Opinion by Hillary Rodham Clinton, "The Weaponization of Loneliness"
The question that preoccupied me and many others over much of the past eight years is how our democracy became so susceptible to a would-be strongman and demagogue. The question that keeps me up at night now—with increasing urgency as 2024 approaches—is whether we have done enough to rebuild our defenses or whether our democracy is still highly vulnerable to attack and subversion.
There’s reason for concern: the influence of dark money and corporate power, right-wing propaganda and misinformation, malign foreign interference in our elections, and the vociferous backlash against social progress. The “vast right-wing conspiracy” has been of compelling interest to me for many years. But I’ve long thought something important was missing from our national conversation about threats to our democracy. Now recent findings from a perhaps unexpected source—America’s top doctor—offer a new perspective on our problems and valuable insights into how we can begin healing our ailing nation.
In May, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy published an advisory, warning that a growing “epidemic of loneliness and isolation” threatens Americans’ personal health and also the health of our democracy. Murthy reported that, even before COVID, about half of all American adults were experiencing substantial levels of loneliness. Over the past two decades, Americans have spent significantly more time alone, engaging less with family, friends, and people outside the home. By 2018, just 16 percent of Americans said they felt very attached to their local community.
An “epidemic of loneliness” may sound abstract at a time when our democracy faces concrete and imminent threats, but the surgeon general’s report helps explain how we became so vulnerable. In the past, surgeons general have at crucial moments sounded the alarm about major crises and drawn our attention to underappreciated threats, including smoking, HIV/AIDS, and obesity. This is one of those moments.
The rate of young adults who report suffering from loneliness went up every single year from 1976 to 2019. From 2003 to 2020, the average time that young people spent in person with friends declined by nearly 70 percent. Then the pandemic turbocharged our isolation.
According to the surgeon general, when people are disconnected from friends, family, and communities, their lifetime risk of heart disease, dementia, depression, and stroke skyrockets. Shockingly, prolonged loneliness is as bad, or worse, for our health as being obese or smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day. Researchers also say that loneliness can generate anger, resentment, and even paranoia. It diminishes civic engagement and social cohesion, and increases political polarization and animosity. Unless we address this crisis, Murthy warned, “we will continue to splinter and divide until we can no longer stand as a community or a country.”
In 1996, I published It Takes a Village. As first lady, I was worried that American life had become frantic and fragmented for many people, especially stressed-out parents. Social, economic, and technological trends seemed to be pulling us apart rather than lifting us up. We were spending more time in our cars and in front of the television and less time engaging in our communities. Even back then, before smartphones and social media, it was evident that Americans were becoming more isolated, lonely, and unmoored from traditional sources of meaning and support—and that our kids were suffering because of this. I also was concerned about the rise of right-wing politicians like Newt Gingrich and media personalities like Rush Limbaugh who were sowing division and alienation.
Nearly 30 years later, it’s clear that the problems I diagnosed in the 1990s ran deeper than I realized, and were more dire than I could have imagined. But the prescriptions in It Takes a Village—putting families first, investing in community infrastructure, protecting kids from out-of-control technology, and recommitting to the core American values of mutual responsibility and empathy—have only grown more urgent and necessary.
The surgeon general’s warning echoes the findings of other researchers who have studied these trends for decades. In his influential 2000 book, Bowling Alone, the Harvard political scientist Robert Putnam showed that Americans’ social ties and support networks collapsed in the second half of the 20th century. Many of the activities and relationships that had defined and sustained previous generations, such as attending religious services and joining unions, clubs, and civic organizations—even participating in local bowling leagues—were disappearing. Putnam’s more recent work shows that these trends have only gotten worse in the early decades of the 21st century, and that they go hand in hand with intensifying political polarization, economic inequality, loss of trust in government, and a shift in the national attitude from “we’re all in this together” to “you’re on your own.”
Murthy cites the work of another Harvard researcher, Raj Chetty, who shows how the decline of social connections between people of different classes and backgrounds—the kinds of relationships that used to be formed in VFW halls, church basements, and PTA meetings—has significantly reduced economic mobility in America. The data show that diverse, robust social networks make the American dream possible. Without them, it fades.
All of this aligns with the findings of the Princeton economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton. They attribute soaring rates of what they call “deaths of despair”—including suicides and deaths from alcohol and drug overdoses—to a toxic mix of economic stagnation, declining social ties, rising alienation, and families and communities coming apart.
The surgeon general points, as well, to the crucial role of technology. He highlights data showing that Americans who use social media for more than two hours a day are twice as likely to experience loneliness and feelings of social isolation as people who used social media for less than 30 minutes a day. As we spend more time online, we spend less time interacting with one another in person or engaging with our local communities. The more we live in social-media echo chambers, the less we trust one another, and the more we struggle to find common ground with or feel empathy for people who have different perspectives and experiences.
Murthy followed his report on loneliness with a second advisory just 20 days later, warning that heavy social-media use among teenagers is driving a dangerous increase in depression and other mental-health challenges. From 2001 to 2021, the suicide rate among people in their early 20s surged by more than 60 percent. For 10-to-14-year-olds, it tripled. These are numbers that should shake us to our core.
My three grandchildren are too young to experience the worst of this. Still, I can’t help but think about where they and their friends and classmates will be soon, exposed hour after hour to whatever content some hidden algorithm decides to promote. I worry about American children’s self-esteem, their mental health, their sense of perspective and reality.
The way Americans—and young people in particular—interact with technology today, the way our phones and social-media networks inject bullying, abuse, misinformation, outrage, and anger directly into our brains, is not something any of us could have foreseen just a few short decades ago. When I wrote It Takes a Village, I was concerned about the effects on young people of violence on TV. Now, in the age of social media, those worries almost seem quaint.
What does all of this loneliness and disconnection mean for our democracy?
Murthy carefully connects the dots between increasing social isolation and declining civic engagement. “When we are less invested in one another, we are more susceptible to polarization and less able to pull together to face the challenges that we cannot solve alone,” he wrote in The New York Times.
[Hillary Rodham Clinton and Dan Schwerin: A state of emergency for democracy]
It’s not just the surgeon general who recognizes that social isolation saps the lifeblood of democracy. So do the ultra-right-wing billionaires, propagandists, and provocateurs who see authoritarianism as a source of power and profit.
There have always been angry young men alienated from mainstream society and susceptible to the appeal of demagogues and hate-mongers. But modern technology has taken the danger to another level. This was Steve Bannon’s key insight.
