Fantasy fiction is a psyop

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I love how this schizophrenic rambling about magic being real and fantasy fiction being a psyop to hide it includes calling God "your magical best friend in the sky". People will believe in anything as long as it's not God :story:
Okay, I had to re-read the OP to see where I said that, and I want to note something:

I said Gods. Note the S at the end. As this was about fantasy novels I was referring to fantasy pantheons (and I believe at the time I was thinking of D&D Clerics and how they're "allowed" to channel their gods for specific effects).

It was not a commentary on God God, who is of course real, and could grant you magic if so desired, though its not the only way.
 
I said Gods. Note the S at the end.
It’s “gods” if it has an s, the g is only capitalized if you’re talking about the one true one. It’s still rambling nonsense that tries to equate a genre notorious for poor writing and petty escapism with conspiracy to obfuscate the existence of supernatural abilities.
 
It’s still rambling nonsense that tries to equate a genre notorious for poor writing and petty escapism with conspiracy to obfuscate the existence of supernatural abilities.
I did a lot of elaborating on Page Two, but put simply: I'm not all that serious on the "psyop" part--I honestly don't think such a psyop would even be possible without an immortal or a demon or somesuch behind it--but rather I'm more on the "magic is real but we've got so many wrong ideas about it that we don't see it when it happens."

And with the elaborations, there's shades of "we're also so disinclined to believe it that we'll even accept a silly but 'logical' explanation over anything supernatural or paranormal."

A story I often tell people is about this time when I was 12-15 (I forget the exact year) where I somehow produced a fifty dollar bill out of thin air. I have no idea how I did it, and whenever I tell this story people try to come up with explanations which.... well, to my memory, they don't make sense (they often involve someone just up and deciding to plant the fifty dollar bill and then act surprised when I mention it).

I'm working through my mind to figure out why this never worked a second time, or how to get other magical effects to occur.
 
either:

>author deliberately misrepresents whats happening in story
can work if the book is about fucking your state of mind ala kafka, but is INCREDIBLY shitty in a detective roman

or:

>hurr durr the witness said "he was running away"
>even tho the witness knew it was a woman

sidenote: trannies and "allies" often use "they" even tho they full well know that its either a man or a woman that is discussed, and everyone else as well, showing they are themselves confused as to when they should use normal pronouns, and when to force themselves to write artificial shit

or:

>detective is a retard who made assumption without asking for body figure
>which the author explains is because of the generic masculinum
>which is just the author forcing her deranged tranny speech into her fanfiction, making it a plot point even tho a believable detective wouldnt make that assumption, as he uses generic masculinum in his speech every day (detectives are very logical humans, they have to be)

a believable detective might just assume the murderer is a male due to sexism, or the method used (women dont tend to use brute force with blunt objects), this could make a good plot point

all of which are horrible writing


I am | you are | he/she/it is
we are | you are | they are
i count 7 pronouns

thats around the age that menses starts in white girls too
You are are used twice and thus count as one.

Even orks figured this out.
 
It’s “gods” if it has an s, the g is only capitalized if you’re talking about the one true one. It’s still rambling nonsense that tries to equate a genre notorious for poor writing and petty escapism with conspiracy to obfuscate the existence of supernatural abilities.
It's at least a halfway decent idea for a book or something, ironically.
 
the process should still have produced periods where the parent life form was not equipped to raise the child
You see this when we've spliced human NOVA1 into laboratory mammals. The NOVA1 mice, for instance, have massively increased vocal and linguistic capabilities, but if you put them in with a bunch of non-NOVA1 mice they don't have anyone to talk to and basically just do regular mouse stuff. If you mix in multiple NOVA1 mice, they will immediately identify each other and start socializing. And that's as far as the open literature tends to go, as there's probably some real Rats of NIMH shit that happens if you let NOVA1 mice breed and raise other NOVA1 mice.

Think for a moment how, not even a couple centuries ago, nearly all people were subsistence farmers who lived and died within walking distance of where they were born. We went from the Wright Brothers to Neil Armstrong in less than one human lifespan. Is it possble this current time is the first time this has ever happened? Sure. It's also possible it happens every few thousand years and we keep nuking ourselves back to the stone age. Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

Magic is just remnants of the previous technological age.
In a thousand years a wizened shaman will approach the ritual altar with the jealously guarded small flat obelisk carried by his sect. He will make a series of gestures across the impossibly smooth black face, bringing forth light from within, and speak the opening incantations from a long dead language: "Ok, Google..."

The demons and their sigils are the names and brands of nanobot utility fog that were popular in Atlantis.
 
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