I am one of those people who would never use his real (patronymic) name or give away his professional background on social media (or in reply to an MSM web page for that matter) for fear of identity theft. There is now also the risk of de-banking and worse to come for expressing political opinions on social media. Anyway, here is some recent food for thought from another blogger:
The internet has given too many people a false sense of power. They anonymously say what they want online, knowing there can be no consequence save for getting deboosted or banned. All the while applauding themselves for their “activism”.
The vast majority of people being anonymous is a problem. Over the course of history, people have risen up and fought the powers that be because they had nothing to lose. They’d already had everything taken from them (or threatened to be taken away from them). Anonymous users and silent observers will never reach that point because they’ll always be safe and sound in their homes, with their cushy jobs, and their growing bank accounts. And I get it. Most people aren’t willing to take risks.
For the record, I don’t believe that anyone should be unmasked online. That said, I don’t believe that anonymous users should be fooling themselves into believing they’re going to make a difference in this world. Nor do they have the right to complain about the state of things. It’s like the people who took the jab in order to keep their jobs. They could’ve embraced the unknown and the discomfort of saying “no” and then looking for a job that would’ve accepted their non vaxxed status. Instead, they caved, became part of the mass experiment, and gave the government and whoever else is pulling the strings proof that people don’t really want to be free and that they’ll never give them any resistance.
I influenced Dick Delingpole enough for him to tweet this lengthy blog post of mine from May 2021 to his followers; and before my @WarwicksFreedom Twitter account was suspended two years ago he would sometimes retweet some of the photos with commentary that I tweeted of local Covidian propaganda. But then he lives in a neighbouring county to me and I met him at the very first anti-lockdown protest in Birmingham back in August 2020:
I also influenced quite a few people directly from my @WarwicksFreedom account to encourage each of them to do likewise in their respective areas. Oh and anyone with a genuinely cushy job wouldn't have to worry about repercussions of social media posting. Demanding that everyone uses their real name on social media is only one step away from what Musk plans to do at X Corp.
I realize I've hit a nerve here and for that I apologize.
Like I said, I don't believe that anyone should be forced to use their real name online if they don't want to. I can merely encourage people to find the courage to do so. If it happens, great. If not, then this world is gonna keep doing its death-spiral as the powers that be crush us.
I am one of those people who would never use his real (patronymic) name or give away his professional background on social media (or in reply to an MSM web page for that matter) for fear of identity theft. There is now also the risk of de-banking and worse to come for expressing political opinions on social media. Anyway, here is some recent food for thought from another blogger:
https://tastefullindy.substack.com/p/in-defense-of-anons
We’ll have to agree to disagree on this one.
The internet has given too many people a false sense of power. They anonymously say what they want online, knowing there can be no consequence save for getting deboosted or banned. All the while applauding themselves for their “activism”.
The vast majority of people being anonymous is a problem. Over the course of history, people have risen up and fought the powers that be because they had nothing to lose. They’d already had everything taken from them (or threatened to be taken away from them). Anonymous users and silent observers will never reach that point because they’ll always be safe and sound in their homes, with their cushy jobs, and their growing bank accounts. And I get it. Most people aren’t willing to take risks.
For the record, I don’t believe that anyone should be unmasked online. That said, I don’t believe that anonymous users should be fooling themselves into believing they’re going to make a difference in this world. Nor do they have the right to complain about the state of things. It’s like the people who took the jab in order to keep their jobs. They could’ve embraced the unknown and the discomfort of saying “no” and then looking for a job that would’ve accepted their non vaxxed status. Instead, they caved, became part of the mass experiment, and gave the government and whoever else is pulling the strings proof that people don’t really want to be free and that they’ll never give them any resistance.
I influenced Dick Delingpole enough for him to tweet this lengthy blog post of mine from May 2021 to his followers; and before my @WarwicksFreedom Twitter account was suspended two years ago he would sometimes retweet some of the photos with commentary that I tweeted of local Covidian propaganda. But then he lives in a neighbouring county to me and I met him at the very first anti-lockdown protest in Birmingham back in August 2020:
https://twitter.com/DickDelingpole/status/1394217979852824580
I also influenced quite a few people directly from my @WarwicksFreedom account to encourage each of them to do likewise in their respective areas. Oh and anyone with a genuinely cushy job wouldn't have to worry about repercussions of social media posting. Demanding that everyone uses their real name on social media is only one step away from what Musk plans to do at X Corp.
I realize I've hit a nerve here and for that I apologize.
Like I said, I don't believe that anyone should be forced to use their real name online if they don't want to. I can merely encourage people to find the courage to do so. If it happens, great. If not, then this world is gonna keep doing its death-spiral as the powers that be crush us.