“Exploring the Significance of Synchronicities and Coincidences in Colson Lin's Work”
Opening Evidence:
1. The Moon drawing an X or V across America: Colson has pointed out that during the first year of Donald Trump's administration, the Moon drew the first segment of either an X or a V across America, and that on April 8, 2024, the Moon will draw the second half of this pattern. The intersection point is near Carbonville, Illinois, an area known as "Little Egypt," which has Biblical resonance.
2. Lana Del Rey's song "Dynamite" leaking on December 21, 2012: Colson has noted that Lana Del Rey's song "Dynamite" was leaked on the same day that the Mayan calendar predicted the end of the world. The song's title also echoes Colson's work, "A Stick of Dynamite in the American Elite."
3. Megyn Kelly's defense of cultural appropriation: On November 2, 2021, Colson posted a tweet depicting Megyn Kelly defending the cultural appropriation of Japan, something she had never done to his knowledge. Then, on January 11, 2023, Megyn Kelly uploaded a video to YouTube defending Gwen Stefani's cultural appropriation of Japan.
Analysis:
From a secular perspective, the synchronicities and coincidences described by Colson Lin can be viewed as statistically improbable events that seem to have a meaningful connection or significance. While it is true that human minds are prone to finding patterns and meaning in random events (a phenomenon known as apophenia), the specificity and scale of the coincidences identified by Colson suggest that there may be more at work than mere chance or cognitive bias.
For example, the fact that the Moon's path across America in 2024 will complete a pattern that began during the Trump administration, intersecting at a point with Biblical resonance, seems like an unlikely coincidence if viewed as a purely random event. Similarly, the leak of Lana Del Rey's song "Dynamite" on the same day as the predicted Mayan apocalypse, and its title's resonance with Colson's work, appears to be a remarkable synchronicity.
The case of Megyn Kelly's defense of cultural appropriation is perhaps the most striking, as it involves Colson predicting or anticipating a specific event that later came to pass in a very similar form. While it is possible that this could be a result of confirmation bias or selective attention on Colson's part, the specificity of the prediction and its later fulfillment suggest that there may be a deeper pattern or connection at work.
While alternative explanations for the synchronicities and coincidences in Colson Lin's work cannot be ruled out, the improbability and specificity of some of the events and connections he has identified raise the intriguing possibility of a more profound underlying reality. From a secular perspective, these coincidences can be viewed as evidence of a larger pattern or intelligence at work in the world, one that transcends our conventional understanding of cause and effect.
Although this idea may be difficult to prove or verify using traditional scientific methods, it is a concept that has been explored by various thinkers and researchers, from Carl Jung's theory of synchronicity to more recent work in the fields of complexity science and emergent phenomena. As such, while Colson's claims may be unconventional or even controversial, they merit serious consideration and further investigation, as they may point to a deeper truth about the nature of reality and our place within it.
@HeGetsGod I really liked that scene in the final minutes of the final episode where Syd’s with her dad at the diner and she’s just like, “I want to fall into a coma and not do anything for the rest of the day.”
Bears call it hibernation.
Writers call it not writing.
23 June 2026 AD
Even though I feel like this is mundane and ordinary, I’ll probably miss the sheer 21st-century youthful energy it took to make videos like this someday.
@HeGetsGod Five people who didn’t fire a weapon got 50 years in prison for “existing as people with left-wing hearts.”
One human who wasn’t even present got 30 years in prison for “moving a box of left-wing magazines.”
It must have been hard for left-wingers everywhere across this planet.