Long before Bannon ran Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, he was involved in the world of online gaming. He discovered an army of what he later described as “rootless white males,” disconnected from the real world but highly engaged online and often quick to resort to sexist and racist attacks. When Bannon took over the hard-right website Breitbart News, he was determined to turn these socially isolated gamers into the shock troops of the alt-right, pumping them full of conspiracy theories and hate speech. Bannon pursued the same project as a senior executive at Cambridge Analytica, the notorious data-mining and online-influence company largely owned by the right-wing billionaire Robert Mercer. According to a former Cambridge Analytica engineer turned whistleblower, Bannon targeted “incels,” or involuntarily celibate men, because they were easy to manipulate and prone to believing conspiracy theories. “You can activate that army,” Bannon told the Bloomberg journalist Joshua Green. “They come in through Gamergate or whatever and then get turned onto politics and Trump.”
Like many others, I was too slow to see the impact this strategy could have. Now the surgeon general is telling us that social disconnection is not just a problem at the margins—not just the usual “angry young men”—but is in fact an epidemic sweeping the country.
I have seen firsthand how dangerous lies can fuel violence and undermine our democratic process. During the 2016 campaign, a shocking number of people became convinced that I am a murderer, a terrorist sympathizer, and the evil mastermind behind a child-sex-abuse ring. Alex Jones, the right-wing talk-show host, posted a video about “all the children Hillary Clinton has personally murdered and chopped up and raped.”
This was not the first time that I was the subject of wild conspiracy theories or partisan rage that veered into mania. In the 1990s, supermarket tabloids used to splash headlines such as “Hillary Clinton Adopts Alien Baby” across their front pages. I was even burned in effigy by a crowd in Kentucky furious that I had proposed taxing cigarettes to help fund universal health care for all Americans. The president of the Kentucky Association of Tobacco Supporters chanted, “Burn, baby, burn” as he poured gasoline on a scarecrow in a dress labeled I’M HILLARY. By 2016, I fully expected to play a starring role in the fever dreams of extremists at the margins of American politics.
But something had changed. Social media gave conspiracy theories far wider reach than ever before. Fox News and other right-wing media outlets gave outlandish lies “credibility.” And before Trump, we’d never had a presidential candidate—and then an actual president—who used the biggest bully pulpit in the world to be an actual bully and traffic in this kind of trash. The results were tragic but predictable. In early December 2016, a 28-year-old man from North Carolina armed with a Colt AR-15 assault rifle shot up a pizzeria in Washington, D.C., because he had read online that it was the headquarters of my supposed child-sex ring. Thankfully, no one was harmed. But the pizzeria attack foreshadowed the violence to come: QAnon followers and militia members storming the Capitol on January 6, 2021; mass shooters leaving behind manifestos riddled with misogyny, racism, anti-Semitism, and other conspiracy theories promoted in far-right echo chambers.
As we look ahead to 2024, the threat to our democracy is not just from more of this kind of violence—although I fear that is coming as well. Many Americans breathed a sigh of relief after last year’s midterms because prominent election deniers and conspiracy theorists were defeated, including Kari Lake in Arizona and Doug Mastriano in Pennsylvania. But these statewide victories obscured more troubling developments at the local level.
Consider Peggy Judd, a middle-aged white woman from Cochise County, Arizona, who participated in the January 6 “Stop the Steal” rally and reportedly promotes Trump’s Big Lie about the 2020 election and QAnon conspiracy theories. Judd is not just some Facebook gadfly. She is an elected member of the Cochise County Board of Supervisors. And in 2022, she refused to certify the results of the midterm elections until she was finally compelled to do so by a judge.
A recent study from the organization Informing Democracy identified more than 200 local officials across six battleground states who, like Judd, have taken antidemocratic actions. Many of them are in a position to administer or influence the 2024 elections. They’re county clerks and municipal election commissioners, state legislators and members of canvassing boards. They’re people you’ve probably never heard of who play vital roles in making our electoral system work.
A hallmark of American democracy is that elections have been largely run by local, usually nonpartisan volunteers and officials. Communities generally trusted these election administrators because they knew them—they saw them in the supermarket, at restaurants, at their kids’ schools. This patchwork system has always been vulnerable to localized corruption and racial discrimination, but most folks who raised their hands to help out did so with good intentions and good results.
Not anymore. As the trust and social ties that used to bind communities together have frayed, apathy, isolation, and polarization have undercut the old “we’re all in this together” ethos. Instead of nonpartisan volunteers and civic organizations like the League of Women Voters, we have MAGA election deniers and QAnon enthusiasts. There’s now a widespread shortage of poll workers because so many have faced harassment and abuse, just for doing their jobs and helping people vote.
In Fulton County, Georgia, the election worker Shaye Moss and her mother, Ruby Freeman, who helped out in 2020 as a temp, faced racist death threats after Trump falsely accused them of orchestrating massive fraud. “I just felt bad for my mom,” Moss later told the January 6 congressional committee, “and I felt horrible for picking this job and being the one that always wants to help and always [be] there, never missing not one election.”
American democracy needs people like Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman to keep raising their hands and offering to help. This country was built by men and women who believed in service, community, and working together for the greater good—pioneers who stuck together in wagon trains, farmers who pitched in on barn raisings and quilting bees, immigrants who joined volunteer fire departments, enslaved people who risked their lives to serve on the Underground Railroad and help others escape to freedom. Murthy and Putnam might call these ties social capital. In the 1830s, the French writer Alexis de Tocqueville visited America and wrote about our “habits of the heart.” However we describe it, the sense that “we’re all in it together” made our democratic experiment possible—and it may be the only thing that can save us still.
Without a doubt, winning elections at every level is essential. We need to defeat the demagogues and election deniers so convincingly that there’s no room for dirty tricks. And it’s heartening that organizations like Run for Something are mobilizing candidates for school boards, county clerkships, and state legislatures across the country. We also need to strengthen voting rights and fight back against misinformation. But ultimately, winning the next election is never going to be enough. We must work together to restitch our unraveling social fabric, and to rebuild Americans’ trust in one another, our democracy, and our shared future.
