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Is 'climate change' a vast conspiracy to cover the government's hurricane program?

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by KingCheetah, Oct 10, 2024.

  1. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Atomic Playboy
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    Everytime an unnaturally powerful hurricane pops up out of nowhere government officials/ scientists immediately deflect to climate change as the cause. Was 'climate change' created so the outbreak of massive man-made hurricanes wouldn't receive close scrutiny and be exposed?
     
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  2. CCorn

    CCorn Member

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    The Jews are turning the sky gay.

     
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  3. AroundTheWorld

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    No, but it's an excuse to promote leftist-authoritarian utopias. The climate always changes. There is some evidence that human activity has an impact on that. But interested parties then use that to advance socialist ideas which have nothing to do with "climate change".

    Also, some of the most prominent figures of the "climate change" movement are actually basically disgusting Jew-hating creatures, like Greta Thunberg.
     
  4. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Atomic Playboy
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    That's not something mother nature could create.
     
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  5. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Member

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    I disabled embeds and expected a triple rainbow.

    Is that purple rain?
     
  6. Xerobull

    Xerobull ...and I'm all out of bubblegum
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    I guess this is as good a time as any to share a previous synopsis of my dissertation:

    Rap Rock: The Real Chinese Infiltration We Never Saw Coming


    It’s time to face the truth, friends. While we were moshing to the heaviest beats of Korn, Limp Bizkit, and Papa Roach, China was quietly planting the seeds of ideological revolution through rap rock. In every riff, every scream, and every rap, there were subtle messages designed to undermine Western individualism and promote collective values. Strap in as we break down the lyrical evidence.

    Limp Bizkit – The Red Cap Revolutionaries

    Limp Bizkit didn’t just wear red caps for fashion; they were waving a crimson flag of collectivist ideals. Take their track "My Way", a seemingly angry song about defiance. But look closer, and you'll see it's not about personal empowerment—it's about conformity.

    "My way or the highway!"

    What appears to be a classic "take control of your life" message is actually a call for total allegiance to a collective ideal. Durst is urging the masses to fall in line, or face the harsh consequences of isolation. China has long known that the road to success is the collective highway, not individual pathways.

    And in "Rollin'":

    "Keep rollin', rollin', rollin', rollin' (What?)"

    Fred Durst wasn’t hyping us up to keep moving forward—he was telling us to "keep rolling" with the tide of collectivism. No time for individual complaints, just keep moving with the group. It's classic mass-mobilization rhetoric. Think about it: can a single person roll? No! Rolling requires multiple points of contact, i.e., the people working together as one.

    Korn – Seeds of Discontent from the East?

    Jonathan Davis may have seemed like an angsty voice for bullied teens, but his lyrics in "Freak on a Leash" are nothing short of a Marxist critique wrapped in an alt-metal shell.

    "Something takes a part of me, something lost and never seen."

    What’s been taken? Individualism, of course. The "something lost" is Western culture, slipping away as collectivism slowly creeps into the mainstream. The “freak on a leash” represents the American worker, bound by corporate greed, while China looks on, preparing to offer a better way—one free of the leash of capitalist oppression.

    And if that wasn’t enough, listen to "Blind":

    "Are you ready?"

    Davis doesn’t ask; he commands. It’s not just a concert hype chant—it’s a question to all of us: are you ready for a global shift in power? Are you prepared to embrace the new world order where the many triumph over the few?

    Papa Roach – The Maoist Manifesto in "Last Resort"

    "Cut my life into pieces, this is my last resort!"

    Ah, Papa Roach's "Last Resort"—the soundtrack to many an existential crisis. But beneath the surface, this isn’t just about suicidal desperation. No, this song is about the collective rebellion against capitalism, where the individual realizes they have no recourse but to seek out alternatives.

    The line:

    "Suffocation, no breathing, don't give a f** if I cut my arm bleeding"*

    This isn’t just teenage melodrama—it’s an anthem for sacrifice. "Suffocation" represents the crushing weight of capitalism, and the cutting is symbolic of the individualist’s futile fight against the inevitable collective wave. The only solution? Cut yourself off from the suffocating grip of capitalist society. It's straight out of the revolutionary handbook, with a breakdown as cathartic as the fall of the bourgeoisie.

    Linkin Park – The Maoists of Nu-Metal

    Linkin Park might seem like a more introspective band, but their lyrics are laced with subversive collectivist messages, especially in songs like "Crawling."

