Anonymous ID: 071f31 Oct. 24, 2020, 12:22 a.m. No.11249731   🗄️.is 🔗kun

FOX>MURDOCH>SOROS

Disinformation deployed?

Is the Truth right in front of you?

Soros views on Israel?

What is a "Court Jew"?

Do you have more then you know?

 

Views on antisemitism and Israel

When asked about what he thought about Israel, in The New Yorker, Soros replied: "I don't deny the Jews to a right to a national existence – but I don't want anything to do with it."[217]

According to hacked emails released in 2016, Soros's Open Society Foundation has a self-described objective of "challenging Israel's racist and anti-democratic policies" in international forums,

in part by questioning Israel's reputation as a democracy.[218] He has funded NGOs which have been actively critical of Israeli policies[219][220][221]

including groups that campaign for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel.[219]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Soros

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_Jew

Anonymous ID: 071f31 Oct. 24, 2020, 12:28 a.m. No.11249757   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11169723 MEET GEORGE SOROS > A "jew" or a Catholic Court Jew?

>>11169733 Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. CIA killed my Father and Uncle

>>11169747 MEET BERNHARD STEMPFLE Priest who wrote parts of Mein Kampf

>>11169757 Cuban Immigrant warns - Castro was trained by Jesuits

>>11169776 MEET TIMOTHY DOLAN Archbishop of New York - Deep State/Church

>>11169799 MEET ADAM WEISHAUPT FOUNDER OF THE ILLUMINATI

>>11169814 Q DROP #189 The Cult Runs the World > VATICAN

>>11169823 Q DROP #714 Q Threat to Clowns > CIA > Vatican?

>>11169831 Q said "Soros takes order from P." Drop #416

>>11169848 Q asks "Who controls the [D] party" and "Who really controls the [D] party" Drop #3749

>>11169854 Q said "Guardian of the Pope" and titled the accompanying image

of an owl "GUARDIAN_P" " Drop #1413

>>11169867 Drops # 3749, 416 and 1413 basic decode > P = Pope/Papal Royal Families (Black nobility) Papal Orders of Knighthood (Malta) Orders such as the Jesuits.

>>11169876 Q DROP #851 CIA & Vatican Helped Nazi Officers Escape

>>11169898 Q DROP #936 The Nazi Order > Vatican > Jesuits

>>11169906 Q DROP #1002 The BITE that has no CURE > Vatican > Viper > Satanists

>>11169926 Q DROP #1021 Did the US taxpayers pay for the Predatory Sexual Abuse

Perpetrated upon Americans by the Roman Catholic Church?

>>11169945 Q DROP #1413 Guardian of the Pope Owl Photo > P = Pope/Papacy

>>11169956 Q DROP #1763 Sex Abuse in the Church > Dark to LIGHT

>>11169969 Q DROP #1831 POTUS Roasts Corrupt & Evil Hillary Clinton at Catholic Charity Event > SURROUNDED BY EVIL? at a Catholic Charity Event?

>>11169989 Q DROP #1879 100s of Priests in PA Molested 1000s of Children

>>11170004 Q DROP #1916 Priest Hits Crying Baby at Baptism > Man of God?

>>11170034 Q DROP #1950 Holy See Corrupt Universal Government of the Catholic Church

>>11170072 Q DROP #2152 Pope Francis Compares Vatican Whistleblower to Satan

>>11170084 Q DROP #2594 Cardinal George Pell 3rd in Command at Vatican

>>11170115 Q DROP #2918 Trump's Roast of Hillary Back in 2016 Reveals Her Dark Secrets > Symbolism will be their downfall

>>11170152 Q DROP #3565 Q Links to Pope's Tweet on Human Trafficking > Biblical

>>11170170 Q DROP #3709 Vatican Ambassador to France Resigns after Molestation Allegations > Those you are taught to trust the most….

>>11170191 Q DROP #3957 Sleepers [Pro] will shift position [Nay]. [Paul Ryan_Fox]

Rupert Murdoch is a Papal Knight and Fox news full of Catholics.

>>11170210 Q DROP #4303 CIA's Use of Journalists and Clergy in Intelligence Operations > Who really controls the Media? CIA back into the news [soon]?

>>11170235 Q DROP #4408 We Are in the Middle of Another Enlightenment Approaching the Precipice. Against (the monarchy, the privileges of the nobility, the political power of the Catholic Church)

>>11170262 Q DROP #4429 Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò Letter to POTUS - Biblical Battle Light vs Dark > Vigano is not our friend. Vigano is not a good person.

>>11170271 Q DROP #4799

When does a Church become a playground?

When does a Church become a business?

When does a Church become political?

When does a Church become corrupt?

When does a Church become willfully blind?

When does a Church become controlled?

>>11170290 WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION AND THE VATICAN CONNECTION

24 year assistant Director of the Who, Milton Siegel explains exactly how the Vatican controls the W.H.O. consider the implications now with covid. Is the story about China controlling the W.H.O a cover story?

>>11170342 Link between Saul Alinsky and the Roman Catholic Jesuits.

Alinsky and the Jesuits also link to Obama

Anonymous ID: 071f31 Oct. 24, 2020, 1:05 a.m. No.11249989   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9991 >>0109 >>0269 >>0350 >>0410 >>0439

Qanon’s Path From Fringe To Mainstream

by Avast Blog on October 23, 2020

 

If you’ve paid even a tiny bit of attention to the U.S. presidential election this year, then you’ve heard the name QAnon — or “Q” to his followers. In the past four years, Q went from a character in a silly online game to the creator of the biggest international conspiracy theories, perhaps ever.