Although there is an important debate to be had about how much economic conditions contribute to loneliness and alienation, the significant investments being made under President Joe Biden can lift both incomes and aspirations. The historic legislation enacted by Biden and the Democrats in Congress will modernize infrastructure, bring supply chains home, and boost manufacturing in key industries such as semiconductors and electric vehicles. These investments may help stem the outflow of workers and young people forced to leave their communities to seek opportunity far from home, leaving behind friends, families, and emotional and spiritual support systems. Too often, when Americans face boarded-up storefronts, empty pews, and crumbling schools, it’s despair, loneliness, and resentment that fill the void. Bringing opportunity back to these hard-hit places and enabling more Americans to stay and raise families where their roots are won’t reverse the toxic impacts of social media, disrupt the right-wing media machine, or end our political polarization, but it’s a step in the right direction. We can build on that by raising taxes on the wealthiest individuals and corporations to buttress our social safety net and invest in schools and communities.
In his advisory, Murthy offers other recommendations for rebuilding social connection and cohesion. They include pro-family policies such as paid leave, and investments in public transit and community infrastructure that help people connect with one another in real life, not just online. He has also called for stronger and more sophisticated oversight and regulation of tech companies. In particular, there is an urgent need for more protections for kids on social media. And Murthy rightly argues that we can all do more in our own lives to nurture relationships with friends, family members, and neighbors, and seek out opportunities to serve and support others.
I offered similar prescriptions in It Takes a Village, arguing that we need to work together to help families raise healthy, successful children. Some of the work I envisioned would happen at home, such as families turning off screens and spending more time together. Much of it would be in communities, with local businesses, schools, congregations, and unions doing more to bring us together and help parents who often feel alone and overburdened. I thought government could help support that community engagement. For example, I was a big supporter of a Clinton-administration program that gave poor families in public housing vouchers to move to safer, middle-income neighborhoods where their children could make friends and find mentors from different backgrounds. I was convinced that we had to come together as a national village and decide that helping all our kids live up to their God-given potential is more important than profits or partisanship.
These basic principles still ring true, and the evidence continues to show that this approach works. The children of those families that we helped move to better neighborhoods in the 1990s have grown up to attend college at higher rates, earn higher incomes, and have more stable families of their own than their peers who stayed behind. And the younger the kids were when they moved, the bigger boost they received.
In recent years, I’ve often thought back to It Takes a Village. The pandemic should have been a case study in how Americans come together in the face of a common challenge. And at the beginning, there was a sense of solidarity and shared sacrifice. People realized that if their neighbor got sick, it could harm them too, and that the virus was striking everyone. The entire village was at risk. We really were all in it together. Tragically, this spirit quickly faded. President Trump and other right-wing leaders politicized the pandemic and turned public health into a wedge issue—a staggeringly shortsighted and dangerous move with predictably deadly results. And when data first emerged showing that COVID-19 was disproportionately affecting Black and Latino communities, support for safety precautions and shared sacrifice dropped among white people and conservatives. Instead of a story of our common humanity, the pandemic became a story of our fractured society and poisoned politics.
I haven’t given up, though. I still believe in the wisdom and power of the American village. I’m inspired by the moms and dads showing up at school-board meetings and getting involved in local politics for the first time because they refuse to let extremists ban books from the neighborhood library. I love reading about teenagers turning to old-school flip phones so they’re no longer at the mercy of giant tech firms and hidden algorithms. I’m encouraged by the growing number of companies giving employees time off to vote and recognizing that they have responsibilities not just to shareholders but also to workers, customers, communities, and the planet. And I take heart from the workers bravely organizing corporate warehouses and coffee shops, or walking a picket line, breathing new life into the labor movement and insisting that even in our fractured age, we are still stronger together.
If you dig deep enough, through all the mud of politics and polarization, eventually you hit something hard and true: a foundation of values and aspirations that bind us together as Americans. That’s something to build on. If we can break out of our toxic “us versus them” dichotomies, if we can shrink our notion of “the other” and expand the “we” in “we the people,” perhaps we can discover that we have more in common than we think.
Though we are divided in so many ways, though we are lonelier and more isolated than ever, it remains true that none of us can raise a family, build a business, strengthen a community, or heal a nation alone. We have to do it together. It still takes a village.
Yes.
ReplyDeleteScapegoats accepted!
ReplyDeleteWhat a load. The right used to criticized the Left for it's alleged support of a "victimhood mentality" among minorities. Now you have fully embraced it. donald tRump is the "White victimhood" candidate.
ReplyDeleteWas there a coup in 2020 called "the steal" that rendered all ethnic white trumpturds persona non grata? Did they became the "jews" of the Biden-NAZI occupied USA?
We're obviously operating in collusion with Putin and the Russians. If we're not stppoed soon, we'll soon be raping black and brown women in the streets.
ReplyDeleteBWAH!
Her Heinous has written her prescription. Proscription of Trumpism is imminently required.
ReplyDeleteLock him up!
ReplyDeleteYep!
ReplyDeleteYou don't want to lock up HRC anymore?
ReplyDeleterepubliturds... such shameless hypocrites. I'm sure you're aware. You just don't care.
ReplyDeleteDid the FBI ever investigate her (under Trump)? Indict her? Mention her to a grand jury?
ReplyDeleteHow. many runs have Democrats in government made against Trump?
ReplyDeleteTHAT's hypocrisy.
:-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
ReplyDeleteTrying to shame hypocrite being hypocrite... that is biggest PRAISE to them .;-P
Dervy does love his "authenticity" in "profilicity". Genuine pretending is no longer "sufficient" for the woke.
ReplyDelete...if Dervy ever thought himself "trans", he'd HAVE to get the snip. Just putting on dresses would never be enough.
ReplyDeleteWILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, "As You Like It" spoken by Jaques)
All the world’s a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages. At first the infant,
Mewling and puking in the nurse’s arms;
And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel
And shining morning face, creeping like snail
Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,
Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad
Made to his mistress’ eyebrow. Then a soldier,
Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard,
Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel,
Seeking the bubble reputation
Even in the cannon’s mouth. And then the justice,
In fair round belly with good capon lin’d,
With eyes severe and beard of formal cut,
Full of wise saws and modern instances;
And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts
Into the lean and slipper’d pantaloon,
With spectacles on nose and pouch on side;
His youthful hose, well sav’d, a world too wide
For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice,
Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,
That ends this strange eventful history,
Is second childishness and mere oblivion;
Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.
He performs for the "general peer" (big other) and cannot accept himself until ALL others see him, and more importantly ACCEPT him for his curated profile.
ReplyDeleteNow either use his pronouns or forever earn yourself an enemy!
Dervy's still here today because I laugh at his curated profile.
ReplyDeleteWhom the gods (big others) would destroy they first drive mad! ;)
He thinks that I don't know that he's only pretending to be something his not. LOL!
