Whatever it is that outrages you, that you think can't be surpressed, it can and will. Whatever you think is "too far", that will lead to a backlash, it won't.
Let me explain. It's called the memoryhole not because people forget.
It doesn't cause people to forget.
It causes people to not care, or at least become passive.
It mutes public outrage through a very specific process:
1. Paradoxically ramp up sustained attention and outrage. We saw this WHILE the covid lockdowns were occurring. We see this with every outrage and every scandal.
2. Deny Deny Deny till they're blue in the face. Go so far as to demonize anyone who doesn't believe the lie. Deny till they're calling people outright terrorists. We have also seen this for every major crisis.
3. When the public discourse is at a fever pitch, back off with a brief (one-two weeks, or even a couple months) distraction
4. Admit the quiet part outloud later on, with a steady drumbeat of leaks and admissions (not decreasing or increasing in frequency, just noticeable in just how steady they seem to be, like a drip-drip-drip IV of information)
5. For some psychological reason, the nothing, such a punishment against officials, happens after the fact--no public outrage or significant backlash occurs.
Thats the memoryhole. People become non-reactive to outrages through this exact series of steps.
This is the process that needs to be disrupted, destabilized, and destroyed. Figure this out and the WEF's 24/7 propaganda is completely neutralized. The DC regime's media narratives will be dead in the water.
Thats what we have to do, that what must be done: figure out how to neutralize the memoryhole.
After that they have no ability to control public outrage or stop it.
prototype 0 points 2.4 years ago
I've heard rumors that microsoft can remotely search every machine and delete files by filename and hash.
If microsoft is doing it, and the system is promoting linux, then linux is probably capable too.
This is why I back up everything to hard copy. Everything and anything thats worth sharing in the future.