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"content": "In light of the recent Destiny drama or whatever where his orbiter streamer e-girl is looking to collect $1M from him to pay for her law school, and all of the other Destiny orbiters snaked on Destiny, I feel like the best thing to say about the situation is this:<br><br>This is a cautionary tale of how you can only go so far online by "debatebroing" people in an "ends-justify-the-means" Machiavellian tactics kind of way without 1) making some actual friends; and 2) learning the ironclad rules about operating socially and keeping your money and reputation in tact.<br><br>Destiny thought brute-forcing his way through every conversation was enough "to win", but, in doing so, he's collected an ever-growing portion of his audience and "community" who feel jilted in some way and otherwise harbor some resentment for him. Maybe all of these current headwinds he's experiencing will come to pass, but it may also be that they don't, and it may come to the point where "the haters" will come to strip everything he has from him through very real big boy lawsuits.<br><br>Maybe I'm wrong here and this moment in time is just a passing one for Destiny, but the amount of uproar about this whole affair in the tangential online spaces that discuss Destiny and the greater e-celeb world lead me to believe that this may be the beginning of the end of Destiny's reign as the leading "free speech warrior of the people" in the online politics arena, and this may indeed be the killshot that forces him out of the "virality arena", to instead be relegated to a future of Internet irrelevance, serving to only captivate Cable TV boomers with tired and advertiser-friendly takes pre-constructed for him by whoever his future right-wing talk show handlers' writing room designates.<br><br>Lessons to learn from this for anyone who would ever have an interest in expressing opinions online for money in a meaningful way:<br><br>1) Don't be a retarded shitlib.<br>2) Own what you say.<br>3) Don't have women, and especially a slew of women, be a part of your associated act online.<br>4) Don't engage in the types of content online where you think you control the narrative but you kind of actually don't, and where things can boil over and get out of hand pretty quickly.<br><br>I've actually been very impressed in reviewing Destiny content the past few years of how he can actually defend any position / make about any argument very well. People won't usually give him this credit, but I will. He uses slimeball tactics to get there, but he gets the job done, and can hypnotize any midwit probably even better than any mainstream alternative. <br><br>I've also been impressed with how he does just brute-force his way through spots where many others would've given up or issued empty online apologies and all that. There is a certain level of respect given to just the unapologetic grit and honesty of just marching through and humiliating your opposition through a well-placed snarky one-liner.<br><br>But you can't debatebro the judge, and at this point, I think Destiny is being forced to confront that reality. <br><br>Assuming this whole affair was real and not some kind of coordinated cloutfest by all parties involved (which it certainly well may still be-- we don't know for certain), this is a good time to reflect on how what you say online can be permanent and DOES NOT read back as well from a biased prosecutor in a court of law as it did when you feverishly spat it out in verbal or text format online to get an "own" by potentially compromising your reputation or making yourself vulnerable to attack later on if an opportunistic a-log wanted to take you on down the line.<br><br>All this to say, the Internet is a place where you CAN express your thoughts well and you CAN make a shit ton of money, but every action has at least one vulnerability, so you better learn to shore those up, or otherwise the day will come where others are going to see you as a fat pile of cash to take from. Destiny may be finding this out presently.",
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"content": "In light of the recent Destiny drama or whatever where his orbiter streamer e-girl is looking to collect $1M from him to pay for her law school, and all of the other Destiny orbiters snaked on Destiny, I feel like the best thing to say about the situation is this:<br><br>This is a cautionary tale of how you can only go so far online by "debatebroing" people in an "ends-justify-the-means" Machiavellian tactics kind of way without 1) making some actual friends; and 2) learning the ironclad rules about operating socially and keeping your money and reputation in tact.