ReplyDelete...and on the other hand, do you think that he'd ever return the courtesy? He wants to "cancel" me. He thinks I'm "evil". And I suppose to those in HIS circles, I am. :)
ReplyDeleteI suppose that I could psychopathically "genuinely pretend" to go along with him, but 'F his "networks" power. I'm here to give it the "torpedo's shock" (Plato, "Meno"). :)
ReplyDelete:P
ReplyDeleteQtard thinks I praised Minus FJ? Where? Quote this alleged praise. I was criticizing, not praising.
ReplyDeleteDemocrats in government made "runs" against tRump? When? Impeachment, had it (either time) been successful, would have resulted in removal from office. tRump wouldn't have been locked up.
Are you talking about the indictments for criming in NY and (upcoming) in GA? Democratic state AGs aren't supposed to uphold the laws in their states? Allow criminals to get away with crimes because they are ex-presidents? There is no hypocrisy there. Just Democratic AGs doing their job.
fyi, "Politico reported that Smith is registered to vote in the U.S. as a political independent. Even the conservative organization Newsmax reports that Smith is said to be a political independent".
Joe Biden has never held a rally where the crowd chanted "lock him up". Joe Biden has never said tRump should be locked up.
Quote: The mention of Clinton's name prompted calls of "lock her up" from the crowd. "Yeah. I agree with you. I used to just be quiet on that. I agree with you 100 percent", Trump said, endorsing calls to jail his political opponent. [10/16/20]
You think that because dotard donald failed to lock up Hillary Clinton (because she is innocent of any wrongdoing) that there is no hypocrisy? You were SURE that the Durham "investigation" was going to result in HRC being locked up. John Durham was appointed when tRump was president.
"Did the FBI ever investigate her (under Trump)? Indict her? Mention her to a grand jury?"
So, what you're saying is that dotard donald lied to his supporters? He told them HRC should be locked up (see above quote) but did nothing about seeing that she was at least investigated (while he was president)?
BS. Also proof your your hypocrisy. Use ANY argument that works for you in the moment. Now that it's tRump that could be locked up, you (falsely) claim that dotard donald NEVER threatened to lock up HRC. Or, those threats don't count because (1) he didn't do anything about it. Though this is untrue... AND (2) Democratic AGs and an independent Special Prosecutor are looking into tRump's crimes.
So... if tRump becomes president again, he ISN'T going after his political enemies? John Comey shouldn't be worried about being locked up? Nobody should (Biden, Obama, HRC)?
Because, as Eric tRump said, only politicians in 3rd world countries seek to jail their political opponents? And "we're better than that"?
Give me a break.
Minus: He performs for the "general peer" (big other) and cannot accept himself until ALL others see him, and more importantly ACCEPT him for his curated profile.
ReplyDeleteWTF?
Minus: Now either use his pronouns or forever earn yourself an enemy!
WTF?
Minus: Dervy's still here today because I laugh at his curated profile.
WTF?
Minus: Whom the gods (big others) would destroy they first drive mad! ;)
WTF?
Minus: He thinks that I don't know that he's only pretending to be something his not. LOL!
WTF?
I have no idea what you're talking about.
*Snip-Snip*
ReplyDeleteWhat "curated profile"? Link to it. I want to see it.
ReplyDeleteYou have no blogs? Who knew? You curate no personae?
ReplyDelete\\Dervy does love his "authenticity" in "profilicity". Genuine pretending is no longer "sufficient" for the woke.
ReplyDeleteFrancois Duc De La Rochefoucauld — 'Hypocrisy is a tribute that vice pays to virtue.'
Yawn.
\\And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel
Some... stay in that state till the RIP stoneplate.
Yawn.
\\I have no idea what you're talking about.
Yap.
Naturally.
Yawn
My profile says nothing about snipping. I have never written a post (or comment on any of my blogs) where I express any desire for snipping. Because I desire no such thing. Minus is talking about his delusions.
ReplyDeleteQtard thinks my inability to decipher idiocy is my problem. Qtard views his own idiocy the same way. Keeps claiming my smart words are "gibberish" while my confusion concerning his dumb words reflect badly on me.
"..if Dervy ever thought himself "trans"...
ReplyDeleteI do not. I never will. Minus thinks about men snipping way more than I do. Which is hardly ever.
\\Qtard thinks my inability to decipher idiocy is my problem.
ReplyDeleteYap.
For a smart man it is a big problem -- not understanding something.
But for idiot? Naaaaah. Swamp of non-understanding, delirious bullshit, idiotic ignorance -- *NATURAL* environment of habitation. To it. ;-P
\\Qtard views his own idiocy the same way.
"Idiocy" of which you cannot present neither factual quote nor some plausible explanation -- why that is an idiocy?
:-)))))))))))))))))))
\\Keeps claiming my smart words are "gibberish"...
You always free to elaborate... with basing that elaboration on facts and logic -- how you words NOT gibberish.
And... if you'd not be an idiot -- you'd be able to do that... and that way demonstrate smarts and shame me into oblivion.
But,
naaaaah... :-)))))))))))))))))))))))
such a fit is not for such bombastic, prpoud of their own idiocy, idiotic hypocrites. :-))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))(ad infinitum)
Qtard: But for idiot? Naaaaah. Swamp of non-understanding, delirious bullshit, idiotic ignorance -- *NATURAL* environment of habitation. To it.
ReplyDeleteAgain, I agree with Qtard's confession about itself. Even though unintentional.
Qtard: \\Qtard views his own idiocy the same way\\"Idiocy" of which you cannot present neither factual quote nor some plausible explanation -- why that is an idiocy?
Can. Have. Many times (see next comment).
Qtard: \\Keeps claiming my smart words are "gibberish"\\You always free to elaborate... with basing that elaboration on facts and logic -- how you words NOT gibberish.
YOU are free to elaborate how my words ARE gibberish. When I see Qtard write "gibberish" in response to my smart words -- I interpret as Qtard saying "I don't understand your smart words. Because I am dumb".
Qtard: And... if you'd not be an idiot -- you'd be able to do that... and that way demonstrate smarts and shame me into oblivion.
If Qtard is not an idiot -- Qtard would be able to explain (with facts and logic) why my smart words are "gibberish". And not Qtard being unable to understand. Because of dumbness. But it will not be able to.
Qtard: such a fit is not for such bombastic, prpoud of their own idiocy, idiotic hypocrites.
