Where are my conspiracy theory incels?
- Darth_aurelius
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KingDavid wrote: 27 Oct 2025, 20:09 Who else on this website listens to and reads conspiracy theories? I know I can’t be the only one.
My once and former self subscribed to certain types of conspiratorial thinking but I have since disabused myself of almost all such notions. I think that my education and training as a lawyer forced me to emphasize the importance of an empirical process of discerning factual veracity and challenging underlying assumptions on the basis of their objective merits. Most conspiracy theories would not and cannot survive the sort of scrutiny which any lawyer is trained to apply. I have the same disposition towards supernatural phenomena which I once partially subscribed to but have since convinced myself of its absolute and utter falsity. All this notwithstanding, I respect the opinions of my brothers in Mujahedeen and Revolutionary Incel arms in the IPF wherever their particular convictions may lead them.
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Lawyers have to prove shit beyond a 99.9% reasonable doubt in criminal court and I believe beyond a 50% reasonable doubt in civil court.Darth_aurelius wrote: 27 Oct 2025, 20:17KingDavid wrote: 27 Oct 2025, 20:09 Who else on this website listens to and reads conspiracy theories? I know I can’t be the only one.
My once and former self subscribed to certain types of conspiratorial thinking but I have since disabused myself of almost all such notions. I think that my education and training as a lawyer forced me to emphasize the importance of an empirical process of discerning factual veracity and challenging underlying assumptions on the basis of their objective merits. Most conspiracy theories would not and cannot survive the sort of scrutiny which any lawyer is trained to apply. I have the same disposition towards supernatural phenomena which I once partially subscribed to but have since convinced myself of its absolute and utter falsity. All this notwithstanding, I respect the opinions of my brothers in Mujahedeen and Revolutionary Incel arms in the IPF wherever their particular convictions may lead them.
I can murder somebody, but if the state doesn’t have enough evidence to prove I murdered somebody, then I’m innocent in the eyes of the law.
As Dan Peña says: “Absence of evidence does not equal evidence of absence.”
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KingDavid wrote: 27 Oct 2025, 20:25Lawyers have to prove shit beyond a 99.9% reasonable doubt in criminal court and I believe beyond a 50% reasonable doubt in civil court.Darth_aurelius wrote: 27 Oct 2025, 20:17KingDavid wrote: 27 Oct 2025, 20:09 Who else on this website listens to and reads conspiracy theories? I know I can’t be the only one.
My once and former self subscribed to certain types of conspiratorial thinking but I have since disabused myself of almost all such notions. I think that my education and training as a lawyer forced me to emphasize the importance of an empirical process of discerning factual veracity and challenging underlying assumptions on the basis of their objective merits. Most conspiracy theories would not and cannot survive the sort of scrutiny which any lawyer is trained to apply. I have the same disposition towards supernatural phenomena which I once partially subscribed to but have since convinced myself of its absolute and utter falsity. All this notwithstanding, I respect the opinions of my brothers in Mujahedeen and Revolutionary Incel arms in the IPF wherever their particular convictions may lead them.
I can murder somebody, but if the state doesn’t have enough evidence to prove I murdered somebody, then I’m innocent in the eyes of the law.
As Dan Peña says: “Absence of evidence does not equal evidence of absence.”
Yes and I used to use that quote myself when I was a devout Catholic and arguing against atheists but it says nothing about the probability of some underlying assumptions being true. When we deal with facts that can be confirmed through scientific methods or other forms of verification then we can assign a degree of certitude to whatever it is they substantiate. The problem I have with conspiracy theories is that the tend to be predicated on the same forms of what I would deem to be spurious reasoning as are theories about ghosts, poltergeists and other supernatural phenomena. Also, too many people whom I have encountered who embrace conspiratorial thinking tend to be unduly credulous and insufficiently rigorous in their critical assessment of information.
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Sustacel250
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Me. Im into conspiracies of all types.
