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some points were made.This is a hell of a read.
It's an unfortunate fact that conspiracies do occasionally exist in reality.Out of curiosity, how do we know the exfiltration was real? Would anyone put it past this administration to parade someone out in front of cameras claiming to be the missing soldier? I'm not saying that's what happened, but I don't trust anything coming from this administration and I like to see independent verification.
I’ve never liked games where you play the villain.Um, can we, like, eject this game or something and plug in a different one. This game sucks.
Guess you didn't like Plague, Inc.I’ve never liked games where you play the villain.
Is that Intel or projection?
Oh, I'm sure the operation happened. But how many people would know if the person was actually rescued?It's an unfortunate fact that conspiracies do occasionally exist in reality.
It is a very fortunate fact that, of the historical conspiracies that we've studied, the number of participants "in on the conspiracy" has typically been less than six, and rarely if ever number greater than a dozen. The real world fact is that conspiracies with greater numbers of participants almost universally collapse under their own weight with that many participants.
So the key litmus test we should all apply when asking ourselves these sort of questions is "how many people would need to be in on it for this to be true". My guess is that for a large SAR operation it would number in the thousands, so if there was some hanky panky going on here I would expect that we'd all hear about it sooner rather than later.