All things are relative.
Back in 1972, when I was about 11 years old and knew nothing about anything, and paid attention to Gilligan’s Island and not much else, I had a teacher who was consumed with hatred for the John Birch Society. She talked about it quite a bit. Never explained it. I had absolutely no idea what she was talking about. But she said it was a dangerous, crazy conspiracy theory that no sensible person paid attention to. And I kept asking myself: Why can’t the professor fix the boat and get those people off the island?
Here we are 50 years later and the advice is: QAnon is a dangerous, crazy conspiracy theory that no sensible person pays attention to — be a smart person and follow JBS instead.
I pass no judgment on anything. I merely point out that you never really know.
I can’t believe he didn’t fix the boat either. : )
The fact that this article was written by someone with the JBS is irrelevant to the accuracy of its criticisms of Q.
I suppose I was in a similar boat.
We were camping one day and a limo drove past our campsite. My dad talked to the driver. He was driving members of the John Birch Society to one of their enclaves. My dad was a libtard and made a big deal about how much he disliked JBS and all that bullshiite. He never could explain why he was a libtard, what his basis reasoning was.
On his deathbed, I asked him: “When I was younger you made a big deal about politics. Now you don’t do that any more, why? “ His answer: “It turns out, it’s not that important.”
Maybe enjoying Gilligan’s Island is more important, but I kinda doubt it. Ecclesiastes holds the clue.
All things are relative.
And, why DIDN’T the Professor fix the boat? Or any of them?