Anonymous
(ID: oIonniVX)
11/10/2025, 1:03:26 AM
No.521019511
>>521009341
>How is it possible that so many people have varying accounts of certain things.
Easy. People's memories are flawed, and they reinforce it by joining echo chambers that enable their delusions.
I don't mean to be a buzzkill. Mandela effect is a really intriguing concept, and I went down that rabbit hole for awhile. But none of it holds up under any scrutiny. Everybody thinks their memory is flawless and they can't possibly have misremembered something from when they were 5 years old.
Let's take this for example
>>Darth Vader never said "Luke, I am your father". (THIS ONE ESPECIALLY BOTHERS ME BECAUSE MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND WAS CALLED LUKE AND EVERYONE USED TO SAY "LUKE I AM YOUR FATHER" TO HIM)
People did say this, but it was never in the movie. This was part of pop culture before the internet was a thing, so people couldn't easily access clips and were quoting it to eachother based on memory of what they saw in the theater. Also, without adding "Luke" the line doesn't make much sense out of context, this just makes it clear what you're referencing. That's all it is.
>How is it possible that so many people have varying accounts of certain things.
Easy. People's memories are flawed, and they reinforce it by joining echo chambers that enable their delusions.
I don't mean to be a buzzkill. Mandela effect is a really intriguing concept, and I went down that rabbit hole for awhile. But none of it holds up under any scrutiny. Everybody thinks their memory is flawless and they can't possibly have misremembered something from when they were 5 years old.
Let's take this for example
>>Darth Vader never said "Luke, I am your father". (THIS ONE ESPECIALLY BOTHERS ME BECAUSE MY CHILDHOOD FRIEND WAS CALLED LUKE AND EVERYONE USED TO SAY "LUKE I AM YOUR FATHER" TO HIM)
People did say this, but it was never in the movie. This was part of pop culture before the internet was a thing, so people couldn't easily access clips and were quoting it to eachother based on memory of what they saw in the theater. Also, without adding "Luke" the line doesn't make much sense out of context, this just makes it clear what you're referencing. That's all it is.