    "Crawling in my skin, these wounds they will not heal."

    This is no simple mental health metaphor. The "wounds" are symbolic of the gaping holes in Western society, wounds that cannot heal as long as the individual reigns supreme. The only cure? Collective effort, a unity that can soothe the wounds of a fractured society. China knows this well.

    "Somewhere I Belong" might seem like a relatable song about alienation, but in reality, it’s about the longing for a harmonious society—one that could only be achieved under collectivism.

    "I wanna heal, I wanna feel what I thought was never real."

    In other words, he wants to heal from the lie of individual achievement and feel the warmth of collective success. “Somewhere I belong” is clearly a place where unity and collective good rule.

    Rage Against the Machine – More Than Just Rage

    It’s impossible to ignore Rage Against the Machine when discussing covert propaganda. They’re literally raging against the very machine that China opposes: capitalism and Western imperialism. Take "Killing in the Name":

    "Some of those that work forces are the same that burn crosses."

    Zack de la Rocha isn’t just talking about the U.S. government or institutional racism; he’s exposing the rot at the core of Western power structures. And the answer to this corruption? An alternative. A collective revolution. His searing cries are essentially a call to dismantle individualist systems in favor of mass mobilization.

    In "Guerrilla Radio," the words:

    "It has to start somewhere, it has to start sometime. What better place than here, what better time than now?"

    This is not merely a plea for resistance; it’s an invitation to global revolution. The choice of "guerrilla" tactics mirrors the Chinese strategy during the Cultural Revolution, where grassroots movements were used to dismantle old ways of thinking.

    Linkin Park's "Faint" – A Call to Collective Obedience

    "I can't feel the way I did before, don't turn your back on me, I won't be ignored."

    This isn’t just about a relationship; it’s about the collective crying out to be heard. The "I" represents the collective masses, disillusioned with the lies of capitalist democracy, demanding attention. They won’t be ignored, and they won't stop until the collective is recognized as the true force for change.

    P.O.D. – Is "Youth of the Nation" Actually a Pro-Collective Anthem?

    Finally, we arrive at P.O.D., who, in "Youth of the Nation," seem to be singing about school shootings and teenage despair. But the underlying message is a subtle cry for a better societal structure.

    "We are, we are, the youth of the nation!"

    This isn't just a teenage rallying cry. It's a declaration that the youth—united as one, under a collective vision—are the true leaders of tomorrow. "Nation" is not a reference to any Western country, but a utopian vision of a united collective society. A generation united, with the power to overthrow individualist systems? That’s propaganda gold.


    Conclusion: The Hidden Agenda Unmasked

    It’s all there if you know where to look. Rap rock was never just music; it was the perfect tool to slip collectivist values into the heads of angry, disillusioned teenagers, all while China quietly chuckled in the background. The lyrics were designed to erode faith in Western individualism, promoting unity and obedience to a collective cause. So the next time you're headbanging to Korn or screaming along to Linkin Park, remember: you’re not just jamming out. You’re being recruited.
     
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  7. mtbrays

    mtbrays Member
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    Birthing-parent nature*
     
  8. JuanValdez

    JuanValdez Member

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    The government is causing powerful and uncontrolled hurricanes by creating a regulatory environment that does not put a price on carbon.
     
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  9. Scarface281

    Scarface281 Member

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    Greta is herself a Jew lol
     
  10. AroundTheWorld

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    nah
     
  11. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Member
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    Nice honeypot Cheetah.
     
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  12. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Atomic Playboy
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  13. AroundTheWorld

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  14. Ottomaton

    Ottomaton Member
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  15. DaDakota

    DaDakota Balance wins
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    So, all these redneck diesel truck idiots are driving around saying **** YOU EARTH......and this is what happens when the EARTH says...nope, **** you!

    DD
     
  16. AroundTheWorld

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  17. Ottomaton

    Ottomaton Member
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    They power their hurricaine machine with the explosive power of Nitrogen Triiodide. The sky is the smoking gun. Also, aliens.

     
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  18. ThatBoyNick

    ThatBoyNick Member

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  19. droxford

    droxford Member

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  20. B-Bob

    B-Bob "94-year-old self-described dreamer"
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    Interesting. Every time I hear someone be skeptical about government controlled weather, I ask if they've seen the X-Men.
    If one single human can evolve to control local weather, think about what a whole deep state could do to make a hurricane (or himicane, like Milton or Norv or whatever).
     

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