DisillusionedCitizen
Member
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2022
- Messages
- 454
Good Afternoon, everyone,
Recently, a few days ago, I've surfed the web and stumbled upon a dishonest, if odd blog story about of several New York Police officers allegedly suffering from, of all things, milk-shake poisoning. Yes, milkshakes being poisoned.
LINK: https://www.patheos.com/blogs/slacktivist/2020/06/23/shake-shack-who/
Despite the blog above supporting the Jewish programs, the story in question gave me some degree of insight on how people fall for the Jews fake sob-stories.
The blogger mentions how the idea of the New York Police (Who see people "rallying around and behind victims") claiming to the public that they were the victims and not the milkshake workers, hoping to steal some sort of "moral authority" from the latter by falsely claiming victimhood." This leads me to wonder if there's some sort of paradox logic surrounding victimhood. in fact, even back at the start of 2021 (I had no idea this place had a forum at the time), I suspected and theorized about this; when people rally behind a victim, not only is the victim protected from any further attacks, but this indirectly "empowers" them in the process. The end result: by claiming victimhood, they gain, power, AND "moral authority" in one move.
"Criticism of police killings and police violence always seems to be unsettling and bewildering for police departments. They don’t quite comprehend what they’re hearing and don’t know how to respond. They seem to dimly grasp that the criticism against them has some strange power — that they people they have harmed and wronged are wielding some kind of incomprehensible moral authority against them. But they’re not quite able to understand what that moral authority means or how it works.
So they try to imitate it, to mimic the form of this thing they recognize is somehow powerful but whose power they are not able to understand. They see the public rallying around and behind their victims so they imagine that claiming such victimhood for themselves will by some mysterious alchemy allow them to wield that same confusing moral authority. So they start telling stories asserting that they are the “real” victims.
These stories are not true, or even plausible. Nor are they even remotely proportional to the lethal, life-destroying true stories of the people they are being criticized for beating, killing, framing, and unjustly ruining the lives of. This is part of what they don’t grasp — that the truth and the actual substance of those stories matters. All they seem to perceive, rather, is that there’s something inscrutably magical about the status of victimhood and they’re desperate to claim that status for themselves."
Looking at these two paragraphs quoted above and given how Jewish New York is now... this "Shake Shack" story is exactly like the way the Jews bring up the Holocaust; the Jews falsely claim victimhood (when Hitler and his Germany actually sued their asses), ignorant bleeding hearts believe the Jews, allowing the Kike bastards can justify any awful, genocidal plan they enact.
Recently, a few days ago, I've surfed the web and stumbled upon a dishonest, if odd blog story about of several New York Police officers allegedly suffering from, of all things, milk-shake poisoning. Yes, milkshakes being poisoned.
LINK: https://www.patheos.com/blogs/slacktivist/2020/06/23/shake-shack-who/
Despite the blog above supporting the Jewish programs, the story in question gave me some degree of insight on how people fall for the Jews fake sob-stories.
The blogger mentions how the idea of the New York Police (Who see people "rallying around and behind victims") claiming to the public that they were the victims and not the milkshake workers, hoping to steal some sort of "moral authority" from the latter by falsely claiming victimhood." This leads me to wonder if there's some sort of paradox logic surrounding victimhood. in fact, even back at the start of 2021 (I had no idea this place had a forum at the time), I suspected and theorized about this; when people rally behind a victim, not only is the victim protected from any further attacks, but this indirectly "empowers" them in the process. The end result: by claiming victimhood, they gain, power, AND "moral authority" in one move.
"Criticism of police killings and police violence always seems to be unsettling and bewildering for police departments. They don’t quite comprehend what they’re hearing and don’t know how to respond. They seem to dimly grasp that the criticism against them has some strange power — that they people they have harmed and wronged are wielding some kind of incomprehensible moral authority against them. But they’re not quite able to understand what that moral authority means or how it works.
So they try to imitate it, to mimic the form of this thing they recognize is somehow powerful but whose power they are not able to understand. They see the public rallying around and behind their victims so they imagine that claiming such victimhood for themselves will by some mysterious alchemy allow them to wield that same confusing moral authority. So they start telling stories asserting that they are the “real” victims.
These stories are not true, or even plausible. Nor are they even remotely proportional to the lethal, life-destroying true stories of the people they are being criticized for beating, killing, framing, and unjustly ruining the lives of. This is part of what they don’t grasp — that the truth and the actual substance of those stories matters. All they seem to perceive, rather, is that there’s something inscrutably magical about the status of victimhood and they’re desperate to claim that status for themselves."
Looking at these two paragraphs quoted above and given how Jewish New York is now... this "Shake Shack" story is exactly like the way the Jews bring up the Holocaust; the Jews falsely claim victimhood (when Hitler and his Germany actually sued their asses), ignorant bleeding hearts believe the Jews, allowing the Kike bastards can justify any awful, genocidal plan they enact.