out how to do that (and the government also didn't make efforts to do that), then they'd be too stupid/useless to be a serious threat

Also, "Big foot" and similar trash operates the same way

See (former airforce/intel vet, nevertrumper activist) Denver Riggleman and his "bigfoot studies", while he denounces "false flag conspiracy theories" and what not

They claim he was just "studying fringe groups" like Bigfoot believers, which seems as silly as believing the airforce infowarfare groups were "just studying" UFO groups

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/denver-riggleman-bigfoot-qanon/2020/11/26/d8de7274-2dbf-11eb-bae0-50bb17126614_story.html

https://archive.is/FDWHA

What hunting Bigfoot taught a Republican congressman about politics

November 26, 2020 at 5:20 p.m. UTC

AFTON, Va. — There was a time in Denver Riggleman's life when he sat on the banks of a creek that reeked of dead fish and peered through night-vision goggles into the thick of the Olympic National Forest.

He was looking for Bigfoot.

Or at least, others in his group were. Riggleman, a nonbeliever who was then a National Security Agency defense contractor, had come along for the ride, paying thousands in 2004 to indulge a lifelong fascination: Why do people — what kind of people — believe in Bigfoot?

He was likely experimenting to see what kinds of people were vulnerable to believing in forged narratives and wild goose chases, and how to create even more alluring evidence to entrap potential dissident (bored/psychotic) civilians

Now in one of his last acts as a Republican congressman from Virginia, Riggleman is asking the same questions of QAnon supporters and President-elect Joe Biden deniers. Months after his ouster by Rep.-elect Bob Good (R) in a contentious GOP convention, Riggleman has become one of the loudest voices in Congress warning of the infiltration of conspiracy theories into political discourse.