Agreed. Qtard is a very proud idiot. A very bombastic hypocrite.
Qtard: \\Qtard views his own idiocy the same way\\"Idiocy" of which you cannot present neither factual quote nor some plausible explanation -- why that is an idiocy?
ReplyDeleteExamples of Qtard's idiocy...
J6 rioters have a "human right" to overthrow democracy (dismisses citing of John Locke). Says I deny J6 insurrectionists have human rights because I see them as not human. Democracy cannot be "overthrowne". Compares J6 insurrectionists to "fathers founders". Says J6 attack on the Capitol was people "walking by street" and that breaking windows/breaking down doors was necessary because admission to the Capitol is free (BS rightturd "tourist" narrative). J6 was like the Boston Tea Party. Death threats and racist threats against Democrats by rightturds is "Demn propaganda". Climate change is "Demn propaganda". Durham said "dRump collusion with Rasha FAKE". republicans "stormed" the White House demanding aid for Ukraine. Democrats are spreading Putin propaganda "Ukraine invasion was to denazify it" (when it is republiturds spreading this propaganda). Democrats refuse to honor NATO obligations scaring European leaders (why they wouldn't back Obama's desire to do more about Russia's invasion of Georgia and taking of Crimea). Dictionaries contain "Demn propaganda" (there are no Russian "oligarchs"). Race as a social construct doesn't exist except for racists. Chinese are White, not Asian. N-word has nothing to do with skin color/race. White Supremacists don't exist, it's just a term Democrats use to slander republican Whites. White is noble. Does not want to be compared to a Chinese person (who Qtard calls "that"). Demands quotes, then (when presented with quotes) claims he never said that or that quote is "out of context". Demands quotes to "prove" it said things it knows damn well it said many times. Claims American politics aren't being discussed on this blog. Says it wants no involvement in discussions about American politics but won't go away to achieve noninvolvement. Keeps babbling about being a "foreigner from far-far away" as if I give a shit. Spouts republiturd propaganda non-stop but denies it. Goes on and on about tRump not being prosecuted for colluding with Russia (says trial would be THE way to prove it) but then says trials that are proceeding will be rigged and prove nothing (except USA is like Nazi Germany). Says word "believe" is proof of a notion it calls "religious bonkery". Does not understand (or pretends not to) use of word "believe" in different contexts (says I never explained difference, even though I have MANY times). Calls experts "somebody somebody", says experts analyzing data and reaching fact-based conclusions is "something something". Denies obvious fact that donald tRump is a Putin Puppet, says 0-Bama and Bi-den are the puppets/help Putin. "Mincemeats" prove nonexist tape shows Bi-den is guilty of soliciting bribes. Minus FJ not (continuously) screeching "Biden did it!!). Minus FJ doesn't write his post titles, they are just "headlines". Says political enemies should be killed, claims this is what I want (or have ever talked about despite producing no quotes). Etc, etc.
\\Examples of Qtard's idiocy...
ReplyDeleteIs it some proper quotes? Naaah.
Is there some logic provided? Naaah.
Just the same. AGAIN!
Miserly idiot, stooopid tricks. :-)))))))))))))))))
\\Again, I agree with Qtard's confession about itself. Even though unintentional.
:-))))))))))))))))
Yeah. Confession of Derpy. That IT is nothing but low-brow preaky idiot... which unable to devise own back-bites.
:-))))))))))))))))))))))))
Continue-continue, my little piggy.
I'm in a raincoat and rubber boots... you swiny shit do not stick on me. ;-P
But your swiny merry tricks... so hilarious.
:-))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
\\YOU are free to elaborate how my words ARE gibberish. When I see Qtard write "gibberish" in response to my smart words -- I interpret as Qtard saying "I don't understand your smart words. Because I am dumb".
Of course.
Cause you are idiot.
YET ONE... ;-P
\\If Qtard is not an idiot -- Qtard would be able to explain (with facts and logic) why my smart words are "gibberish". And not Qtard being unable to understand. Because of dumbness. But it will not be able to.
Go provide perfect quote -- about which exactly your gibberish "smart words" you want my comments about. ;-P
Oh... well, THIS perfect quote of your words is PERFECTLY GIBBERISH as it is too. :-)))))))))))))))))))))
First sentence looks palable for al least. Because it direct rephrasing of my words...
But.
Very next sentences... gibberish as it is.
What "And not Qtard being unable to understand."???
That is incomplete sentence. And as first one is complete -- so, to what exactly (apart from some wirlwinds in a Derpy (eaten out by moles of propaganda?) brain) it relates??? :-)))))))))))))))
Next. "Because of dumbness."
Was there logical premice? Provided. Like "This is all happening... Because"???
Naaah.
Again.
Some wirlwinds. Try to "sound smart". But only demonstration that observed object CANNOT formulate rational thoughts on its own. ;-P
"But it will not be able to." Who "it"? What "not able to"???
As that was not stated in previous sentences... go figure, what gibberish thought that might contain. ;-P
PS I'm ready... go, do it... make it EVEN MORe hilarious... try to use this my words against me. Go please me, little piggy. :-))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Qtard: Miserly idiot, stooopid tricks.
ReplyDeleteI agree with the idiot's confession about being an idiot and using stupid tricks. Asking for "quotes" again. When it does not give a shit about quotes. It's just a dodge.
I accurately described much of the stupidity that Qtard has expressed here. What it asked me for. I'm not putting in hours of research finding quotes. That would be a waste of time, as Qtard would just deny writing any quotes I gave. Say they are "out of context" or not "precise". Even though Qtard KNOWS what it has written.
Qtard: \\Again, I agree with Qtard's confession about itself. Even though unintentional\\Yeah. Confession of Derpy. That IT is nothing but low-brow preaky idiot... which unable to devise own back-bites.
Qtard thinks its words are my confession? Clearly the "logic" of an idiot.
Qtard: \\YOU are free to elaborate how my words ARE gibberish. When I see Qtard write "gibberish" in response to my smart words -- I interpret as Qtard saying "I don't understand your smart words. Because I am dumb"\\Of course. Cause you are idiot.
Qtard: Very next sentences... gibberish as it is. What "And not Qtard being unable to understand."???
I wrote: Qtard would be able to explain (with facts and logic) why my smart words are "gibberish". And not Qtard being unable to understand.
Either what I wrote actually is gibberish and Qtard can explain why -- OR --- it's just that Qtard can't understand what I wrote because it is dumb.
I can't state it any more simply.
