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One thing I've learned in my brief time here on earth: The majority of people only change when they've felt enough pain.

If you're really smart and/or 'evolved', you'll start noticing other's painful choices and make better choices for yourself.

To your question of "now that we know it was all bullshit, what do?!", there's a lot of things that can be done. The first is to unwind all of the fake phony bullshit that's been stuffed into your head from birth. The next is to figure out as best as you can, what *is* true. The second is to cement in your very being to be comfortable with *uncertainty* (most people are very uncomfortable with uncertainty, which is why they willingly adopt comforting bullshit as truth). This is because there's now a tremendous void where what you used to believe was true simply doesn't exist, and what is true must be discovered. The third is to take the most obvious rational actions based on your new realizations about all of that (seriously, don't overthink it, just take the first, most obvious action, then repeat). Do that enough times and you'll be much better off.

Paraphrasing Mark Passio (a self-reformed Satanist): "There's only one sin in all of physical existence, and that's to willfully turn from the truth and embrace the lie as such."

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Happy Loy Krathong! My laptop is finally fixed and I'm looking forward to round 3 or 4 or whatever I'm up to. In my experience young children never listen to a warning, because it is abstract, unless they have already experienced some hopefully lesser hurt. Perhaps an experience too close to a campfire gave them an unpleasant warning about hot stoves or some experience of falling made them careful about the stairs. With the Covid jabs it was so abstract and externalized that you are absolutely correct: the most common response by far to these unholy things which I seemed to encounter was indeed the "What's the big deal? I got it and I'm fine" statement. That still is the case I've had several people who do the whole "why can't your husband just get the jabs?" Thing. People don't care much until it affects them

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Dec 9, 2023Liked by Nicholas Creed

Yes, people don’t care much until it affects them, but they have to become aware of what and how they were affected.

My sister-in-law seems to have had an adverse reaction to the vaccine, but she has never acknowledged it. Even though she is affected, she will not recognize what and how she was affected. So no change at all in the way she thinks or sees all this.

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I am sorry to hear about your sister-in-law's adverse reaction. I have noticed similarly with those close to me that they are less likely to connect dots when the likely side effects concern only themselves personally; cognitive dissonance seems to prevail. The triggers for changing their perspective seems to come from observable reality of others around them getting repeatedly sick, as well as the increasing number of strawman arguments in the MSM providing cover for the democide - leading to more people questioning things they used to go along with.

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Sadly, it was the Warning-Action dynamic that was used by the powers that be and it worked well. Why? Because most of the non-thinking people of western countries had already given up their own self-authority to those powers... government, medicine, academia, the media etc.

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Bonhoeffer himself exists under the shadow of deception, more fiction than flesh.

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