Anonymous ID: 041c63 Oct. 22, 2020, 8:26 a.m. No.11211672   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Ghislaine Maxwell accuser shares QAnon messages before

 

deposition unsealed

 

By Lee BrownOctober 22, 2020 | 10:36am

 

Ghislaine Maxwell accuser Virginia Roberts Giuffre shared a series of QAnon messages hinting at an unfounded global network of powerful pedophiles before the alleged madam’s deposition was unsealed Thursday.

 

Just hours before the key document was released — despite Maxwell’s long battle to keep it hidden — Giuffre retweeted a photo of young girl and a teddy bear inside a giant “Q.”

 

“We’ve Awoken, Stop Pedophilia,” read the caption to the image, which Giuffre posted along with a series of hashtags including #TheGreatAwakeningWorldwide, a key QAnon phrase.

 

She used the same hashtag late Thursday as she reshared a message saying #WWG1WGA — the acronym for QAnon’s most central slogan, “Where we go one, we go all.”

 

MORE:

 

https://nypost.com/2020/10/22/maxwell-accuser-shares-qanon-messages-before-deposition-unsealed/

Anonymous ID: 041c63 Oct. 22, 2020, 8:27 a.m. No.11211687   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1854 >>2033

Trucker who drove onto I-35W during George Floyd protest charged

 

“ The trucker who was attacked after driving into a massive protest on the Interstate 35W bridge following the killing of George Floyd was charged Thursdaywith two criminal counts from the May 31 incident.

 

Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman’s office charged 35-year-old Bogdan Vechirko of Otsego with threats of violence, a felony, and criminal vehicular operation, a gross misdemeanor.

 

Vechirko drove onto the bridge as hundreds of pedestrians protested the death of Floyd, who had died six days earlier in the custody of Minneapolis Police. Vechirko said that he was returning from a fuel delivery in south Minneapolis and didn’t mean to drive into the protest or aim to hurt anyone.”

 

https://www.startribune.com/truck-driver-who-drove-through-george-floyd-protesters-on-interstate-35w-bridge-charged-criminally/572827812/

 

By Rochelle Olson Star Tribune OCTOBER 22, 2020 — 9:34AM CST

Anonymous ID: 041c63 Oct. 22, 2020, 8:35 a.m. No.11211810   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2033

How conspiracy theories like QAnon spilled into the mainstream

 

Andrew Marantz on Facebook, tech ideology,

 

and the spread of hate on the internet.

 

By Sean Illing@seanillingsean.illing@vox.com Oct 22, 2020, 11:00am EDT

 

If you’re not extremely online, you may have been confused three weeks ago when President Trump was asked to condemn a group called the Proud Boys at the first presidential debate.

 

As my colleague Jane Coaston has explained, the Proud Boys are a hodgepodge of men’s right’s groups and pro-Trump street-fighting clubs that emerged in 2016 as a counterweight to antifa and other lefty protesters. But for most people who don’t follow politics all that closely, the debate was likely the first time hearing anything about them.

 

It was, for that reason, one of those strange moments in which the weird world of the online berserk spilled into the political mainstream. Indeed, given all the coverage the Proud Boys received after the debate, it may not be accurate to call them “fringe” any longer.

 

Which is why I reached out to Andrew Marantz, a writer at the New Yorker who spent years immersed in the world of online extremists. In his 2019 book, Antisocial, Marantz interviewed conspiracy theorists, alt-right trolls, and various media gate crashers who have flooded the virtual space and, in his words, “hijacked the American conversation.” The book is a fascinating guide through the digital wilderness, and it’s even more relevant now that several US intelligence agencies have warned of increased election-related threats from domestic extremist groups.

 

Marantz and I discussed how online extremism has evolved since his book was released, if he thinks the threat is being overstated, and the role of the tech companies in perpetuating all these problems. I also asked him if we just have to accept that American politics in the years to come is going to look increasingly like the darkest corners of the web.