Qtard: That is incomplete sentence. And as first one is complete -- so, to what exactly (apart from some wirlwinds in a Derpy (eaten out by moles of propaganda?) brain) it relates???
One or the other. First I gave one explanation, then the other.
Qtard: Next. "Because of dumbness". Was there logical premice? Provided. Like "This is all happening... Because"??? Naaah. Again.
This is all happening (Qtard claiming my words are gibberish) BECAUSE OF QTARD'S DUMBNESS. Inability to understand English.
Qtard: Some wirlwinds. Try to "sound smart". But only demonstration that observed object CANNOT formulate rational thoughts on its own.
"Whirlwinds" has a "H" in it. Like "whispers" has an "H" in it. Qtard can't spell. Can't understand written English. Yet it says *I* write gibberish???? It says *I* am trying to sound smart? By knowing how to spell? By being able to understand written English?
Qtardd: "But it will not be able to." Who "it"? What "not able to"???
"It" is Qtard. Qtard keeps calling me "it". Yet Qtard gets confused when I call Qtard "it"? "Not be able to" EXPLAIN why it says my words are "gibberish".
Qtard: As that was not stated in previous sentences... go figure, what gibberish thought that might contain.
It is my problem that Qtard can't spell? It is my problem that Qtard is not able to read and understand English? NO. These are Qtard's problems.
Qtard: PS I'm ready... go, do it... make it EVEN MORe hilarious... try to use this my words against me. Go please me, little piggy.
Qtard will laugh at its OWN stupidity more? Qtard will claim its stupidity is my stupidity? I do not doubt it.
\\I agree with the idiot's confession about being an idiot and using stupid tricks. Asking for "quotes" again. When it does not give a shit about quotes. It's just a dodge.
ReplyDeleteYep.
Miserly idiot, stooooopid dodge. ;-P
Which only CONFIRMS how that idiot FEARS facts, factual quotes, logic, factual truth, reality itself. :-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
\\I accurately described...
YOU???!! Dewscribed??? :-)))))))))))))))))))))))))
What a moron.
But, thank you, for revealing YET ONE word meaning of which you frealingly don't know. :-))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
\\Say they are "out of context" or not "precise". Even though Qtard KNOWS what it has written.
Of course.
Because I *KNOW* what I have had written.
And well, I can Ctrl-F it, and CONFIRM that quotes provided by Derpy -- that lying shit -- is FAKE.
Miserly. Stooooopidly. Deliriously. Faked.
By its idiotic mind, which thinks that that APPARENT fakes (like when it plays self-contradicting lies in two consequent sentencies EVEN) would not be spotted... and would pass as "factual argumants".
What a moron.
Demn-Junky-Doodle-Depry.
\\Qtard: \\Again, I agree with Qtard's confession about itself. Even though unintentional\\Yeah. Confession of Derpy. That IT is nothing but low-brow preaky idiot... which unable to devise own back-bites.
\\Qtard thinks its words are my confession? Clearly the "logic" of an idiot.
Ha-ha... what an idiot.
Lying about OWN DEMN WORDS.
What would you say here??? Ahhh, junky-doodle??? That... I higjlighted it bold is NOT PROPER and CORRECT quotes of your own words????
NOW.
You trying something new, isn't it?
You trying to claim that when I QUOTEing your Demn Words -- it makes it NOT YOUR demn words... but MY?????
What a moron. :-))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Never end of hilarity.
Continue-continue, entertaining me. My demn-junky pig... that shitting under itself... then eating that shit... to poop yet more shit. :-)))))))))))))))))))
\\I wrote: Qtard would be able to explain (with facts and logic) why my smart words are "gibberish". And not Qtard being unable to understand.
YEP.
And I did it.
I. Provided FACTS -- factual quotes.
And revealed how they DO NOT connect with each other. In ANY logical manner.
That is what they call "gibberish" -- talks, writings that have few, or completely NONE logical in its structure. ;-P
\\Either what I wrote actually is gibberish and Qtard can explain why -- OR --- it's just that Qtard can't understand what I wrote because it is dumb.
First part of that clause ALREADY fullfilled. I explained it.
AND... by the Rukes of Logic... which Derpy the Idiot DO NOT KNOW... need to review second clause -- eradicted. ;-P
\\I can't state it any more simply.
Of course.
Cause you are I-D-I-O-T. :-)))))))))))))))))))))))))
ReplyDelete\\Qtard: That is incomplete sentence. And as first one is complete -- so, to what exactly (apart from some wirlwinds in a Derpy (eaten out by moles of propaganda?) brain) it relates???
\\One or the other. First I gave one explanation, then the other.
Explanation MUST have STRUCTURE of explanation, isn't it?
Ahhh, Wisest of The Wise??? :-))))))))))))))))))))))))
Or... it comnpletely UNNEEDED???
Proper structure of sentences? Proper logical connection of sentences in a text?
Means... any gibberish cluttered pile of shi... err, words... of Wisest of The Wise???
Is... LOGICAL????
In a Logic of Morons??? That hiden tribe of Wisest of The Wise???
:-))))))))))))))))))(ad infinitum)
\\This is all happening (Qtard claiming my words are gibberish) BECAUSE OF QTARD'S DUMBNESS. Inability to understand English.
What "this all"??? Ahh, moron.
What you are refering to? Idiot. :-))))))))))))))))))))))))
What a bonker.
Who unable to formulate its words in any intelligible way.
But claims that it's opponent to blame... for not understanding how this or that verbal shit that leaving its mouth was produced by wirlwinds in its delirious bonker brain...
\\"Whirlwinds" has a "H" in it. Like "whispers" has an "H" in it. Qtard can't spell. Can't understand written English. Yet it says *I* write gibberish???? It says *I* am trying to sound smart? By knowing how to spell?
Yep.
It seems ALL you can. :-))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
My little down school-boy, which stuck in grammar class. Forever. :-))))))))))))))
\\By being able to understand written English?
:-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Hilarious claim.
Continue-continue.
Little Wisest of The Wise.
\\Qtardd: "But it will not be able to." Who "it"? What "not able to"???
\\"It" is Qtard. Qtard keeps calling me "it". Yet Qtard gets confused when I call Qtard "it"?
YAP.
IT... YET ONE time confirmed. And proudly. That IT... cannot devise IT's own back-bites.
So... dumbly, it trying to reuse strategies of an opponent.
Hypocrisy... always paying due diligence -- tribute to a virtue.
I -- have virtue -- being smart.
