Adrian Sol
Daily Stormer
September 12, 2017
Terrorists are purely motivated by mental illness. And if you reveal otherwise on twitter, you’re probably a racist.
For a long time, the media has had total control over the narrative. It really didn’t matter what the facts were, since very few people experienced events first hand, and the rest of the population got the story from the nightly news and newspapers. This was great for the system, since they had total control over what people knew and felt about the world.
But in the age of social media, everything is filmed and documented online. This means that independent agents can piece together the facts and present a more realistic narrative to the public.
A recent example of this, of course, is the death of Heather Heyer. The media immediately repoorted that she was hit by the car of a White nationalist, and blamed the charlottesville protesters for the incident. However, clever detective work has just revealed that she wasn’t even hit by any car, and died of a heart attack because of her disgusting level of obesity.
The system is panicking at this, fearing that the control of information is slipping away from their grasp.
Pathetically, they’re now pleading with victims of terrorist attacks to avoid spreading information on social media about their experience.
They don’t want footage like this circulating on the internet.
BBC:
NHS staff and terror attack victims and their families have been warned about the risks of using social media in new guidelines issued by NHS England.
The guide cautions that internet trolls may subject victims to “vile and upsetting abuse”, as was seen after the Manchester and London terror attacks.
It also warns people to be wary of journalists seeking accounts of events.
The process of retelling a story can make people “relive the worst parts” of horrific events, it warns.
This is such a transparently ridiculous excuse that it’s actually embarrassing that they’re going ahead with it.
Big Brother is watching you… But only so you don’t feel sad feels.
“Don’t report on terrorism, because it could make you feel bad.”
I think people can decide for themselves if things are going to make them feel bad.
Thankfully, they later explain what the real reason for these “guidelines” actually is.
People may say more than they intend to when “vulnerable, upset or angry”, it adds.
The NHS England guide also issues specific advice to younger people, cautioning: “People will use your information for their own ends and when you’re in the heat of the moment you may say more than you intend or later regret.”
Regarding trolls, it tells teenagers: “They can say things like you’re only doing something for money or to abuse the system and so on.
Ah, so this is what they’re really worried about. That people will “use the information for their own ends.” In other words, the right wing will reveal things to the public that the government would rather remain secret, or at least, low-profile.
Of course, they’re dressing this up as being about “avoiding false rumors” or “protecting people’s feelings,” but the reference to “trolls” indicates that their true fear is related to the spread of narrative-disrupting information.
The Jews and their slug-like servants want a world in which they maintain total control over the flow of information. Social media is driving them nuts. They want people to self-censor themselves to preserve their precious narrative.
Well, too bad, kikes. Try as you might, you’re not shutting down the internet. If you want to take the iPhones away from the normies, you’ll have to pry them from their cold, dead hands.