
Yeah, and if you cite Infowars, Der Stürmer, or The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, I'll reject those too.
Alex Jones is an entertaining fucker. I enjoy his loud, boistrous style. Doesn't mean I believe him.
It also makes more sense that the Washington Metro police asked the FBI to help with an unsolved murder so that the situation had changed since 2018. It makes even better sense that before publishing allegations of a cover-up, a competent news organization would have contacted the Washington Metro police and asked them about it.Cunt wrote: ↑Thu Dec 17, 2020 6:56 pmIf you don't know about the kerning/corney thing, you can't even understand the excuse I offered the FBI (which could mean they were 'set up')
It could indeed be total bullshit, but it makes a lot more sense that there was a coverup, as opposed to the official story of his death.
Either way, Gateway Pundit's hasn't done the due diligence a competent reporter takes for granted. That's not surprising since it grew from a blog.
Have you demonstrated its relevance to anything?Cunt wrote: ↑Thu Dec 17, 2020 7:37 pmDid you understand the kerning thing? Or is the information tainted for you because it originated in a q post?
No, but q did.
You mean like that op-ed you wouldn't read because it was in the Guardian?
I can't.
Far more significant is an unheralded change. The Corney/Comey strangeness has largely been fixed. With the new, revised version, my computer now only recognizes two “Corney”s as “Comey”s, and nearly 20 “Comey”s are properly identified by the key-word search function. And yet, though clearly some sort of change has been made affecting word searches, the Corney/Comey conundrum goes entirely without mention in the listing of changes and revisions to the document. RealClearInvestigations contacted Horowitz’s office to ask about the revisions, but were told that anyone who could speak to the issue was out of the office for the holiday week.
The revision has replaced the original report at the OIG website, and with it has gone easy access to the document at the center of the strangeness. But just because there isn’t easy access doesn’t mean there isn’t access. It turns out the Comey/Corney effect resisted eradication. Each inspector general has his or her own website. It was at the Department of Justice OIG site that the Horowitz report was posted with much fanfare on Dec. 9. It was at that same website that -- with rather less fanfare; indeed with no hoopla at all – that the original report was quietly replaced with the revised version.
Well, the source doesn't really matter because the article shows it's work. I can see u/Lumyai's reasoning and decide if I think it's plausible. One thing he or she didn't seem to account for is that unlike most of the words with an "m" in them, Comey is a proper name and might have been handled differently. I don't know this, but if I really wanted to find out I could.Cunt wrote: ↑Thu Dec 17, 2020 11:56 pmI can't.
I know what happened, and the facts around it (even if it didn't happen) are real enough. I don't know where to get the relevant q post, and don't like surfing those sites where he is posted. (I'm more of a lurker)
What kerning is?
It's the space between letters in displayed text.
In a gov't document, in which Comey as mentioned several times, a search yielded no results (like a ctrl-f). Closer inspection showed that what looked like 'Comey' was showing in results as 'Corney', with the space between the r and n reduced to cause it to look different.
I may not be explaining it well...here is a ...(caution, I found an article about it, seems reasonable enough, but I am unfamiliar with this source)Far more significant is an unheralded change. The Corney/Comey strangeness has largely been fixed. With the new, revised version, my computer now only recognizes two “Corney”s as “Comey”s, and nearly 20 “Comey”s are properly identified by the key-word search function. And yet, though clearly some sort of change has been made affecting word searches, the Corney/Comey conundrum goes entirely without mention in the listing of changes and revisions to the document. RealClearInvestigations contacted Horowitz’s office to ask about the revisions, but were told that anyone who could speak to the issue was out of the office for the holiday week.
The revision has replaced the original report at the OIG website, and with it has gone easy access to the document at the center of the strangeness. But just because there isn’t easy access doesn’t mean there isn’t access. It turns out the Comey/Corney effect resisted eradication. Each inspector general has his or her own website. It was at the Department of Justice OIG site that the Horowitz report was posted with much fanfare on Dec. 9. It was at that same website that -- with rather less fanfare; indeed with no hoopla at all – that the original report was quietly replaced with the revised version.
That is maybe a plausable innocent reason for it. My point though, was that just because the FBI didn't find anything, then did (wrt Seth Rich) doesn't indicate they were 'the fuckers'.
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