 

MORE AT LINK:

 

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/21502877/qanon-online-extremism-facebook-andrew-marantz

Anonymous ID: 041c63 Oct. 22, 2020, 8:37 a.m. No.11211856   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1884

Trump voters are more likely to believe in QAnon conspiracy theories

 

13 MINUTES AGO

 

Surprisingly large number of Trump followers subscribe to QAnon conspiracy theories.

 

With less than two weeks left until the US presidential elections, a new poll has found that nearly half of Donald Trump’s supporters believe in the QAnon conspiracy theories that the president is in a battle with the deep state and paedophilic groups.

 

QAnon, is a group that believes that there is a widespread conspiracy in the US which is part of a cabal that involves the Democratic Party, satan worshipers and paedophile groups that want to bring down Trump.

 

Trump supporters were more likely to believe that the US president was in a titanic battle against these groups according to Yahoo News/YouGov study.

 

The conspiracy has gained traction in recent years with Trump at crucial moments fanning central ideas of the movement.

 

During an NBC town hall meeting, Trump was asked to distance himself from QAnon to which he replied "I know nothing about QAnon" adding that the only thing he knows is that "they are very strongly against paedophilia and I agree with that."

 

The statement was interpreted as support for the group and its central unifying theme. Trump is also acutely aware that in a tight election campaign he can not alienate a key voter demographic which includes conspiracy theorists.

 

QAnon has been labelled by the FBI a “conspiracy theory-driven domestic extremists” organisation.

 

In an internal assessment, the FBI noted that “these conspiracy theories very likely will emerge, spread, and evolve in the modern information marketplace, occasionally driving both groups and individual extremists to carry out criminal or violent acts."

 

QAnon conspiracy has also been linked with white supremacist organisation which according to the FBI drive the “majority of the domestic terrorism cases” in the US.

 

One of the reasons is why QAnon has been labelled as an emerging terrorist threat is because people associated with the group’s core ideas could commit acts of terrorism towards groups of people and organisations they deem to be part of the secretive cabal.

 

QAnon, however, is not simply confined to the US.

 

The ideas of the group have found fertile ground across the Atlantic ocean and in the UK.

 

A recent study in the UK has found that 25 percent of adults agreed that “secret satanic cults exist and include influential elites” and a similar portion believed that “elites in Hollywood, politics, the media and other powerful positions” are engaged in industrial-scale abuse.

 

One of the main reasons QAnon has found itself gaining traction is because of the discovery of high profile sexual predators like Jeffrey Epstein who was found to be procuring underage age girls for friends who were celebrities, politicians, business moguls and royalty.

 

The US-based Epstein had over decades cultivated friendships with well-known politicians like Bill Clinton, Donald Trump and even the famous model Naomi Campbell. There are no suggestions that those individuals knew what Epstein was doing, however, Epstein was able to use his power and privilege to silence his victims from coming forward.

 

In the UK over the years there have been revelations of high profile personalities engaged in paedophilia which has shocked people.

 

A famous celebrity in the UK by the name of Jimmy Saville, who was working for the BBC, abused more than 1,000 children over the span of several decades which only came to light after his death.

 

There were also reports in the UK media the members of parliament had strangled and killed a 12 year-year-old boy during a sex orgy in the 1980s.

 

As a result of the revelations, there was widespread outrage from people who felt that institutions had covered up instead of investigating historic reports of abuse.

 

The resulting loss of trust in institutions to fully grasp the scale of these scandals has resulted in a slow drift of people willing to believe in conspiracy groups like QAnon.

 

https://www.trtworld.com/magazine/trump-voters-are-more-likely-to-believe-in-qanon-conspiracy-theories-40802

Anonymous ID: 041c63 Oct. 22, 2020, 8:38 a.m. No.11211871   🗄️.is đź”—kun

LET’S GO NORTH CAROLINA!!!

 

#TrumpPence2020 #MAGAFlag of United StatesEagle

 

Globe with meridianshttp://Vote.DonaldJTrump.com

 

https://twitter.com/DanScavino/status/1319144567011237889