12 Comments

What a wonderful illustration and analogy! I think of the egg as "hatching" something...like election results. The election results I have looked at sure look "hatched." The woman I have worked with doesn't like when I describe "voters going to convenience centers to vote" as cheap extras in a movie production. She tells me that we want people to vote. The point of all this work is not to stay in the squirrel cage forever, isn't it? Thank you. There are too many people who want to smooth things over and tinker with "passing a bill" to stop the ugly talk about illegitimate elections. Mercifully, you are not one of them. Merry Christmas. You are a Star!

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Thank you Andrew, love the images that open these articles too. I wonder if algo affects MN as well, imagine so... one wonders whether ERIC has anything to do with it, or if that is separate.

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ill say it again....thank you.

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“The difference is that there is a reason to open a cantaloupe, to eat it. What is the reason to open the databases so that the algorithms can be used?”

Metaphorically speaking, to eat us.

In HG Wells’, War of the World’s, the alien invaders survived off of human blood, which eventually was the vehicle of their own destruction. The invaders of our election process—of this planet?—are out to control us.

Wells’ aliens were ‘ai’ dependent cyborgs, reliant on sophisticated machine technology for what was left of their physical bodies (mostly brain) to exist. Eliminate the Fabergé

algorithms and the machines they tentacle to. For now, put the process back into human hands.

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Let s see the rinos ( who won’t fight for Americans) were content to lose 4 senatorial races and maybe 7 house seats to large amounts of mail in votes seems to me the whole purpose of the algorithms is select our government not elect it

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Great analogy. I also like the analogy that Claude came up with -- It's like finding a secret door hidden in the back of your bank vault. Your first concern is whether it's being used to steal money, but you'd have to wonder why the heck it is there in the first place.

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Where was that particular analogy by Claude?

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I was wondering anbout that also. I remember making that analogy myself. Claude may have referenced it in part of a conversation I excerpted, making it look like it came from Claude. OTOH, I remember Claude coming up with a couple of good analogies on its own.

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Haha... Can't help but feel that we're staring into the future... i.e. Did I say/think that or did AI. Then again, staring into the future is something you know a lot about 🤠

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I can't top the other comments. Great analogy. Keep talking. Soon the globalist takeover will be exposed.

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I’m going to have to look up what a Fabergé egg is. The first thing that came to mind when I heard the egg word were those pantyhose commercials around the time of the bicentennial (like this one):

https://youtu.be/L-36tP6eFcU

Of course, those have nothing to do with melons.

Or 𝙙𝙤 they?

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I looked it up:

A **Fabergé egg** is a luxurious decorative egg created by the Russian jeweler Peter Carl Fabergé. These eggs are renowned for their exquisite craftsmanship and intricate designs, often made from precious materials like gold, silver, and gemstones.

### Key Features:

- **Historical Significance**: The most famous Fabergé eggs were made for the Russian Tsars as Easter gifts for their wives and mothers during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

- **Surprise Inside**: Each egg typically contains a hidden surprise, such as a miniature object or a piece of jewelry.

- **Artistic Style**: Fabergé eggs often feature elaborate designs, including enamel work, intricate carvings, and detailed motifs inspired by nature, architecture, and history.

### Notable Examples:

- **Imperial Eggs**: The most famous are the Imperial Fabergé eggs, commissioned by Tsar Alexander III and later by his son Nicholas II. There are only 50 known Imperial eggs in existence.

Today, Fabergé eggs are considered masterpieces of decorative art and are highly sought after by collectors.

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