The "QAnon" Fraud!

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
Can you guess why Q would try to enlist people with mental health disorders into his service? Because such people see patterns where there are none, and they read "deep" significances into numbers and events that are really just coincidental random chance. But for him, that served to keep the scam going.
This was "Q"'s whole MO. Dispense a whole load of pseudo cryptic rubbish that would appeal to those already gullible to buy into any given narrative that fitted their bias. Also designed to make those who followed it feel as if they were in on something that set them apart and ironically smarter than those who could actually see through the whole charade for what it was. It's fascinating on one level to observe it all but deeply sad on another.
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
You don't think the autistic Elon Musk has useful talents?
1) Elon Musk obviously wasn't quite autistic enough to buy into QAnon.
2) Elon Musk is "the king of vaporware" according to the popular critic of pseudoscience, Thunderf00t.
3) Musk didn't even start Tesla. He bought it from the founders.
4) Elon Musk supports abortion, carbon taxes, universal basic income, mRNA vaccines, transhumanism, and a one-world government.
5) “It was really US taxpayers that helped get him through his roughest time,” said Dan Ives, tech analyst with Wedbush Securities. “If it didn’t have regulatory credits, Tesla would not be the brand it is around the globe, and Musk wouldn’t be the richest person in the world,” Ives said.

 
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User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
A series of Telegram posts by Lin Wood, a pro-Trump lawyer, appears to indicate that the MAGAverse may be fracturing from within.

On Wednesday, Wood laid into Mike Lindell, the CEO of MyPillow, and John Sabal, a QAnon influencer also known as "QAnon John," on his official Telegram channel. In a Telegram post, Wood suggested that the MAGA movement was being compromised by "deep state operatives" disguised as "patriots" who were actually "communist infiltrators."

"Mike Lindell. Patriot or traitor? You decide," Wood wrote. "Do the research. Connect the dots. Draw your own conclusions. I have drawn mine. I know this: God does not lie. And god never overpromises and under-delivers," Wood added.

He then shared a lengthy message from one of his followers, which posited that Lindell could be associated with Antifa. The post shared by Wood also claimed that Lindell once offered a 66.6% discount on his pillows, implying that the pillow salesman had links to satanism. The number 666 is sometimes used in popular culture to refer to "the mark of the beast," a satanic symbol.

Wood also attacked Sabal, telling his followers to "watch out" for him. "I have had my eyes on Ol' QAnon John from the very beginning. He thought he was playing me. I was playing him to expose him as a FAKE Patriot," Wood wrote.

The Trump-allied lawyer also appealed to Sabal to "confess and repent." "I pray for you, John. I don't want anyone to spend eternity in hell," Wood wrote.

Wood's posts also mentioned other conservative figures like former Attorney General William Barr and Trump-era special counsel John Durham. Wood asked his followers to consider whether they were "patriots or traitors."

 

marke

Well-known member
If I were you, I'd be less concerned about Elon and more concerned about the fact that Mike Lindell is very probably the Antichrist. Lin Wood has a strong sense for these things.
We could possibly think about that to get our minds off all the depressing social and economic news resulting from the Obama-Biden disaster.
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
QAnon is not a cult in itself. Rather, it is part of a larger cult--the Qult of personality that centers itself around Trump-worship. Ginni Thomas is a victim of it:

In the new NBC report, Allan Smith and Alex Seitz-Wald cite a recent report about Ginni Thomas' involvement with the Lifespring cult decades ago about which Jane Mayer of the New Yorker wrote, "Her parents helped get her a job with a local Republican candidate for Congress, and when he won she followed him to Washington. But, after reportedly flunking the bar exam, she fell in with a cultish self-help group, Lifespring, whose members were encouraged to strip naked and mock one another’s body fat. She eventually broke away, and began working for the Chamber of Commerce, opposing 'comparable worth' pay for women."

According to Smith and Seitz-Wald, people who knew Thomas back then are appalled by seeing her go down the election fraud conspiracy rabbit hole.

"It’s difficult to reconcile Thomas then and now, four people who worked with her at the height of her anti-cult activism through the late 1980s said in interviews. After she spent years trying to expose cults, these people found Thomas’s efforts to promote outlandish plans to overturn the 2020 results, particularly the text messages and emails in which she referenced false election conspiracies that originated in QAnon circles on the internet, surprising. Democrats and Republicans alike have said QAnon supporters exhibit cult-like behavior," they wrote.

Read more at the source:

 
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marke

Well-known member
QAnon is not a cult in itself. Rather, it is part of a larger cult--the Qult of personality that centers itself around Trump-worship. Ginni Thomas is a victim of it:

In the new NBC report, Allan Smith and Alex Seitz-Wald cite a recent report about Ginni Thomas' involvement with the Lifespring cult decades ago about which Jane Mayer of the New Yorker wrote, "Her parents helped get her a job with a local Republican candidate for Congress, and when he won she followed him to Washington. But, after reportedly flunking the bar exam, she fell in with a cultish self-help group, Lifespring, whose members were encouraged to strip naked and mock one another’s body fat. She eventually broke away, and began working for the Chamber of Commerce, opposing 'comparable worth' pay for women."

According to Smith and Seitz-Wald, people who knew Thomas back then are appalled by seeing her go down the election fraud conspiracy rabbit hole.

