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Msg ID: 2746761 Yes Pizzagate! +6/-5     
Author:Shooting Shark
10/12/2022 9:40:08 AM

You tools can't face it. 

As for your comments below bias a vis being probed by aliens

aliens don't exist. If they do we haven't seen one.

pedophiles do exist. 
They are arrested daily, but not if they are a part of the Washington DC establishment, apparently.

the FBI has documrnted their subversive coded symbolism. 
try hey use aliases too. Just like the communist insurgents did in the 1950s. 

Criminal tradecraft.

So live in your Pollyanna would, wher the chares are "false on their face"

Nothing hould be prima-face evident,

than the fact you are a 

useful idiot. 



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Msg ID: 2746770 Yes Pizzagate! +5/-5     
Author:Old Guy
10/12/2022 10:59:55 AM

Reply to: 2746761

The FBI does not arrest people on the left, they don't even spend any time investigating.  But they will offer you 1 million if you have proven information about Trump.

The DOJ is basically the same, if you are on the left, they don't care how young you like them.

it is amazing how much they have corrupted morals, social standards and legal equality.



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Msg ID: 2746853 There's help for you +6/-3     
Author:bladeslap
10/13/2022 7:49:54 AM

Reply to: 2746761

Speaking of Psychology: Why people believe in conspiracy theories, with Karen Douglas, PhD (apa.org)

Speaking of Psychology: Why people believe in conspiracy theories, with Karen Douglas, PhD

Episode 124 — Why people believe in conspiracy theories, with Karen Douglas, PhD

This past year, COVID-19 and the U.S. elections have provided fertile ground for conspiracy theories—with sometimes disastrous consequences. Karen Douglas, PhD, of the University of Kent in the United Kingdom, discusses psychological research on how conspiracy theories start, why they persist, who is most likely to believe them and whether there is any way to combat them effectively.

About the expert: Karen Douglas, PhD

Karen Douglas, PhDKaren Douglas, PhD, is a professor of social psychology at the University of Kent in the United Kingdom. Her research focus is on beliefs in conspiracy theories and their consequences. She is also interested in the social psychology of human communication, including the influence of technology on social interaction.



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