The trend that I described above continues in Stefan Molyneux’s December 10, 2018 upload “France: Burn Till You Learn!” This time there were some portions where, when the slide presentation quotes a ridiculously long chunk of text, such as one beginning, “With his popularity rating at record lows,...” from the website(a paranoid right-wing Beware-the-Banksters propaganda blog that is thinly veiled as an investment advice website), the slide does apply quotation marks to the duplicated passage. Here at the 22:47 timestamp , Molyneux’s reproduction of a Helen Pluckrose essay inis so extensive that it is embarrassing. At least there, the presentation slides use quotation marks to indicate that someone is being quoted, but the sections taken from Pluckrose are so large that one wonders why the presentation slide didn’t have its own phrasing. With this new and conspicuous usage of quotation marks for these long quoted sections of text, one wonders if whoever makes Molyneux’s presentation slides had seen this blog post prior to this December 11 update. But later, as you will see below, Molyneux uses Pluckrose’s piece in an even less creative fashion which, although being the least obvious instance of plagiarism here, still greatly casts into doubt Molyneux’s self-aggrandizement as an original thinker and meticulous scholar.