The only political message I have

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This situation has just been so god damn abstract from the beginning. Now we're at the point where the fake news MSM is rolling with this tall tale while there is yet to be 100%-without-a-doubt definitive proof that Byuu is dead and not merely in DFE/hiding from the world.

The Farms has already had to deal with a few days of DDOS and a holy crusade from internet lumpenproles, and this sort of attention by the MSM is quite a bit of an escalation. I actually like it here on the Farms that it would be a royal morale killer if TPTB start going after this place to bring it down for good... all for a possible lie.
 
Does MSM really think that you're ever going to provide a legitimate answer after March 2019? Or are they just doing this so they can vilify you more by claiming, "Joshua Moon failed to comment."?
 
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Reactions: Dork Of Ages
guys, Near just contacted me on AOL Messenger to tell me that he is very much alive, and actually loves Null and the Kiwi Farms. He has asked that the harassment of this true and honest site be stopped, and additionally stated that USA Today is a propaganda rag for mouthbreathers. I will not be taking any further questions.
 
"Sorry, I've never been able to smile."
https://twitter.com/near_koukai/status/1408940057235312640/photo/1
1627191961719.png


Byuu, this you?
 
I love how the latest hit piece on the farms is hidden behind a paywall so all most people ever see is the headline. I honestly don't care if the dipshit is alive or dead. There are 7 billion people on this Earth. If that journo really wanted a hard hitting story, they'd have written about the children dying of starvation in DR Congo and CAR.

Don't know those abbreviations? Neither do the "journalists" writing about David Binder's unconfirmed death.
Unfortunately, you can see it for free on Yahoo News.
 

>Kiwi Farms' founder Josh Moon posted a statement on his site denying responsibility, and noted in an email to USA TODAY that "there is no evidence of any harassment."

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There is still no evidence this person is dead, and there's actually some evidence he's still alive.

The only thing I want every single person to learn from using this website is to TRUST NOBODY. The government, universities, and journalists all lie - either covertly, overtly, or through omission. When you read something, you must internalize that it is written by a fleshbag just like you and they have a motivation for what they're writing. They are trying to imprint something on your playdough brain and no matter how impartial they're trying to be, they are going to process what they say through their own interpretation of reality.

If you can't independently verify something, it conjecture. It doesn't matter if it's a respected publication, government agency, or university stating it. It's bullshit unless you can prove it yourself.

This is extremely dangerous to our democracy.
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And thats why i live under a rock trusting no one not even the Youtube. The only time i go out is to buy video games and if someone looks at me i yell at them and run away back under my rock. Donate money or even a manual typewriter for your only hope for a future.
 
A little tidbit on the Journo that e-mailed Jersh, specifically omitted 90% of his statement, and wrote the article using @Wayne Beckett as her sole credible source for the entire debacle:

CDAqgFSq_400x400.jpeg


Alia E. Dastagir
09/09/1983 (Age 39)
22 Wells Ln, Stony Brook, NY 11790 (Sold for $1.9 million in 2019)


Alia Dastagir has worked at USA TODAY for nearly eight years, beginning on the audience team where she helped drive innovative storytelling and presentation. She transitioned to a full-time reporter role covering cultural issues on topics ranging from sexism and racism to media ethics and mental health.

As expected, her beat is primarily mental health, racism, and sexism. She has no education whatsoever in mental health, and her master's degree is in journalism. Some previous articles by her include:

The imaginary predator in America's transgender bathroom war

Young, transgender and fighting a years-long battle against suicidal thoughts

LGBTQ Definitions every good ally should know

You're sexist. And so am I.




Thank you Alia, very cool
 
Japanese police won’t reveal any personal information, especially information related to a death, unless connected to a major crime. Even then, family permission needs to be given to ID victims. See the recent Samigahara murders. Not all victims were named.

Death certificate information can only be requested by family or next of kin. There are no public obituaries.


Sperg all you want, but the fact of the matter is Japan is very different from western countries with regards to this type of stuff.

Doesnt this also imply its also hard for a dude on Hong Kong to claim Near killed himself?
 
A little tidbit on the Journo that e-mailed Jersh, specifically omitted 90% of his statement, and wrote the article using @Wayne Beckett as her sole credible source for the entire debacle:

CDAqgFSq_400x400.jpeg


Alia E. Dastagir
09/09/1983 (Age 39)
22 Wells Ln, Stony Brook, NY 11790 (Sold for $1.9 million in 2019)


Alia Dastagir has worked at USA TODAY for nearly eight years, beginning on the audience team where she helped drive innovative storytelling and presentation. She transitioned to a full-time reporter role covering cultural issues on topics ranging from sexism and racism to media ethics and mental health.

As expected, her beat is primarily mental health, racism, and sexism. She has no education whatsoever in mental health, and her master's degree is in journalism. Some previous articles by her include:

The imaginary predator in America's transgender bathroom war

Young, transgender and fighting a years-long battle against suicidal thoughts

LGBTQ Definitions every good ally should know

You're sexist. And so am I.




Thank you Alia, very cool

I legit thought that was Blaire White.
 
Very disturbing that not a single "journalist" has written about how Byuu's death has never been confirmed or do engage in actual journalism and try to find out for themselves. In a just world the careers of these people would be purged.
At first I didn't care if the guy really killed himself or not (I'd never heard of him previously), but after all this fallout I'm now genuinely curious - simply because the most amusing outcome would be if he hadn't killed himself at all, and these histrionics were all for nothing.

