Wednesday, February 28, 2024

A Long Overdue Visit to Nymville


My dear friends in Nymville missed me so much.  It’s been literally years since I talked about a Nym.

We’ve already covered a lot of the biggest celebrity Nyms.  The king and leader of the Nyms being the antonym, single handedly defeating the forces of gematria at the battle of Logical Reasoning by his mere existence.  Your battle tactics are pretty shoddy if you can find, often very easily, the opposite meaning for even a single word used as a single number.

I missed talking about one which we address today, inspired by the video recently viewed where three separate people had either avatars for the channel showing presumably themselves while wearing a mask and/or video presentations wearing a mask.  In Nymville they have no need to disguise what they are.  The community expert, Aptonym, has the standards under control.

It talks a lot of cojones to decide you are willing to put your actual name and face out there associated with dubious content.  Around the time the Alex Jones trials were first starting video was leaked of him (allegedly) wandering around his offices consuming liquor.  A lot of liquor.


For purposes of this post, let’s give the benefit of the doubt to poor Alex and assume this is faked to make him look bad when he’s just fine.  The price of celebrity is being constantly scrutinized and there’s always going to be someone looking to try to gain attention off your name and face.  We know what Alex Jones looks like.  He’s not trying to disguise it.  Name and face recognition is part of the theater, boldly going where no one should go.  If you’re trying to get donations or purchases of dubious products in your online store you don’t want the target audience to get the wrong website.  And there is even another real and out there Alex Jones, Welsh tv presenter Cassandra Alex Jones.  Although she goes by Alex it’s difficult to misidentify her as the raging lunatic Alex Jones in this story.

Not everybody has the psychological profile necessary to handle too much fame.  Since people are assholes some early positive feedback can get you more than you bargained for.  Imagine being married to a Bill Gates or Elon Musk.  Or Alex Jones. The perks of the money are nice.  But all the negative press, including deliberately fakery, is stressful.  Depression, disgust, divorce.  Celebrity relationships seem doomed to fail with both players getting too much attention when even one celebrity gets more than enough for both of them.

The gematria grift community is a mixed bag of personalities.  Most of the bigger names in the Zachosphere use what is apparently their real name.  But not all.  Mostly their actual face is on camera, not even hidden by a mask.  But not all.  The mid level folk in the pyramid, those are more likely to hide their true identity.  The beginners return to being comfortable with using their real name, only turning to disguise once the IRL temperature gets heating up to an uncomfortable level.

Hiding your face or using an AI generated voice is more intensive than just making a sock puppet account that only comments.  And it’s a pretty safe bet that the screen name is an aptonym.

Or actually, a FORCED antonym.  A true aptonym is generally regarded as an amusing coincidence.  You dog’s veterinarian’s last name is Shephard.  Your chiropractor is Dr. Spiner.  While a forced aptonym is like naming your Dungeons & Dragons character appropriate for their class.  Wulfgar the Barbarian sucks as a name for a wizard.  So, Spellmaster it is.

Wherever the gematria aficionado falls in the MLM scheme they are caught up in the middle of the misinformation racket.  Where getting deliberately funneled into seeking the wrong answer is a good thing for those at the top.  The gematria user will settle into a Spellmaster type aptonym as a prime choice for an internet presence.  It’s super easy to project the opposite of what you’re up to.  And for a time at least your IRL pain in the ass identity can be separate from your gung ho internet pain in the ass identity.  

When dealing with the real life actual name using gematria aficionado it’s actually a pretty simple process to gauge how caught up they are in the misinformation.  Look at their friends.  As soon as you see someone with the word Truth as part of the screen name, that’s probably a bullshitter.  (Badger’s Law as applied to aptonyms).  Of course the same is to be said for Gematria.  There’s never anybody named Gematriabunchofnumbers that is up to anything good.  Same applies to a gematria using account that relates to the financial hooks.  BlockchainKing = scammer.  Any sports gematria account is almost certain to try and throw in the word sport or the particular name of a sport in it.  Scammers.  In fact, like all the really cool names for cars will likely be used up someday in the future, there’s been so many experts giving gematria a bad name all the good forced aptonyms have been used up.  Most of the social media misinformation activity that gets repeated is copy and paste from forced aptonym named accounts.

If you’re being encouraged to take your truth seeking to the next level by saying things you wouldn’t say in real life it may already be too late.  The Attaboy!TM you get on the internet does not translate well to the real world.  Actually exchange of ideas and useful information does not include verbal assault to “wake people up”.  All you’re doing is alienating who you call sheep further by not being able to present your opinion in a calm and respectful manner.  Let the adults have a conversation.  And maybe some day politicians can become adults, too instead of seeking out opportunities to harass at every moment.

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