There's a lot of effort going into trying to counter the MSM and get this information out to the public.
I was thinking it would be useful to know which memes, which infographics, what information, inconsistencies etc are most likely to make people who initially thought it was all a bogus made up story from the mind of a crazy person, change their mind and realise that it is really very serious, and very real.
I was thinking of an online survey (totally anonymous obviously) that would ask people when they first found out about this, what made them decide to look into it further, what sources did they go to, what is the social media platform they use the most, when did they first realise it was true and what was the one thing that brought about that realisation etc, whether that be a meme or infographic, blatant MSM cover up etc.
We could just ask people in a post on here, to answer questions in the comments, but an online survey could have more reach and surveys give a kind of boring legitimacy to things, so perhaps seeing a survey about 'when did you realise PG was real?' or something may in itself prompt people to look into it further.
I was thinking the results could then be shared so people could see what are the best areas to focus on so that efforts are directed towards tweaking and sharing memes/info that are most likely to get results. What do you guys think?
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ghost_marauder ago
I've understood that human trafficking has been going on for ~13 years (around when I left highschool). But, my concept of it was more on the micro level. Rouge individuals who would abduct kids, working in solidarity. Or pimps and hookers working a region. It wasn't until I began researching the UN (~2 years ago) that the concept of micro level crimes could be organized into the macro level and not busted if sponsored by the state. But, putting two and two together didn't happen until the podesta emails.