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Deprogramming January 6th: A Conversation Guide Here’s a guide to deprogram friends on the “insurrection” narrative Scott Adams

29,274 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

11 Comments

jay plemons's profile picture
jay plemons1 year ago

1/ Start easy: Ask if they know the Food Pyramid was flawed despite decades of trust. Then try the Fine People Hoax (Trump misquoted on Charlottesville). @AmericanDebunk

jay plemons's profile picture
jay plemons1 year ago

2/ Bad Arguments to Avoid • It wasn’t dangerous (people got hurt) • Feds were behind it (unproven) • Election was stolen (no accepted proof)

jay plemons's profile picture
jay plemons1 year ago

3/ Good Argument It’s about what nonviolent protesters believed: the election seemed off (e.g., bellwether counties flipped). They wanted to save the Republic, not disrupt it.

jay plemons's profile picture
jay plemons1 year ago

If this guide helps, repost to deprogram others:

salil mehta's profile picture
salil mehta1 year ago

reminder e-version of copula narratives is released tomorrow! already a top 30 book in categories. incl top 3 release: probability & statistics, free will & determination, and portfolio management. note my two other books are on sale, this week only

Mike Dobridge's profile picture
Mike Dobridge1 year ago

@ScottAdamsSays When it comes to J6, to ask some questions, like who ordered the police to open the doors on the other side of the Capitol and why was Ray Epps given a light punishment despite what the video showed he was doing. My argument is based on questions.

Angel Angle's profile picture
Angel Angle1 year ago

@ScottAdamsSays The bottom line is that they wouldnt have shown up unarmed if insurrection was the intent.

eaglenine33's profile picture
eaglenine331 year ago

@ScottAdamsSays How about these 20 million extra votes that broke pattern? Video of Feds dressed in Maga gear inside the Capital building beforehand talking strategy?

PartyofOne's profile picture
PartyofOne1 year ago

@ScottAdamsSays The protesters were there to demand Congress follow the Electoral Count Act of 1887 which allows objections to state electoral votes be raised during the joint session of Congress, and not certify the contested states.

Spencer's profile picture
Spencer1 year ago

@ScottAdamsSays ❤️🇺🇸

Jackie LeBeouf's profile picture
Jackie LeBeouf1 year ago

@ScottAdamsSays Simply said and perfect as usual.

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