10 Comments
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Barbara Charis's avatar

I was told years ago not to trust info from Wikipedia...I looked at their information myself and saw it was aligned with the establishment.... Misinformation Mafia.

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ABIGAIL REPORTS's avatar

Alternative search engines are out there. Not as big, but you get many different articles.

A lot of Green Headlines show up on my headline catcher, Newsbreak.

Big thing they are all Chrome connected.

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Brandon is not your bro's avatar

We are surrounded by a cluster of deep con . Thanks Edwin .

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Edwin's avatar

The con goes about 5 levels deeper than any of us figured. This is orders of magnitude worse than anyone had contemplated.

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Carolyn's avatar

NEVER use wikipiki

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mobius wolf's avatar

Lost years hence. I never look at it.

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Thomas A Braun RPh's avatar

I suspect that the CIA and Big Pharma via third parties (PR firms?) monitor Wikipedia content daily and remove any facts that counter their goal setting. They probably have dedicated personal to keep the miss information current. I tried to correct the miss information about the risks of taking too much Vitamin D with research facts and the data disappeared within 24 hours! No way to grow the bottom line by making the patient healthier! Learn more at thomasabraunrph@substack.com

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ABIGAIL REPORTS's avatar

And you can't trust all Podcast or YT. Look for the same people, same theme, This is a AI created one. Black Boy Helps Elon Musk's Mom with Flat Tire, Next Day He Gets The SHOCK of His Life! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2S-L2hH1W8. Lots more like it.

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ABIGAIL REPORTS's avatar

DON'T DO SHOPPING through QR CODES.

What is a brushing scam?

https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/what-is-a-brushing-scam-experts-are-warning-consumers-about-qr-code-fraud/3570645/

Brushing scams are an emerging threat to unsuspecting consumers as Black Friday shopping begins.

The first type of the scam begins when fraudsters gain information such as a name and home address.

From there, scammers will set up an Amazon account with the victim’s information and send a package to the targeted person’s home with no return address.

“Once you have signed to confirm receipt of the parcel, the scammer then writes a positive verified review for the product in your name, to help improve their seller rating and to help drive more sales,” said Kushal Tantry of QR Code Developer, a company that allows users to create custom QR codes.

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Charlie's avatar

All b s. The truth is my consciousness and that can change. Real intelligence.

Chigh is correct in that it does not have C…

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