So yeah, it's a bit disappointing to get article after article written about how evil the farms is, without even getting the payoff that we find out some genuinely new information about the "suicide". Can't these journalists make some calls or something? I dunno, don't they usually talk to the police, ask them for a statement, that kind of thing?

Personally, I'm pretty sure he's faking. The giveaway was that shit about his friend on the phone hearing that one song, the very song that Near had previously said he would be playing when he killed himself. Dun dun dun!

That's not shit people do when they commit suicide. It's what people with a "romantic" idea of suicide thinks people do.
 
A little tidbit on the Journo that e-mailed Jersh, specifically omitted 90% of his statement, and wrote the article using @Wayne Beckett as her sole credible source for the entire debacle:

CDAqgFSq_400x400.jpeg


Alia E. Dastagir
09/09/1983 (Age 39)
22 Wells Ln, Stony Brook, NY 11790 (Sold for $1.9 million in 2019)


Alia Dastagir has worked at USA TODAY for nearly eight years, beginning on the audience team where she helped drive innovative storytelling and presentation. She transitioned to a full-time reporter role covering cultural issues on topics ranging from sexism and racism to media ethics and mental health.

As expected, her beat is primarily mental health, racism, and sexism. She has no education whatsoever in mental health, and her master's degree is in journalism. Some previous articles by her include:

The imaginary predator in America's transgender bathroom war

Young, transgender and fighting a years-long battle against suicidal thoughts

LGBTQ Definitions every good ally should know

You're sexist. And so am I.




Thank you Alia, very cool
At least she's a real woman.
 
Doesnt this also imply its also hard for a dude on Hong Kong to claim Near killed himself?

The way this is possible is if the person in Hong Kong was listed as his next of kin or emergency contact. Usually, when renting a property and when registering with your company, you have to designate an emergency contact, which can be overseas.

Very disturbing that not a single "journalist" has written about how Byuu's death has never been confirmed or do engage in actual journalism and try to find out for themselves. In a just world the careers of these people would be purged.

So yeah, it's a bit disappointing to get article after article written about how evil the farms is, without even getting the payoff that we find out some genuinely new information about the "suicide". Can't these journalists make some calls or something? I dunno, don't they usually talk to the police, ask them for a statement, that kind of thing?

As I’ve stated before, unless connected to a crime or a high profile incident, police will not speak about random deaths — especially to journalists. Journalists in Japan really do not have a lot of the access to government officials or police like they do in other countries.
 
That's not shit people do when they commit suicide. It's what people with a "romantic" idea of suicide thinks people do.
Just to tack on here, the reason you can lock someone in a psych ward for the 72 hour involuntary hold and when they get out don't immediately try to kill themselves is part if that.

This doesn't really apply to people with chronic physical conditions or shit like schizophrenia because the mindset is different, but normally when someone is going to kill themselves from psychological issues whether it's a response to bullying or extreme depression there is almost always a very small window of them being actively suicidal. You've probably heard the term "suicidal ideation" which is when someone thinks of killing themselves, usually without a plan. Some do create a plan though and when they pass into the actively suicidal mindset they'll carry it out quite mechanically without much fuss since the potential of getting stopped is the opposite of what they want.

The point I'm making is in someone who is killing themselves over the shit Byuu claimed the window for actually acting on their part tends to be very, very small and its why intervention in them is effective. The amount of time that passed with his emails to Null making the threat then deciding to do it does not match up with that pattern you see in almost all others.

Moreover, there are definitely people who end up psych hospitals for suicide attempts who did it for attention or a cry for help and their attempts are always really stupid and over the top with the method chosen incapable of killing a mouse.

TLDR: Byuu's pattern of behavior that night doesn't line up with how bullied/depressed people off themselves. Which likely means he was either suffering actual mental illness and it had nothing to with the Farms or his bitch ass is alive.
 
Nope. The Lancet ran that article early in Covid where the data was made up. It was about hydroxychloroquine showing no benefit. The fuckers were paid by every high priced pharmaceutical company on the vaccine maker list. The Lancet took 3 weeks to retract the article but by then the US et al had already banned its use for treatment based on that fucking article.

I could give similar examples involving the other journals you mentioned, but I think I made my point. Science is political now.

Lancet retraction

Retracted too late article

Edited to specify links.
I agree that even with the other available data (switzerland being an especially visible case where covid death rates in hospitals fell while hydroxychloroquine was administered) wrong political decisions were made on fudged data published too soon. It was retracted after a couple of weeks though (not a long timespan in science if there isn't a pandemic going on) when third party peer review requested by the lancet was refused data access - the fact that after conceding that a fuckup during peer review happened, politics did not react accordingly is retarded, but on the side of politics rather than academia. I don't think the fact that journals retract articles after another verification attempt fails to confirm the datas validity is a strike against trustworthiness (not retracting it or not checking would be) - it just indicates that no system is 100 percent impervious to tampering.
Otherwise it'd be akin to saying - Ford found a fault in the brake system of car X on second inspection. Cars are recalled and the model is shelved. Because Ford issued a recall after a 2nd inspection and did not find fault at first, Ford is not trustworthy, ever.
 
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