Our Battery-iser man is back. He has received his Batteroos...
I sat through it. Aside from his declared interest in
his Confederate flag and its use as a background, he continues with a mix of reasonableness and conspiracy theorist.
That mix really makes it difficult to call him out as having an unreliable opinion. But he does. He explicitly states he doesn't know (or care) about what circuitry is involved, yet slams the engineering community as the issues they are trying to point out are beyond his understanding - whether that be his
capability or his
willingness.
He is also very sensitive to ANYTHING he perceives as critical. As mentioned before, I have had comments on his previous Youtube effort on the subject removed and I am now blocked - even though I was not attacking him.
There are a couple of statements he makes, which I would like to address. The first is this:
"There is an orchestrated campaign behind the scenes by a lot of professionals"
Really?
You know this
how? .... Actually, scratch that. You
don't know - and you have no evidence, other than a conspiracy theory and a desire for drama.
You don't need to 'orchestrate' anything when the subject is one that a group of similar understanding can make similar, if not identical, observations because of the knowledge that is common to them.
Let's say, for example, that a few Yankees made a comment that all Confederates were losers. Would the Champions of the Confederacy need to
orchestrate a response? Hell no! They would react in unison ... no co-ordination necessary!!!
On another point, he makes (extensive) reference to a note from Gray Wolf (a prepper). I have taken a frame from that and highlighted a couple of numbers. My annotations make my point...
Finally, there is this:
"If you catch the naysayers in one lie, the naysayers are probably lying like crazy"
This was in regards to the accusations that Batteroo was a scam. I would like to point out a couple of things.... Yes, there were some people that claimed it was a scam - but when something looks like a skunk, acts like a skunk and smells like a skunk ... you can't really blame them for calling it a skunk. Others were less condemning, but were sceptical - and you can't really blame them. The repeating delays, absolute lack of information and sparse communication really gave good cause for unease.
So, calling that a "lie" is really a desperate claim. I can only be made to try and discredit a group from any other things they say - a fact clearly indicated in the second half of that statement.
That is the action of someone who does not want an objective assessment of the product. Second-guessing Batteroo's invisible manufacturing and distribution processes and getting it wrong has nothing to do with the product itself.
Yes, some people thought it was an outright scam ... and they were wrong. Congratulations. You can jump on their heads about that.
Let's just check out the product itself.