<br><br>Destiny thought brute-forcing his way through every conversation was enough "to win", but, in doing so, he's collected an ever-growing portion of his audience and "community" who feel jilted in some way and otherwise harbor some resentment for him. Maybe all of these current headwinds he's experiencing will come to pass, but it may also be that they don't, and it may come to the point where "the haters" will come to strip everything he has from him through very real big boy lawsuits.<br><br>Maybe I'm wrong here and this moment in time is just a passing one for Destiny, but the amount of uproar about this whole affair in the tangential online spaces that discuss Destiny and the greater e-celeb world lead me to believe that this may be the beginning of the end of Destiny's reign as the leading "free speech warrior of the people" in the online politics arena, and this may indeed be the killshot that forces him out of the "virality arena", to instead be relegated to a future of Internet irrelevance, serving to only captivate Cable TV boomers with tired and advertiser-friendly takes pre-constructed for him by whoever his future right-wing talk show handlers' writing room designates.<br><br>Lessons to learn from this for anyone who would ever have an interest in expressing opinions online for money in a meaningful way:<br><br>1) Don't be a retarded shitlib.<br>2) Own what you say.<br>3) Don't have women, and especially a slew of women, be a part of your associated act online.<br>4) Don't engage in the types of content online where you think you control the narrative but you kind of actually don't, and where things can boil over and get out of hand pretty quickly.<br><br>I've actually been very impressed in reviewing Destiny content the past few years of how he can actually defend any position / make about any argument very well. People won't usually give him this credit, but I will. He uses slimeball tactics to get there, but he gets the job done, and can hypnotize any midwit probably better than even than any mainstream alternative. <br><br>I've also been impressed with how he does just brute-force his way through spots where many others would've given up or issued empty online apologies and all that. There is a certain level of respect given to just the unapologetic grit and honesty of just marching through and humiliating your opposition through a well-placed snarky one-liner.<br><br>But you can't debatebro the judge, and at this point, I think Destiny is being forced to confront that reality. <br><br>Assuming this whole affair was real and not some kind of coordinated cloutfest by all parties involved (which it certainly well may still be-- we don't know for certain), this is a good time to reflect on how what you say online can be permanent and DOES NOT read back as well from a biased prosecutor in a court of law as it did when you feverishly spat it out in verbal or text format online to get an "own" by potentially compromising your reputation or making yourself vulnerable to attack later on if an opportunistic a-log wanted to take you on down the line.<br><br>All this to say, the Internet is a place where you CAN express your thoughts well and you CAN make a shit ton of money, but every action has at least one vulnerability, so you better learn to shore those up, or otherwise the day will come where others are going to see you as a fat pile of cash to take from. Destiny may be finding this out presently.",
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"content": "In light of the recent Destiny drama or whatever where his orbiter streamer e-girl is looking to collect $1M from him to pay for her law school, and all of the other Destiny orbiters snaked on Destiny, I feel like the best thing to say about the situation is this:\r\n\r\nThis is a cautionary tale of how you can only go so far online by \"debatebroing\" people in an \"ends-justify-the-means\" Machiavellian tactics kind of way without 1) making some actual friends; and 2) learning the ironclad rules about operating socially and keeping your money and reputation in tact.\r\n\r\nDestiny thought brute-forcing his way through every conversation was enough \"to win\", but, in doing so, he's collected an ever-growing portion of his audience and \"community\" who feel jilted in some way and otherwise harbor some resentment for him. Maybe all of these current headwinds he's experiencing will come to pass, but it may also be that they don't, and it may come to the point where \"the haters\" will come to strip everything he has from him through very real big boy lawsuits.\r\n\r\nMaybe I'm wrong here and this moment in time is just a passing one for Destiny, but the amount of uproar about this whole affair in the tangential online spaces that discuss Destiny and the greater e-celeb world lead me to believe that this may be the beginning of the end of Destiny's reign as the leading \"free speech warrior of the people\" in the online politics arena, and this may indeed be the killshot that forces him out of the \"virality arena\", to instead be relegated to a future of Internet irrelevance, serving to only captivate Cable TV boomers with tired and advertiser-friendly takes pre-constructed for him by whoever his future right-wing talk show handlers' writing room designates.