I like them because I found them fun, or Im always on the search for some new insane one. For me is a practice in the middle of infotainment and things I take seriously. Usually I dont believe any of them. Except in 2 instances for example 911 I would say I took the side of the conspiracy scene even if at the end I didnt really determine "what truly happened", for me it was simply important to take the side of the conspiracy community in that moment. And secondly with convid and the clotshot where I decided to implement my plan to disappear from society so I survived of canned food for 3 years and I didnt get any clotshot. Obviously in this second instance I acted like grug meme with my instincts and what my intuition told me was to move away and dont talk to anyone for 3 years.
About the other conspiracies, I tend to take more nuanced approaches, I consider the info but rarely I do something about it, as I said is more like infotainment.
I like them because I found them fun, or Im always on the search for some new insane one. For me is a practice in the middle of infotainment and things I take seriously. Usually I dont believe any of them. Except in 2 instances for example 911 I would say I took the side of the conspiracy scene even if at the end I didnt really determine "what truly happened", for me it was simply important to take the side of the conspiracy community in that moment. And secondly with convid and the clotshot where I decided to implement my plan to disappear from society so I survived of canned food for 3 years and I didnt get any clotshot. Obviously in this second instance I acted like grug meme with my instincts and what my intuition told me was to move away and dont talk to anyone for 3 years.
About the other conspiracies, I tend to take more nuanced approaches, I consider the info but rarely I do something about it, as I said is more like infotainment.
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I like how this site actually has free speech and I can post conspiracy theories or shit that’s not politically correct and I don’t have to worry about getting banned or my posts deleted.Sustacel250 wrote: 30 Oct 2025, 08:44 Me. Im into conspiracies of all types.
I like them because I found them fun, or Im always on the search for some new insane one. For me is a practice in the middle of infotainment and things I take seriously. Usually I dont believe any of them. Except in 2 instances for example 911 I would say I took the side of the conspiracy scene even if at the end I didnt really determine "what truly happened", for me it was simply important to take the side of the conspiracy community in that moment. And secondly with convid and the clotshot where I decided to implement my plan to disappear from society so I survived of canned food for 3 years and I didnt get any clotshot. Obviously in this second instance I acted like grug meme with my instincts and what my intuition told me was to move away and dont talk to anyone for 3 years.
About the other conspiracies, I tend to take more nuanced approaches, I consider the info but rarely I do something about it, as I said is more like infotainment.
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Sustacel250
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I love crazy conspiracies, the crazier the better. I am also a fan of these people who go as far as to deny reality. I always had a soft spot for schizomaxers.KingDavid wrote: 02 Nov 2025, 09:51
I like how this site actually has free speech and I can post conspiracy theories or shit that’s not politically correct and I don’t have to worry about getting banned or my posts deleted.
- Darth_aurelius
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KingDavid wrote: 02 Nov 2025, 09:51I like how this site actually has free speech and I can post conspiracy theories or shit that’s not politically correct and I don’t have to worry about getting banned or my posts deleted.Sustacel250 wrote: 30 Oct 2025, 08:44 Me. Im into conspiracies of all types.
I like them because I found them fun, or Im always on the search for some new insane one. For me is a practice in the middle of infotainment and things I take seriously. Usually I dont believe any of them. Except in 2 instances for example 911 I would say I took the side of the conspiracy scene even if at the end I didnt really determine "what truly happened", for me it was simply important to take the side of the conspiracy community in that moment. And secondly with convid and the clotshot where I decided to implement my plan to disappear from society so I survived of canned food for 3 years and I didnt get any clotshot. Obviously in this second instance I acted like grug meme with my instincts and what my intuition told me was to move away and dont talk to anyone for 3 years.
About the other conspiracies, I tend to take more nuanced approaches, I consider the info but rarely I do something about it, as I said is more like infotainment.
