
This includes any accusations of being a "bot", "NPC", "insane", "crazy", etc. This subreddit is for CIVIL DISCUSSION of the Mandela effect. Posts must also include a body with specific details indicating why it relates to a known Mandela Effect or the Mandela Effect in general. Thoroughly sum up what your post is about in the title. No low effort posts, including vague titles.

Instead, post a comment in the weekly DAE megathread, or depending on what you are asking consider checking out /r/TipOfMyTongue. If your question follows the lines of "does anyone else remember.", do NOT make a post. These type of posts are best suited for /r/GlitchInTheMatrix.

For example, we don't know what color your neighbors car is - so don't post about it here if it changes color. No personal changes or "DAE remember?" posts. Steve didn’t pull it out it’s a jagged, sharp barb and it went through Steve’s chest like a hot knife through butter.The Mandela Effect is a group of people realizing they remember something differently than is generally known to be fact - the most famous example of this would be the Berenstain/Berenstein bears. He also insisted that, contrary to reports at the time, Steve did NOT try and remove the barb, saying: "The stingray barb was a blade of about a foot extending out of the tail. It wasn’t until I panned the camera back and Steve was standing in a huge pool of blood that I realised something was wrong." "I panned with the camera as the stingray swam away - I didn’t even know it had caused any damage. "All of a sudden it propped on its front and started stabbing wildly with its tail.

You swim up from behind the animal and I’ll try to get a shot of it swimming away'. He explained: "Stingrays are normally very calm - if they don’t want you to be near them, they’ll swim away. Now, in a moving interview with Network Ten's Studio 10 show, Justin has opened up about Steve irwin's death for the very first time. The wildlife presenter died in 2006 after being stabbed by a stingray while filming a documentary series - and his underwater cameraman, Justin Lyons, was the only person to witness those final moments.