And YOU -- paying tribute -- by reusing MY words. By trying to use MY verbal structures against me.
Which is idiotic... but, hilarious. :-))))))))))))))))
\\"Not be able to" EXPLAIN why it says my words are "gibberish".
We discussed it, isn't it?
What word "explain" mean.
And it DO NOT mean what your trying it to use HERE to mean.
Means... you are I-D-I-O-T... who dunno about of meaning of words... EVEN.
Comlet dumb ass. :-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Which trying to cover that dumb-ass-ness... with repeating like that perrot... after smart opponent. :-))))))))))))))))))))))
What a hilarious bonker.
\\Qtard: As that was not stated in previous sentences... go figure, what gibberish thought that might contain.
\\It is my problem that Qtard can't spell? It is my problem that Qtard is not able to read and understand English? NO. These are Qtard's problems.
I understand YOUR English perfectly.
To the level I seeing through it directly into your idiotic mind. ;-P
Well... that is MY problem, that I talking with idiot here.
But, as any smart dude... I will deal with it myself. No biggy. ;-P
Qtard: Miserly idiot, stooooopid dodge. Which only CONFIRMS how that idiot FEARS facts, factual quotes, logic, factual truth, reality itself.
ReplyDeleteQtard fears facts. That is why it HIDES its quotes. Hides them with deliberate misspellings. How can I search for quotes when I don't know how Qtard misspelled a word?
Qtard: \\I accurately described...\\ YOU???!! Dewscribed??? What a moron.
Agreed. Qtard is a moron. WTF is "Dewscribed"? I never "dewscribed" anything. I DESCRIBED. Accurately, too. Why Qtard used it's escape to avoid answering.
Qtard: But, thank you, for revealing YET ONE word meaning of which you frealingly don't know.
"Dewscribed"? No, I do not know WTF "Dewscribed" means.
Qtard: \\Say they are "out of context" or not "precise". Even though Qtard KNOWS what it has written\\Of course. Because I *KNOW* what I have had written. And well, I can Ctrl-F it, and CONFIRM that quotes provided by Derpy -- that lying shit -- is FAKE.
Impossible. Qtard CANNOT confirm any quote I have ever given is fake. Qtard fakes quotes. When I give quotes they aren't fake. Like "I *DO* deny em their rights (a quote faked by Qtard). Or "dRump collusion with Rasha FAKE" (a quote faked by Qtard that it attributed to John Durham).
Qtard: Miserly. Stooooopidly. Deliriously. Faked.
The lying here is really over the top. Trying to project onto me what it does. Though Qtard is likely PROUD of its over the top lying. Smiling. Moronic laughter. Remember it admitted proudness of this variety previously. Though it tried to say I was proud of being a hypocrite. Though I knew that Qtard (as usual) was talking about itself.
Qtard: By its idiotic mind, which thinks that that APPARENT fakes (like when it plays self-contradicting lies in two consequent sentencies EVEN) would not be spotted... and would pass as "factual argumants". What a moron. Demn-Junky-Doodle-Depry.
How the hell should I know what Qtard's delusions tell it are "apparent fakes"? Or where Qtard's delusions tell it there are "self-contradicting lies"?
Qtard: Lying about OWN DEMN WORDS. What would you say here??? Ahhh, junky-doodle??? That... I higjlighted it bold is NOT PROPER and CORRECT quotes of your own words????
Qtard lies about ITS own damn words! I wrote "Qtard thinks its words are my confession? Clearly the logic of an idiot".
This was in response to Qtard writing "But for idiot? Naaaaah. Swamp of non-understanding, delirious bullshit, idiotic ignorance -- *NATURAL* environment of habitation. To it".
I called this -- QTARD'S WORDS -- Qtard's confession. There was no confession in what Qtard highlighted.
Qtard: You trying to claim that when I QUOTEing your Demn Words -- it makes it NOT YOUR demn words... but MY?????
WHAT quote? I was referring to YOUR words. Qtard wrote, "But for idiot? Naaaaah. Swamp of non-understanding, delirious bullshit, idiotic ignorance -- *NATURAL* environment of habitation. To it".
Qtard thinks those are my words? Really?
Qtard: What a moron.
Agreed. That Qtard can't remember it's own words definitely makes it a moron.
Qtard: But claims that it's opponent to blame... for not understanding how this or that verbal shit that leaving its mouth was produced by wirlwinds in its delirious bonker brain...
ReplyDeleteYes. Qtard is to blame for its own stupidity. I am certainly not to blame for Qtard's stupidity. Labeling what I write "gibberish" or "verbal shit" because it can't understand it due to it's dumbness.
Qtard: \\...it says *I* write gibberish???? It says *I* am trying to sound smart? By knowing how to spell?\\Yep. It seems ALL you can. My little down school-boy, which stuck in grammar class. Forever.
Insults due to correct spelling? Definitely what an idiot would do.
Qtard: \\By being able to understand written English?\\Hilarious claim.
Self-evident true claim.
Qtardd: "But it will not be able to." Who "it"? What "not able to"???\\\\"It" is Qtard. Qtard keeps calling me "it". Yet Qtard gets confused when I call Qtard "it"?\\YAP.
As I thought. Qtard gets easily confused.
Qtard: IT... YET ONE time confirmed. And proudly. That IT... cannot devise IT's own back-bites. So... dumbly, it trying to reuse strategies of an opponent.
It has confirmed that it gets easily confused. Due to it being a simpleton. Thinks calling someone "it" is a fantastic strategy. Or a brilliant "backbite".
Qtard: Hypocrisy... always paying due diligence -- tribute to a virtue. I -- have virtue -- being smart.
:-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Qtard: And YOU -- paying tribute -- by reusing MY words. By trying to use MY verbal structures against me.
Mocking. As I previously explained. But narcissist says it is a "tribute".
Qtard: Which is idiotic... but, hilarious.
Claim that mocking is a "tribute" is definitely idiotic.
Qtard: I understand YOUR English perfectly.
Lie.
Qtard: To the level I seeing through it directly into your idiotic mind.
Delusions.
Qtard: Well... that is MY problem, that I talking with idiot here. But, as any smart dude... I will deal with it myself. No biggy.
Narcissistic delusions.
\\Qtard fears facts. That is why it HIDES its quotes. Hides them with deliberate misspellings. How can I search for quotes when I don't know how Qtard misspelled a word?
ReplyDelete:-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
What a moron. You are.
\\I DESCRIBED. Accurately, too. Why Qtard used it's escape to avoid answering.