\r\n\r\nLessons to learn from this for anyone who would ever have an interest in expressing opinions online for money in a meaningful way:\r\n\r\n1) Don't be a retarded shitlib.\r\n2) Own what you say.\r\n3) Don't have women, and especially a slew of women, be a part of your associated act online.\r\n4) Don't engage in the types of content online where you think you control the narrative but you kind of actually don't, and where things can boil over and get out of hand pretty quickly.\r\n\r\nI've actually been very impressed in reviewing Destiny content the past few years of how he can actually defend any position / make about any argument very well. People won't usually give him this credit, but I will. He uses slimeball tactics to get there, but he gets the job done, and can hypnotize any midwit probably better than even than any mainstream alternative. \r\n\r\nI've also been impressed with how he does just brute-force his way through spots where many others would've given up or issued empty online apologies and all that. There is a certain level of respect given to just the unapologetic grit and honesty of just marching through and humiliating your opposition through a well-placed snarky one-liner.\r\n\r\nBut you can't debatebro the judge, and at this point, I think Destiny is being forced to confront that reality. \r\n\r\nAssuming this whole affair was real and not some kind of coordinated cloutfest by all parties involved (which it certainly well may still be-- we don't know for certain), this is a good time to reflect on how what you say online can be permanent and DOES NOT read back as well from a biased prosecutor in a court of law as it did when you feverishly spat it out in verbal or text format online to get an \"own\" by potentially compromising your reputation or making yourself vulnerable to attack later on if an opportunistic a-log wanted to take you on down the line.\r\n\r\nAll this to say, the Internet is a place where you CAN express your thoughts well and you CAN make a shit ton of money, but every action has at least one vulnerability, so you better learn to shore those up, or otherwise the day will come where others are going to see you as a fat pile of cash to take from. Destiny may be finding this out presently.",
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"content": "In light of the recent Destiny drama or whatever where his orbiter streamer e-girl is looking to collect $1M from him to pay for her law school, and all of the other Destiny orbiters snaked on Destiny, I feel like the best thing to say about the situation is this:<br><br>This is a cautionary tale of how you can only go so far online by "debatebroing" people in an "ends-justify-the-means" Machiavellian tactics kind of way without 1) making some actual friends; and 2) learning the ironclad rules about operating socially and keeping your money and reputation in tact.<br><br>Destiny thought brute-forcing his way through every conversation was enough "to win", but, in doing so, he's collected an ever-growing portion of his audience and "community" who feel jilted in some way and otherwise harbor some resentment for him. Maybe all of these current headwinds he's experiencing will come to pass, but it may also be that they don't, and it may come to the point where "the haters" will come to strip everything he has from him through very real big boy lawsuits.<br><br>Maybe I'm wrong here and this moment in time is just a passing one for Destiny, but the amount of uproar about this whole affair in the tangential online spaces that discuss Destiny and the greater e-celeb world lead me to believe that this may be the beginning of the end of Destiny's reign as the leading "free speech warrior of the people" in the online politics arena, and this may indeed be the killshot that forces him out of the "virality arena", to instead be relegated to a future of Internet irrelevance, serving to only captivate Cable TV boomers with tired and advertiser-friendly takes pre-constructed for him by whoever his future right-wing talk show handlers' writing room designates.<br><br>Lessons to learn from this for anyone who would ever have an interest in expressing opinions online for money in a meaningful way:<br><br>1) Don't be a retarded shitlib.<br>2) Own what you say.<br>3) Don't have women, and especially a slew of women, be a part of your associated act online.<br>4) Don't engage in the types of content online where you think you control the narrative but you kind of actually don't, and where things get boil over and get out of hand pretty quickly.