luka
Well-known member
Poor luka, the thread is doomed
no it's not.
Poor luka, the thread is doomed
I'm not condescending tbc, it's an honest question
wild conspiracy theories I wouldn't bother disputing, what's the point
I'm asking if omnipresent, extremely widely discussed trends in marketing can be considered conspiracies
This was my thought, too. E.g. the UK is already the most CCTV-dense country in the world, bar China, and it's been that way for years. Ditto all the monitoring of internet traffic, email and SMS brought in as part of the War on Terror after 9/11.but does your cousin (or you) really think that wasn't happening before corona, or that it requires corona in some way
alright. well if you or your cousin have answer I'd be curious to hear it.
otherwise I'll leave you to it and wish you good hunting in beholding the pale horse
This was my thought, too. E.g. the UK is already the most CCTV-dense country in the world, bar China, and it's been that way for years. Ditto all the monitoring of internet traffic, email and SMS brought in as part of the War on Terror after 9/11.
Yeah yeah, I know, boring answer/wrong answer. I'll leave you to it.
that's a fair distinction, if not something I'm particularly interested inmarketing trends are of course not conspiratorial, it's the inhuman, invisible force bent on destroying human agency and emotion
Not particularly, no (the sci-fi part, I mean).corona is an obvious cover for the acceleration of these post-9/11 trends though, they can't just announce that meeting and touching other people is illegal can they, and 9/11 is not exactly conspiracy-free itself. i thought you were sci-fi fans @Mr. Tea @padraig (u.s.)
I appreciate that I'm resolutely refusing to get into the spirit of the thread, so I'll take my cue from padraig and leave you to it.
I suppose I'm just naturally not a particularly paranoid person? I guess I'm OK with that, really.