Now is the perfect time to flood the net with this. Make Podesta choke, as soon as he dares to open his demon mouth. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=nDWY6hA1-ME
Spread this video to kingdom come. Tweet it directly to Rolling Stone, and ask them to comment on these bands. Push it NOW!
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VoaterFrog ago
The article makes it sounds like Podesta and Alefantis are the victims.
The article mentions hacked emails that started the conspiracy theory... but not a word as to what was actually in the emails.
The article conveniently ignores other bombshell evidences like the Instagram photos or the bizarre bands that play at Comet.
What an amazing piece of propaganda.
Are_we__sure ago
There's nothing in the emails that implicated Podesta. Everything that PG claims about the emails was made up or read in an austitic manner to change it's meaning. There no code in the podesta emails. But the entire pizzagate narrative rests on claims a code was discovered. It wasn't. It was completely made up and didn't even make sense when substituted back into the emails.
There's no bombshell evidence at all
septimasexta ago
"read in an austitic manner to change it's meaning." THIS IS HATE SPEECH! What do you know about autism. PREJUDICED PIG! You probably support USING TRANSGENDER DRUGS ON THESE CHILDREN, JUST LIKE THEY DO IN THE UK. You are VOMIT.
Are_we__sure ago
I know a reasonable amount about autism. I worked for many years very closely with a math expert who had Asperger's. It's very well known that autistic people tend to take things literally and he certainly had that issue.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-gift-aging/201304/people-autism-spectrum-disorder-take-things-literally
I was particular thinking of the email where Tony Podesta is asked if can meet for dinner and he replies with something like "No. Still in the torture chamber." It's an obvious metaphor about being stuck at work doing something he doesn't want to do, but people are claiming it could only mean one thing, that he was literally in a chamber torturing people. There's a example after example of this in the Pizzagate record.
Hate-speech? Are you trolling me or are you autistic?
And of course, this is not hate speech. I don't hate autistic people Saying autistic people often miss the meaning of language is not more hateful than not hiring a color-blind person as your graphic designer.
septimasexta ago
"I worked for many years very closely with a math expert who had Asperger's" So you know for a fact he had this medical diagnosis? How? Also ASPERGER'S is a small sector under the autism spectrum. THERE ARE HUGE VARIATIONS IN BEHAVIOR. "read in an autistic manner" only makes sense if used to RIDICULE. You are VOMIT. MAKING FUN OF VACCINE INJURED CHILDREN! A NAZI!
Also, YOU MIGHT NOT WANT TO USE ASSBURGER'S NAME ANY MORE.......
"Problematic history of Hans Asperger
Asperger syndrome shares its name with Hans Asperger, a prominent figure in the early research into autism who worked as a paediatrician in Austria in the 20th century, including during the time of the Nazis. An eight-year study into his relationship with the Nazi regime was published in 2018, concluding that he assisted in their euthanasia programme.
This provoked a big debate among autistic people and their family members, particularly those who identify with the term ‘Asperger’. We are listening closely to the response to this news so we can continue to make sure the language we use to describe autism reflects the preferences of autistic people and their families. " https://www.autism.org.uk/about/what-is/asperger.aspx
Are_we__sure ago
Because I worked closely with a guy for 8 years. I helped him find a Ms. PacMan arcade console when he didn't like the emulator I installed on his PC even when it had an old school joystick. Because I used to give him a hand signal when we in a group and I was joking about something, so he would understand I was joking.
Gee, it almost sounds like something I quoted.
Yeah, pretty much exactly like the expert I quoted.
And I said "I know a reasonable amount." I never claimed to be an expert.
No it doesn't. This is false. It makes perfectly plain sense as it is. Or as the article I quoted points out People with Autism Spectrum Disorder Take Things Literally and they have trouble understand colloquialisms and figurative language. And this trouble leads them to miss meanings by taking things too literally.
The guy I quoted is the author of the book, An Asperger Dictionary of Everyday Expressions, a book that would not need to exist if what I said didn't make sense.
Wow. First you claim I hate the autistic and then you call me a NAZI and claim I'm making fun of children? You're feeling your oats, aren't you? So the guy concerned with nuance and the validity of evidence and standing against the mob mentality of witch hunt is a NAZI? Yeah, that sounds exactly like the Nazis. Kristallnacht was all about propert textual analysis and nuance wasn't it?
And you're Vaxxer. Of course. You're so concerning about children you want them to get diseases like measles that could send them to the hospital or even kill them. Okeydoke.
septimasexta ago
"Hans Asperger, National Socialism, and “race hygiene” in Nazi-era Vienna"
"Asperger managed to accommodate himself to the Nazi regime and was rewarded for his affirmations of loyalty with career opportunities. He joined several organizations affiliated with the NSDAP (although not the Nazi party itself), publicly legitimized race hygiene policies including forced sterilizations and, on several occasions, actively cooperated with the child ‘euthanasia’ program. The language he employed to diagnose his patients was often remarkably harsh (even in comparison with assessments written by the staff at Vienna’s notorious Spiegelgrund ‘euthanasia’ institution), belying the notion that he tried to protect the children under his care by embellishing their diagnoses.
Conclusion
The narrative of Asperger as a principled opponent of National Socialism and a courageous defender of his patients against Nazi ‘euthanasia’ and other race hygiene measures does not hold up in the face of the historical evidence. What emerges is a much more problematic role played by this pioneer of autism research. Future use of the eponym should reflect the troubling context of its origins in Nazi-era Vienna." https://molecularautism.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13229-018-0208-6