<br><br>I've actually been very impressed in reviewing Destiny content the past few years of how he can actually defend any position / make about any argument very well. People won't usually give him this credit, but I will. He uses slimeball tactics to get there, but he gets the job done, and can hypnotize any midwit probably better than even than any mainstream alternative. <br><br>I've also been impressed with how he does just brute-force his way through spots where many others would've given up or issued empty online apologies and all that. There is a certain level of respect given to just the unapologetic grit and honesty of just marching through and humiliating your opposition through a well-placed snarky one-liner.<br><br>But you can't debatebro the judge, and at this point, I think Destiny is being forced to confront that reality. <br><br>Assuming this whole affair was real and not some kind of coordinated cloutfest by all parties involved (which it certainly well may still be-- we don't know for certain), this is a good time to reflect on how what you say online can be permanent and DOES NOT read back as well from a biased prosecutor in a court of law as it did when you feverishly spat it out in verbal or text format online to get an "own" by potentially compromising your reputation or making yourself vulnerable to attack later on if an opportunistic a-log wanted to take you on down the line.<br><br>All this to say, the Internet is a place where you CAN express your thoughts well and you CAN make a shit ton of money, but every action has at least one vulnerability, so you better learn to shore those up, or otherwise the day will come where others are going to see you as a fat pile of cash to take from. Destiny may be finding this out presently.",
"context": "https://clubcyberia.co/contexts/4486e0d2-5970-4aec-8491-5eeaadf65370",
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"content": "In light of the recent Destiny drama or whatever where his orbiter streamer e-girl is looking to collect $1M from him to pay for her law school, and all of the other Destiny orbiters snaked on Destiny, I feel like the best thing to say about the situation is this:\r\n\r\nThis is a cautionary tale of how you can only go so far online by \"debatebroing\" people in an \"ends-justify-the-means\" Machiavellian tactics kind of way without 1) making some actual friends; and 2) learning the ironclad rules about operating socially and keeping your money and reputation in tact.\r\n\r\nDestiny thought brute-forcing his way through every conversation was enough \"to win\", but, in doing so, he's collected an ever-growing portion of his audience and \"community\" who feel jilted in some way and otherwise harbor some resentment for him. Maybe all of these current headwinds he's experiencing will come to pass, but it may also be that they don't, and it may come to the point where \"the haters\" will come to strip everything he has from him through very real big boy lawsuits.\r\n\r\nMaybe I'm wrong here and this moment in time is just a passing one for Destiny, but the amount of uproar about this whole affair in the tangential online spaces that discuss Destiny and the greater e-celeb world lead me to believe that this may be the beginning of the end of Destiny's reign as the leading \"free speech warrior of the people\" in the online politics arena, and this may indeed be the killshot that forces him out of the \"virality arena\", to instead be relegated to a future of Internet irrelevance, serving to only captivate Cable TV boomers with tired and advertiser-friendly takes pre-constructed for him by whoever his future right-wing talk show handlers' writing room designates.\r\n\r\nLessons to learn from this for anyone who would ever have an interest in expressing opinions online for money in a meaningful way:\r\n\r\n1) Don't be a retarded shitlib.\r\n2) Own what you say.\r\n3) Don't have women, and especially a slew of women, be a part of your associated act online.\r\n4) Don't engage in the types of content online where you think you control the narrative but you kind of actually don't, and where things get boil over and get out of hand pretty quickly.\r\n\r\nI've actually been very impressed in reviewing Destiny content the past few years of how he can actually defend any position / make about any argument very well. People won't usually give him this credit, but I will. He uses slimeball tactics to get there, but he gets the job done, and can hypnotize any midwit probably better than even than any mainstream alternative. \r\n\r\nI've also been impressed with how he does just brute-force his way through spots where many others would've given up or issued empty online apologies and all that. There is a certain level of respect given to just the unapologetic grit and honesty of just marching through and humiliating your opposition through a well-placed snarky one-liner.