"It’s difficult to reconcile Thomas then and now, four people who worked with her at the height of her anti-cult activism through the late 1980s said in interviews. After she spent years trying to expose cults, these people found Thomas’s efforts to promote outlandish plans to overturn the 2020 results, particularly the text messages and emails in which she referenced false election conspiracies that originated in QAnon circles on the internet, surprising. Democrats and Republicans alike have said QAnon supporters exhibit cult-like behavior," they wrote.

Read more at the source:

Micah Xavier Johnson was a poor deluded cult victim who lost his life for a wicked cause he thought was right. Like teenage suicide bombers under the Muslim jihadist cult, Johnson lost his life because he fell prey to the demonic influence of BLM and leftist racist democrat narratives.


An Army veteran “upset about Black Lives Matter” and “recent police shootings” who opened fire Thursday night in Dallas in an attack on police officers has been identified by police as Micah Xavier Johnson.

Five police officers were killed and seven were wounded, officials said. Two civilians were also wounded in the shootings, police said.

“The suspect said he was upset with white people and wanted to kill white people, especially white officers,” Brown said.




micah-johnson-e1467991093693.jpeg
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
The anonymous message board user known as “Q,” whose cryptic announcements spawned the fascist pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy theory, has returned to posting after a nearly two-year hiatus.

On Friday night, someone with access to Q’s login credentials posted on 8kun, the anarchic internet community where Q last posted in December 2020.

“Shall we play a game once more?” the first post marking Q’s return to the board read, signed “Q.”

The message was written in the same clue-like format as thousands of earlier Q posts, dubbed “Q Drops” by their fans, that led to the creation of QAnon in late 2017. Q’s followers believe the messages explain the world as it really is, controlled by Satan-worshipping, child-eating pedophiles in the Democratic Party, finance, and other institutions.

In QAnon’s telling, Donald Trump was recruited by the military to run for president in 2016 to take down that nefarious “cabal.” QAnon believers await “The Storm,” an event in which they believe Trump enemies like Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama will be executed via orders from a military tribunal, or imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay.

The Q poster followed up with two more messages on Friday night. Asked why they had disappeared for more than a year, they wrote, “It had to be done this way.”

“Are you ready to serve your country again?” Q wrote in another post. “Remember your oath.”

Despite its ludicrous claims, QAnon has managed to become a faction within the Republican Party. Two current members of Congress, Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Lauren Boebert (R-CO), have voiced support for QAnon in the past, and more Q backers are expected to win office in the midterms. A 2021 poll found that QAnon’s core tenets have a significant amount of support, with 15 percent of people surveyed saying they believed the world is run by a Satanic pedophile cabal.

Ron Watkins, the former 8kun administrator who has often been accused of controlling the QAnon account, is currently running as a longshot candidate for an Arizona House seat.

 

marke

Well-known member
The anonymous message board user known as “Q,” whose cryptic announcements spawned the fascist pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy theory, has returned to posting after a nearly two-year hiatus.

On Friday night, someone with access to Q’s login credentials posted on 8kun, the anarchic internet community where Q last posted in December 2020.

“Shall we play a game once more?” the first post marking Q’s return to the board read, signed “Q.”

The message was written in the same clue-like format as thousands of earlier Q posts, dubbed “Q Drops” by their fans, that led to the creation of QAnon in late 2017. Q’s followers believe the messages explain the world as it really is, controlled by Satan-worshipping, child-eating pedophiles in the Democratic Party, finance, and other institutions.

In QAnon’s telling, Donald Trump was recruited by the military to run for president in 2016 to take down that nefarious “cabal.” QAnon believers await “The Storm,” an event in which they believe Trump enemies like Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama will be executed via orders from a military tribunal, or imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay.

The Q poster followed up with two more messages on Friday night. Asked why they had disappeared for more than a year, they wrote, “It had to be done this way.”

“Are you ready to serve your country again?” Q wrote in another post. “Remember your oath.”

Despite its ludicrous claims, QAnon has managed to become a faction within the Republican Party. Two current members of Congress, Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Lauren Boebert (R-CO), have voiced support for QAnon in the past, and more Q backers are expected to win office in the midterms. A 2021 poll found that QAnon’s core tenets have a significant amount of support, with 15 percent of people surveyed saying they believed the world is run by a Satanic pedophile cabal.

Ron Watkins, the former 8kun administrator who has often been accused of controlling the QAnon account, is currently running as a longshot candidate for an Arizona House seat.

In shocking breaking news, This guy has been fingered as having been closely connected to the creation of the organization formerly known as "Q"uack, inc.

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User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
The ex-president and his family kept maintaining that the 2020 election was stolen, even in the face of courts that repeatedly rejected lawsuits (over 60) that sought to overturn the election.

When you add to that the fact that one heck of a lot of Trumpers firmly believe that the QAnon theory is true, it’s like lighting a match. And in a YouGov/Yahoo!News poll conducted in October 2020 found that half of his supporters believed in this completely and thoroughly debunked fallacy, well, that’s like adding the gasoline. The poll, as reported by USAToday, was a survey of 1,583 registered users and was taken shortly after Trump held a town hall.

So now you have the needed fuel and all you have to do is toss the lit match. And on Jan. 6, 2021, that’s what happened.

 
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