The Forum > General Discussion > Mandela Effect + Multiculturalism: Changing the Past to Match the Future
Mandela Effect + Multiculturalism: Changing the Past to Match the Future
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Posted by Shockadelic, Saturday, 2 June 2018 12:06:04 AM
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Doing a quick Google search on Medala Effect brought up a few out there theories. Time travel, multiple realities, or just bad memories and social media.
So with that in mind, if the effect is a real thing, then the theory that this is a world government social power struggle is not that strange a theory (I guess compaired to other theories). Here's a thought though. If the Medala effect is real, is there any reason to think it's linked to the politics of multiculturalism? And if so what does this change? Personally I don't think it's worth putting much concern into. A strange phenomon that might, or might not be real. How are we suppose to live our lives? In any way that's important in our lives, from ethics, time with family and friends, and going to work, I don't see this Mandela effect having much influence or being any danger. If it's real. Posted by Not_Now.Soon, Saturday, 2 June 2018 2:19:15 AM
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//Reptilians, the Matrix, witchcraft, tin-foil hatters, eating puppies,
Hitler and pretentious Latin to boot. You get a gold star for setting the pathetic cut-and-paste cliche record.// Is that your entire rebuttal? I use too many clichés? Good one, mate. //then the theory that this is a world government social power struggle is not that strange a theory// It's not a theory at all, NNS: it's wild speculation with no supporting evidence. //(I guess compaired to other theories).// False memory theories aren't strange theories, NNS. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_memory //A strange phenomon that might, or might not be real.// Oh, it's definitely real. I heard about it on a podcast I like a while ago, and they provided some examples. The classic example is the one it's named after: people incorrectly remembering Mandela's death in prison. I'd never heard of that one as a thing until then; I remembered Mandela being released from prison in the 1990's and dying well after 2000. But the second example they cited is one that gets me - and a lot of other people as well: we incorrectly remember the Monopoly man as wearing a monocle. He doesn't, he never has; but until I was told that he didn't, and checked for myself.... I could have sworn he did. There are some more good examples here. Have a go and see how many get you, it's fun. http://www.buzzfeed.com/christopherhudspeth/crazy-examples-of-the-mandela-effect-that-will-make-you-ques?utm_term=.nlWa1gRqd#.nkdyR6aWP So that's your Mandela effect right there. It's real enough, alright, and a mildly entertaining way to procrastinate. But incorrectly remembered film trivia as evidence of the New World Order tampering with the past? Pull the other one, it plays Colonel Bogey. Posted by Toni Lavis, Saturday, 2 June 2018 6:06:26 AM
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To TL.
The theory that the Mandela effect is just false memories is the most rational one I've seen, except it doesn't fit when combined with the point of the Mandela effect is noted because of it being shared false memories. The only way to make that theory fit is if we enter cultural media into the picture and have social networking get details wrong at a large enough scale that people remember it the wrong way. The problem is that even with this theory it's the most rationale but still doesn't fit the examples given in their observations of the effect. Mandela's death for instance can't be blamed for by the social media in Facebook or Instagram. The theories that try to make it fit more go on to wild and strange theories along the lines of multipal realities converging or something just as strange. In that light having government manipulation be the cause, (something that has been attempted probabley many times by many governments), doesn't seem so far fetched. But it doesn't mean that there's a tie between Mandela effects and government cover ups of corruption or some such thing. Or between the political pushes for loose national boundaries or simular things to the Mandela Effect. Either way though. I don't think there's a danger from the examples of false memory that are sited towards the Mandela effect. Nothing to point to a wide spread manipulation going on or something. But who knows. I'm willing to hear the argument to see if there's sufficient danger to show some concern. Posted by Not_Now.Soon, Saturday, 2 June 2018 7:40:44 AM
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An amusing shared false memory that I read about when studying the phenomenon of false memories as an undergraduate is the one involving the Woodstock festival. Millions of war babies and baby boomers remember being at the festival; far more than could have ever possibly attended. People who have never even been to the town can tell you in graphic what they did over those three days.
Posted by AJ Philips, Saturday, 2 June 2018 10:25:26 AM
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CERN must be opening links to alternate universes, because Lavis is from one.
A universe of honest and ethical governments that never conduct secret experiments and agendas. Particles can be quantum entangled across time and space. They become entangled through: physical interaction. What is CERN doing? Hundreds of thousands of particle collisions every second. For years now. And use quantum computers to analyse the results. Nothing to worry about there. Who is funding CERN? European governments. Who is pushing globalisation and multicultural immigration, despite the obvious detrimental effects on their own citizens? European governments. I'm sure those European governments expect no return on their billions invested in CERN. No, it's just out of the goodness of their hearts. Purely scientific enquiry. Aw, shucks. Makes me want to cuddle some kittens. Posted by Shockadelic, Saturday, 2 June 2018 12:26:08 PM
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Reptilians, the Matrix, witchcraft, tin-foil hatters, eating puppies,
Hitler and pretentious Latin to boot.
You get a gold star for setting the pathetic cut-and-paste cliche record.
I recommend your promotion to Second Assistant Regional Agent Subdivision 6F.