\r\n\r\nBut you can't debatebro the judge, and at this point, I think Destiny is being forced to confront that reality. \r\n\r\nAssuming this whole affair was real and not some kind of coordinated cloutfest by all parties involved (which it certainly well may still be-- we don't know for certain), this is a good time to reflect on how what you say online can be permanent and DOES NOT read back as well from a biased prosecutor in a court of law as it did when you feverishly spat it out in verbal or text format online to get an \"own\" by potentially compromising your reputation or making yourself vulnerable to attack later on if an opportunistic a-log wanted to take you on down the line.\r\n\r\nAll this to say, the Internet is a place where you CAN express your thoughts well and you CAN make a shit ton of money, but every action has at least one vulnerability, so you better learn to shore those up, or otherwise the day will come where others are going to see you as a fat pile of cash to take from. Destiny may be finding this out presently.",
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"content": "In light of the recent Destiny drama or whatever where his orbiter streamer e-girl is looking to collect $1M from him to pay for her law school, and all of the other Destiny orbiters snaked on Destiny, I feel like the best thing to say about the situation is this:\r\n\r\nThis is a cautionary tale of how you can only go so far online by \"debatebroing\" people in an \"ends-justify-the-means\" Machiavellian tactics kind of way without 1) making some actual friends; and 2) learning the ironclad rules about operating socially and keeping your money and reputation in tact.\r\n\r\nDestiny thought brute-forcing his way through every conversation was enough \"to win\", but, in doing so, he's collected an ever-growing portion of his audience and \"community\" who feel jilted in some way and otherwise harbor some resentment for him. Maybe all of these current headwinds he's experiencing will come to pass, but it may also be that they don't, and it may come to the point where \"the haters\" will come to strip everything he has from him through very real big boy lawsuits.\r\n\r\nMaybe I'm wrong here and this moment in time is just a passing one for Destiny, but the amount of uproar about this whole affair in the tangential online spaces that discuss Destiny and the greater e-celeb world lead me to believe that this may be the beginning of the end of Destiny's reign as the leading \"free speech warrior of the people\" in the online politics arena, and this may indeed be the killshot that forces him out of the \"virality arena\", to instead be relegated to a future of Internet irrelevance, serving to only captivate Cable TV boomers with tired and advertiser-friendly takes pre-constructed for him by whoever his future right-wing talk show handlers' writing room designates.\r\n\r\nLessons to learn from this for anyone who would ever have an interest in expressing opinions online for money in a meaningful way:\r\n\r\n1) Don't be a retarded shitlib.\r\n2) Own what you say.\r\n3) Don't have women, and especially a slew of women, be a part of your associated act online.\r\n4) Don't engage in the types of content online where you think you control the narrative but you kind of actually don't, and where things can boil over and get out of hand pretty quickly.\r\n\r\nI've actually been very impressed in reviewing Destiny content the past few years of how he can actually defend any position / make about any argument very well. People won't usually give him this credit, but I will. He uses slimeball tactics to get there, but he gets the job done, and can hypnotize any midwit probably even better than any mainstream alternative. \r\n\r\nI've also been impressed with how he does just brute-force his way through spots where many others would've given up or issued empty online apologies and all that. There is a certain level of respect given to just the unapologetic grit and honesty of just marching through and humiliating your opposition through a well-placed snarky one-liner.\r\n\r\nBut you can't debatebro the judge, and at this point, I think Destiny is being forced to confront that reality. \r\n\r\nAssuming this whole affair was real and not some kind of coordinated cloutfest by all parties involved (which it certainly well may still be-- we don't know for certain), this is a good time to reflect on how what you say online can be permanent and DOES NOT read back as well from a biased prosecutor in a court of law as it did when you feverishly spat it out in verbal or text format online to get an \"own\" by potentially compromising your reputation or making yourself vulnerable to attack later on if an opportunistic a-log wanted to take you on down the line.\r\n\r\nAll this to say, the Internet is a place where you CAN express your thoughts well and you CAN make a shit ton of money, but every action has at least one vulnerability, so you better learn to shore those up, or otherwise the day will come where others are going to see you as a fat pile of cash to take from. Destiny may be finding this out presently.",
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