Viking Supporters Co-operative

Viking Chat => Off Topic => Topic started by: SydneyRover on July 16, 2021, 12:45:34 am

Title: have you been 'red-pilled'?
Post by: SydneyRover on July 16, 2021, 12:45:34 am
''I spend a lot of time on Instagram. Not posting stories, but researching Gen Z online political subcultures. That’s how I first stumbled across a content strategy that I’ve dubbed the “slow red-pill”''

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jul/15/theres-a-new-tactic-for-exposing-you-to-radical-content-online-the-slow-red-pill

Title: Re: have you been 'red-pilled'?
Post by: idler on July 16, 2021, 09:49:51 am
Disturbing and disappointing but unfortunately not surprising.
Title: Re: have you been 'red-pilled'?
Post by: BillyStubbsTears on July 16, 2021, 01:56:19 pm
I saw this happening in real time with an economic and politics blog. When it was founded in the late noughties, it published very well thought out and well balanced critiques of how the system had gone so badly wrong as to result in the GFC and the botched global response to it. It established itself as a go-to place for intelligent criticism of western capitalist economies. Got very big followings.

Then it gradually slid over several years into subtle, then outright Russian Govt propaganda. Lots of articles blowing smoke over any rational discussion of Ukraine, Salisbury, Syria, in fact anything where Russian interests were at stake.

Fascinating to observe. It's a long term game the FSB are playing to f**k with people's heads.
Title: Re: have you been 'red-pilled'?
Post by: SydneyRover on July 20, 2021, 02:57:25 am
I saw your comment referring to the 'lost' government papers later found at a bus stop, which reminded me of this .................

''UK government employees lost their mobile devices - or had them stolen - at least 2,004 times in 12 months.

The numbers, released under a Freedom of Information request, include smartphones, laptops, and tablets''

not all or even many would be top secret but a single one of those would be too many.

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-51572578