Another Type Of "Evil" Grifting Trend For Entertainment & Mind Programming

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/JeMQYHhJuY8

The thing is, I have seen the growth of these types of channels not just in the USA, but even in countries like Italy and France.

The thing is that, these social experiments, are in fact EVIL.

They are also designed to play on people's emotions, between guilt and sympathies, especially in a time when Humans should not be so giving or sympathetic to others.

You must question where these influencers are getting all this "money" to blow, by giving random strangers a few hundred to thousands of dollars.

Now, the thing is that the guy in the video who pulled the attitude for the guy begging for 2 bucks, was very smart and in tune with his primal instincts every step of the way, probably also truly does have his own set of issues to worry about and cannot be bothered. You cannot blame him at all for this, and the thing is, Gas Stations and Plazas are MAJOR hubs for a lot of scammers.

While it would not be evil in every scenario as such to give some random person a handful of money, the "dynamic" and "precedent" that these influencers set, absolutely are promoting almost a form of black magick ritual in what they are doing.

This is designed to make you drop your "guards" and primal instincts, and to possibly "replay" this scenario in your head, if you end up in  a similar situation of a panhandler who harasses you in public.

Which can set you up for future traps, if not just giving money to someone who was pretending to be homeless.

There are a lot of other examples too, such as Black Men pretending to be panhandling, "homeless" and then the first Woman or Stranger who is willing to give them some pocket change, is then told that they really appreciate it but cannot take it and are actually "not homeless" but are conducting a social experiment, and then reward them with a wad of cash.

It really makes me angry that this type of content is flooding the internet, and once again, you need to "question" how these Influencers who conduct these social experiments, routinely have sums like $10,000 to blow on a very stupid example, all to try to set some kind of "Moral Precedent" which goes against what someone's instincts should be in these types of scenarios.

This is a very nefarious type of mind programming being done, and there is a strong chance many of these Influencers may have been formerly homeless.

What's interesting about the guy who refused to give the money, is he nearly acted the way I would word for word, including the part for him needing the $2! That would have been something I would've said, I would be like "So where's my $2 dollars buddy!?"

In all honesty, I would not have felt guilty or regretful afterwards with the $10K, and I'll tell you why. Even THAT is sketchy enough, and you just never know if there could be an objective to do a "turncoat" action and actually get you robbed by trying to claim you stole their money.

That's probably also why the guy who gave the $20 was so reluctant at first as well.

Comments

  1. Initially I would have felt hard done by, missing out on the 10K. However your explanation is priceless, most of the time it is a scam and that 10K could easily come with a turncoat action. No one actually gives 10K away for free. Even if it was YouTube monetisation money, the odds are like winning the lottery so its better to just save the 2 bucks and deprive these beggars. Also the elite could easily be using these videos to program people to be extra generous.

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  2. Something about generosity that I find very interesting is that it is only a male expectation to be generous. Also it is expected to occur for people towards ones parents and grandparents. Generosity is never expected to be women paying for men or adults and elders paying for children. Finally, the woke mob have even infiltrated generosity to the point where it can even now be a racial thing. White people expected to pay for blacks due to the ‘white privilege lie’.

    So yet again young white men dealing with the high expectations from society, whilst receiving no benefit from society.

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    Replies
    1. @Kyle, Indeed, and those are some EXCELLENT points.

      The problem with it all is that it all creates a whirlwind of emotions, that whole scenario when it is still all an act. It's designed to manipulate people's perceptions and to make them feel compelled to "think twice" before saying "No", especially in a highly predatory world we now live in.

      This is how Social Media Influencers are further chipping away at our lives and making everything worse, and even with $10,000 Dollars to kill for a stupid pointless entertainment stunt, all to try to prove a "moral point"

      Delete
    2. @PSA it just further proves that women are the privileged gender. I can now easily see how everything I done for my family wouldn’t have been asked for had I had been a woman, and I can imagine your life is the same.

      Delete
  3. Weird how I seem to catch your posts seconds/minutes after you publish them. These types of videos PISS ME THE FUCK OFF (good chance it’s also scripted) and then the guy who won 10000 wouldn’t even take it although I do guess it’s suspicious and you’d wonder where he got the money from. The worst ones are the guys giving money to the homeless and just HAD to film themselves, absolute narcissism to the core. I remember seeing a video (may have been the same guy as the one here) pretending to have only a few dollars and asking if they can do some I guess “special order” to give him just a pizza with no cheese and sauce or something along the lines of that because he’s just so starving and poor. And then he puts sad melancholic piano music and tries to make everyone feel bad for him. I’m glad that atleast that time people were calling out his bullshit. And if I remember correctly, it was right before the place closes so he would just be holding back the staff and making them work overtime on an order that isn’t even on their menu. Complete dickhead move

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    Replies
    1. @zikeKEK, Then there's always that "slight" chance that the guy who gave the $20 was also an actor and might have been told to take the $10,000K which might even be monopoly cash, who knows, but regardless he would've even gotten paid something to play the act, so the fact is these people are heavily destroying our lives.

      I feel bad for the first guy though who legitimately looks like he had a tough life and yet was made to feel guilt in it, I'm pretty sure 100% that the guy has been taken advantage of for being kind in the past, you can just see it all over him.

      Delete
    2. mothafucka even if it was something like “can you spare a penny” he doesn’t have to give ANYTHING. It’s rude and disrespectful to be minding your own business and then some spastic comes up and starts pestering you for money and on top of that actually turns out to be filming you the whole time and puts you on blast online for millions to see. All these people are just “do-gooders”. Even the people in the comments don’t show ANY empathy whatsoever for the guy who refused to give him money. They just want to be seen as kind rather than actually show any.

      Delete
    3. @zikeKEK, Correct.

      It's on a very rare Blue Moon that I ever give anyone spare change. It all comes down to their approach, since I detect things from their energy and also whether they seem authentic or not. I probably have not given anything to someone in well over 8 years at this point, I gave someone $5 who seemed to be in dire straits, no "funky" personalities.

      But it's not a practice I engage in frequently, I've maybe done it no more than for about 10 people ever in my lifetime.

      And these current times, I'd be apt to not give them even a single penny for the most part.

      I even have Women who try to come up to me and bum money off of me, one girl who looked like the trashiest white whore ever asked me for "50 cents", and I go, "Do you even think you are worth 50 cents!?"

      She goes, "Well, I kinda like to think I'm worth more than that..."

      Delete
  4. PSS, over 90 percent of those types of videos are staged ...

    This one was too...

    I can tell by how relaxed the dead beat was, and the bad acting by the nerd. ...and the money is clearly fake.

    😂

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    Replies
    1. @Joey Aragon,

      Sure seems like it, because who would have a cash wad all clean and uncirculated like that? It did look fake from the distance.

      Indeed most of the videos end up being staged, it's just the horrible thing is the idea they pass down in this dumb shit. The influencers definitely have an agenda with it.

      Delete
    2. Of course, they want instant fame and take our money.

      I just shit downy social media again...it dumbs down and is demonjewdemonic.

      Delete

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