Anonymous ID: f9fbdf Aug. 14, 2020, 4:40 a.m. No.10283538   🗄️.is đź”—kun

==Nice work Seattle!! Make sure you de-fund your already struggling police force!!

Good Times….Sharp politicians out there…

 

Seattle's East Precinct sees surge in arson, assaults and burglaries

 

Newly released numbers show that crime is up nearly across the board in Seattle's East Precinct, where much of the protest activity has been centered.

 

Some people who live or work in the Capitol Hill area worry it’s going from bad to worse. And it’s not just vandalism. Everything from arson to assaults to burglaries have seen significant increases compared to last year.

 

John McDermott owns a business just blocks from the police department’s East Precinct headquarters and said his property got defaced again earlier this week.

 

“With all the decay that's going on around here and all the crime that's rising, why cut my fence down and jump up and paint on my billboard," he said.

 

The new commander of the East Precinct released statistics this week that show a 10 percent jump in overall crime so far this year compared to 2019.

 

Property crimes lead the way with an 11 percent increase. Violent crimes shot up 9 percent. That, combined with ongoing protests, has some residents on the run.

 

“There are still neighbors in my building that haven't returned. The people below me moved out too,” said Matthew Ploszaj, who lives near Cal Anderson Park.

 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/seattles-east-precinct-sees-surge-in-arson-assaults-and-burglaries/ar-BB17WV78

Anonymous ID: f9fbdf Aug. 14, 2020, 5:31 a.m. No.10283769   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3773 >>3775 >>3776 >>3783

Latest MSM Shit Piece

 

How QAnon rode the pandemic to new heights — and fueled the viral anti-mask phenomenon

 

Researchers and experts say QAnon has emerged in recent months as a sort of centralized hub for conspiracy and alternative health communities.

 

In February, five months before she became known as "QAnon Karen," there was no one more terrified of the coming pandemic than Melissa Rein Lively.

 

"I bought the N-95 masks. I bought the hazmat suit," she said. "In my mind, a zombie movie was imminent."

 

At the time, Rein Lively said her career was at its peak. Her self-owned marketing company had just helped launch the high-end restaurant Nobu in Scottsdale, Arizona. Hyatt Hotels had signed on for marketing help.

 

By July 5, she had gone into a Target store and trashed the mask section, streaming her rage in a viral post that drew over 10 million views. Before the police closed in on her garage, she livestreamed her own mental breakdown on her company's Instagram account, telling police to "call Donald Trump and ask him" why she shouldn't be arrested for her actions.

 

She was, she told the police, the "QAnon spokesperson."

 

Rein Lively's experience is one that researchers recognize.

 

While QAnon bubbled on the fringes of the internet for years, researchers and experts say it has emerged in recent months as a sort of centralized hub for conspiracy and alternative health communities. According to an internal document reported by NBC News this week, Facebook now has more than 1,000 of these QAnon groups, totaling millions of members.

 

Users like Rein Lively who started off in wellness communities, religious groups and new-age groups on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram during the pandemic were then introduced to extremist groups like QAnon, aided by shared beliefs about energy, healing or God — and often by recommendation algorithms.

 

And while anti-mask sentiment has surfaced in a variety of ways for a number of reasons, viral videos of anti-mask confrontations have become causes for celebration in conspiracy circles, embraced as examples of people taking the fight against their shadowy enemy into the real world.

 

Rein Lively followed a similar path as a growing community of conspiracy theorists, radicalization experts told NBC News.

 

Cooped up inside her home and losing work due to the pandemic in the weeks before her outburst, Rein Lively filled the time she would've spent hanging out with friends and emailing clients by diving down conspiracy-fueled rabbit holes on Facebook and Instagram, worsening her feelings of isolation and fear.

 

Some find themselves believing in elaborate conspiracy theories about Bill Gates, 5G wireless technology, vaccines and masks, which researchers say are in part pushed by an algorithm and shared community members that group all of the theories together.

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/how-qanon-rode-pandemic-new-heights-fueled-viral-anti-mask-n1236695