Excellent observation comrade and our commitment to unrestricted free speech is one of the many qualities that distinguishes us from every other forum in the incelosphere, most of which are ruled by tyrannical, brutish, simp nigger ignoramuses who routinely censor and ban anything or anyone who happens to offend their servile negro and/or simp sensibilities. In contrast to such arbitrary and capricious injustice, we are governed by men of great intellectual prowess (I myself am a constitutional law professor at a university), honorable Islamic countenance and sincere revolutionary convictions.
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Something is fishy. About Matthew Livelsbergeri Tesla fire Cybertruck. What are the the spooks hiding ?
'' The mystery surrounding the motive for the Tesla Cybertruck attack outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas on New Year’s Day only deepened after the final investigative report from local police provided few new details.
The 78-page "after-action" report released Monday by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD), confirmed that Matthew
Livelsberger, who died by suicide before the explosion, left a manifesto on his phone, which investigators recovered during forensic analysis.
The Department of War declared the manifesto classified, and the investigation was turned over to the federal government, the report said.
The report confirms that the Green Beret was on leave from his Special Forces unit and had rented a Tesla Cybertruck through the car-sharing platform Turo.
He filled it with fireworks, gas cans and camping fuel, and drove it to the Trump International Hotel just after 8:40 a.m. on Jan. 1, 2025. There, the vehicle detonaLVMPD and federal investigators described the incident as a premeditated vehicle-borne improvised explosive device (VBIED) attack "with the potential to cause mass casualties and extensive structural damage" but did not call it terrorism.ted, causing damage and injuring six people.
Surveillance video showed Livelsberger pouring accelerant into the truck bed moments before detonation, an act LVMPD said reflected planning rather than impulse.
Counterterrorism investigators concluded he sought to make "a very big, very public statement," suggesting the Las Vegas location was chosen for visibility and impact.
He also left behind a note claiming the attack was not terror-related, but a way for the soldier to "cleanse" his mind but criticized the "feckless leadership" of a U.S. that is "near collapse," officials said.
"This was not a terrorist attack, it was a wake-up call," Livelsberger wrote in the notes app on his phone.
"Americans only pay attention to spectacles and violence. What better way to get my point across than a stunt with fireworks and explosives," Livelsberger wrote.
One of his messages was said to have gone to Shawn Ryan, an ex-Navy SEAL and CIA contractor. ''
'' The mystery surrounding the motive for the Tesla Cybertruck attack outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas on New Year’s Day only deepened after the final investigative report from local police provided few new details.
The 78-page "after-action" report released Monday by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD), confirmed that Matthew
Livelsberger, who died by suicide before the explosion, left a manifesto on his phone, which investigators recovered during forensic analysis.
The Department of War declared the manifesto classified, and the investigation was turned over to the federal government, the report said.
The report confirms that the Green Beret was on leave from his Special Forces unit and had rented a Tesla Cybertruck through the car-sharing platform Turo.
He filled it with fireworks, gas cans and camping fuel, and drove it to the Trump International Hotel just after 8:40 a.m. on Jan. 1, 2025. There, the vehicle detonaLVMPD and federal investigators described the incident as a premeditated vehicle-borne improvised explosive device (VBIED) attack "with the potential to cause mass casualties and extensive structural damage" but did not call it terrorism.ted, causing damage and injuring six people.
Surveillance video showed Livelsberger pouring accelerant into the truck bed moments before detonation, an act LVMPD said reflected planning rather than impulse.
Counterterrorism investigators concluded he sought to make "a very big, very public statement," suggesting the Las Vegas location was chosen for visibility and impact.
He also left behind a note claiming the attack was not terror-related, but a way for the soldier to "cleanse" his mind but criticized the "feckless leadership" of a U.S. that is "near collapse," officials said.
"This was not a terrorist attack, it was a wake-up call," Livelsberger wrote in the notes app on his phone.
"Americans only pay attention to spectacles and violence. What better way to get my point across than a stunt with fireworks and explosives," Livelsberger wrote.
One of his messages was said to have gone to Shawn Ryan, an ex-Navy SEAL and CIA contractor. ''
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