• @BenVimes@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    The most profoundly puzzling thing to me is their insistence that magic words will somehow make authorities back off.

    Like, they believe that there is this grand conspiracy involving the Federal Reserve and maritime law and birth names and whatever else. And yet they also believe that the forces behind this conspiracy must acquiesce if you just invoke the right language.

    Do they never consider that an entity powerful enough to do all that could also just ignore their demands? Like, even if the conspiracy is true, why would its perpetrators just give up because some random person told them to?

    • Dadd Volante
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      4010 months ago

      Check out The Freemen. This is pretty much where this stuff came from, whackos in Montana during the 90s who pulled off the longest standoff with the FBI in American history (may have changed since).

      They had their own currency (which some locals would actually accept), and they were very, very good at painting themselves as innocent victims.

      I believe that because of them and other groups like The Montana Militia are one of the prime influences for this movement.

    • @hanekam@lemmy.world
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      1410 months ago

      It’s the same impulse that made medieval people believe they could defend themselves from fairies and demons by saying the right things the right way. Some part of the insanity demands that a person who sees through the illusion can somehow win against the evil conspirators

    • lad
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      710 months ago

      My guess would be that by using the right words they pretend to be part of that power, because how else would one tell apart the laymen and true sovereign citizens.

      Don’t know if that even has anything in common with what they say their reasons are, that’s too crazy to read 😅