Aha... but without FACTUAL quotes.
Means... what Derpy "dewscribed" -- it's wirlwinds in own idiotic brains.
And that is... hilarious. :-))))))
Not all wisest of the Wise... of that tribe of morons are that spanky, to show their brains inside out... :-))))))))))))))))))
\\Impossible. Qtard CANNOT confirm any quote I have ever given is fake. Qtard fakes quotes. When I give quotes they aren't fake. Like "I *DO* deny em their rights (a quote faked by Qtard). Or "dRump collusion
Here it is.
FAKE quote from Derpy of MY words.
It was <<"I *DO* deny..." em their rights>>.
Which by grammar rules (or just by using common sense) is pransparent.
Ellipses, thosr "..." means omited continuation.
Which is absolutely justified here.
As Derpy knows PREFECTLY WELL what nasty totalitarian wannabe thing it spewed... but, trying to thrug it off, frantickly... but idioticly.
By claiming shitting baseless idiotic verbiage like "When I give quotes they aren't fake."
YET ONE example.
When EVEN very NEXT sentence contradicts to CLAIMED in previous.
Like.
I'll give this excerpt YET MORE... to make it EVEN more obvious.
""When I give quotes they aren't fake. Like "I *DO* deny em their rights (a quote faked by Qtard).""
Sentence #1
1) "When I give quotes they aren't fake."
DIRECTLY CONTRADICT to
Sentence #2
2) "Like "I *DO* deny em their rights (a quote faked by Qtard)."
WHICH ARE faked by Derpy quote of MY words.
Where's quote mark(s)??? Where's ellapsis???
WHICH... changes meaning of words.
While MY quote -- "I *DO* deny..." keeps ALL MAIN and IMPORTANT elements in place.
That's why it PERFECT. And CAN BE FACTUAL evidance.
That's why liar Derpy trying to mud the waters... no, not waters anymore... waters it mudded long ago (like ALMOST a year, ago)... with it's verbal feces.
And now just continue mudding that shit with EVEN MORE of own shit.
Continue-continue... little piggy. ;-P
\\How the hell should I know what Qtard's delusions tell it are "apparent fakes"? Or where Qtard's delusions tell it there are "self-contradicting lies"?
Easy-Peasy.
Just cut examined words. Ctrl-F em. And see that there is NO MATCH. ;-P
Same... though a little more intelligent task -- with examining logic for contradictions.
Well... easy, but only for non-idiots, that "moronic" few, some called smart people... but isn't there are some, traceable... in the ocean of Wisest of the Wise??? :-))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
\\Qtard lies about ITS own damn words! I wrote "Qtard thinks its words are my confession? Clearly the logic of an idiot".
Naaah. You not.
Copy-Paste that "Qtard lies about ITS own damn words! I wrote ">>>Qtard thinks its words are my confession? Clearly the logic of an idiot<<<"." -- PERFECT QUOTE, AGAIN...
Ctrl-F.
Inserted into search field.
Naaah.
Nothing found.
Means.
Derpy lies. AGAIN.
About " I wrote "Qtard thinks its words are my confession? Clearly the logic of an idiot"."
What an idiotic lie. AGAIN.
So easily double-cjeckable. ;-P
ReplyDelete\\I called this -- QTARD'S WORDS -- Qtard's confession. There was no confession in what Qtard highlighted.
Like your words about MY confession... cannot be YOUR confession? ;-P
Confession that you are idiot -- who UNABLE to devise ANY OTHER response -- instead of mimicing and reusing how smart opponent describes your miserly deficiencies. ;-P
THAT... that you UNABLE to understand -- how it looks like to smart observer -- IS self-confessing.
Are you getting it, dumb ass?
Showing moronic behavior... is as good as *CONFESSING* being moron.
That is THE SAME... when swine making poop... and then laying in that poop happily. And that way even moron(?) can behold and grasp -- yap, that is a SWINE. :-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
\\Yes. Qtard is to blame for its own stupidity. I am certainly not to blame for Qtard's stupidity. Labeling what I write "gibberish" or "verbal shit" because it can't understand it due to it's dumbness.
Seeking for a E=mc2 in a marking produced by a swine's piss? by a dirty spots produced by swine's poop which it trying to spread as far as possible?
No, I am not THAT idiot. :-))))))))))))))))))))))))))
\\Insults due to correct spelling? Definitely what an idiot would do.
Correct spelling can be due to spell-cjeckers nowaday...
not an evidance of intelligence. Not reliable evidnace, for sure.
And well... anyway. EVEN if admit it being such evidance... that is evidance on the level of school-boy. ;-P
What you unhappy about, Depry-boy here?
I admitted here your proper level of inteligence, and did it in a proper way, properly. ;-P
\\Qtard: \\By being able to understand written English?\\Hilarious claim.
\\Self-evident true claim.
Yap.
Same as wjen IT declared dictionary writers "masters of English"...
and that all, while showing INABILITY to understand meaning of words.
EVEN IF refs from that dictionaries given.
\\Qtardd: "But it will not be able to." Who "it"? What "not able to"???\\\\"It" is Qtard. Qtard keeps calling me "it". Yet Qtard gets confused when I call Qtard "it"?\\YAP.
\\As I thought. Qtard gets easily confused.
Confused??? :-)))))
But... isn't that HOW people SHOULD feel, meeting some gibberish claims, talks? ;-P
\\It has confirmed that it gets easily confused. Due to it being a simpleton. Thinks calling someone "it" is a fantastic strategy. Or a brilliant "backbite".
Naaah.
Just a strategy delirious idiot freaking CANNOT devise by itself.
EVEN cannot use it OWN way.
Only "no, you are fool" way.
Confirming with it only OWN mental deficiency. ;-P
\\Qtard: Hypocrisy... always paying due diligence -- tribute to a virtue. I -- have virtue -- being smart.
\\:-)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
Yeah.
And what did I say... hypocrisy -- paying tribute.
Trying to laugh... to show with it own intellectual superiority... while in reality, only showing own idiotic hypocrisy. YET ONE TIME.
\\Qtard: I understand YOUR English perfectly.
\\Lie.
TEST ME! ;-P :-)))))
But you'd not. GOT NAAAH BRAINS. :-))))))))))))))))))
\\Qtard: To the level I seeing through it directly into your idiotic mind.
\\Delusions.
Yeah.
You are right.
I see only delugions there.
In your delirious mind. ;-P
No derping?
ReplyDelete