 

Followers of Q interpret his purposefully opaque statements to come up with wild conclusions about what’s “really” going on in Washington: Hilary Clinton is the head of a child-sex ring. There’s a battle between good and evil happening — and Trump is the archangel on the side of good. The “deep state” will end when the “Great Awakening” happens and everyone realizes Q was right all along.

 

But how did this obscure, anonymous conspiracy theory get so popular that the President of the United States has talked about it? The answer lies in what happens when internet culture is misinterpreted — and spirals out of control.

 

Q first showed up in the run-up to the 2016 election on the site 4chan, where he (or she — Q has never claimed a gender) first appeared as “Q Clearance Patriot.” The name alluded the user had a high-level government security clearance. And, from go, Q posted cryptic messages about the government, which quickly gained a following on the message boards.

 

“When I first heard about Q, I just thought that it was a troll, basically, and that it was just somebody having a laugh and kind of tricking people,” Fredrick Brennan, one of the founders of 4chan, said on the Reply All podcast episode about Qanon. “I didn’t take it as seriously as I should have in the beginning. I don’t think a lot of people did.”

 

According to reporting done by the Reply All team, Q wasn’t taken seriously at first because this type of roleplaying was common on the board. People would “pretend to be some high placed government official leaking secrets” and everyone would play along. But, they explain, something shifted with Q after “10 to 15 posts.” Suddenly, everyone was deep into the game.

And maybe it wasn’t a game anymore.

 

The next move Q made was away from 4chan and on to another message board, called 8chan. That’s where they really started gaining popularity. It’s also when users started taking Q’s message away from the boards and onto more mainstream social media sites, like Twitter, Facebook, and — most importantly — YouTube.

 

While the participation on message boards is fairly obvious — the sites surface content that users visibly interact with via comments and up or down votes — mainstream social media algorithms tend to be more opaque. That’s a very deliberate move — they want you, the user, to feel like everything is happening “logically” and “naturally” so that you stay on their site longer. They want you to get sucked into their rabbit holes. And the way to do that is to put increasingly shocking content in front of your eyes.

 

Qanon’s theories, as expounded on by their followers, fit perfectly into this model. YouTube’s format was especially amenable to the rapid spread. (As it is to pretty much all conspiracy theories. Look up “flat earth theory” on YouTube and you’ll see how true that is. Or maybe don’t.) And spread it did, gaining an increasing amount of traction until YouTube finally cracked down on Q supporters in early October 2020, citing a new policy that disallows “content that targets an individual or group with conspiracy theories that have been used to justify real-world violence.” Facebook made a similar move around the same time.

MORE AT LINK:

https://securityboulevard.com/2020/10/qanons-path-from-fringe-to-mainstream-avast/

Anonymous ID: 071f31 Oct. 24, 2020, 1:05 a.m. No.11249991   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0039 >>0097 >>0109 >>0269 >>0350 >>0410 >>0439

>>11249989

MORE:

But the conspiracy theory horse has already bolted. And the social media giants are acting like shutting the doors four years later is going to keep it inside, while that horse frolics through the field of American Democracy, trampling everything in its path.

 

Mainstream social media sites really are to blame for bringing Q to the public, no matter what they want to spout about not wanting to “censor” users. Because while Q was born on the much more obscure, nerdy, weird (and often — but not always — toxic) message boards that attract a very specific kind of visitor, they grew up on the sites that are populated by everyone.

 

The spread of Q from the deep corners of the net to every corner of America is a prime example of what happens when people don’t understand internet culture. While virtually everyone is to some degree a digital citizen at this point, there are different cultures within that citizenship. Q was born into a very specific culture in a very specific place. Taken out of that context, they grew into something else entirely.

 

Think of it like the mythical pet baby alligators that grew to monstrous sizes when they were released into the New York City sewer system. Out of context — and out of place — something small and harmless can become extremely dangerous.

 

There are many morals to be learned from the ongoing story of Q’s popularity:

 

Social media can’t be trusted to self-regulate.

Americans are especially susceptible to conspiracy theories.

Public schools need to invest in more critical thinking and media literacy classes.

But here’s what’s most applicable in our case: Just as you need to understand the various cultures of your country in order to be a good citizen of your country, you have to understand the cultures of the internet in order to be a good citizen of the internet.

 

So do a little work to get out of your personal bubble; even if it’s just occasionally listening to Reply All, which explores the cultures of the internet. Hone your critical thinking skills. Apply Occam’s Razor. Do those things, and it’s very unlikely you’ll get sucked into a conspiracy theory that started out as a Live Action Role Play for a bunch of nerds on 4chan.

https://securityboulevard.com/2020/10/qanons-path-from-fringe-to-mainstream-avast/

Anonymous ID: 071f31 Oct. 24, 2020, 1:10 a.m. No.11250023   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0025

QANON EXPLAINED: THE CONSPIRACY THEORY SPREADING IN

CHRISTIAN CIRCLES

Written by Maria Aguilar on October 23, 2020

Editor’s Note: Stay tuned for continued coverage on November 3.

 

“WWG1WGA,” “Pizzagate,” “The Great Awakening” – If any of these terms sound familiar to you, then chances are that you have heard about QAnon, a conspiracy theory that alleges a cabal of government and other elite institutions are involved in child trafficking, cannibalism, and world domination, among other claims.

 

Although Americans’ awareness of QAnon has increased since March to nearly half of U.S. adults, very few say they have heard a lot about it, according to a Pew Research Center survey conducted from Aug. 31 through Sept. 7, 2020. Among those who are aware of QAnon, 74% see it as bad for the country, in contrast to 20% of Americans who say it is a somewhat or a very good thing. Six percent of the subjects did not answer.

 

Daniel Bennett, associate professor of political science at John Brown University, explains the appeal of QAnon. “I think it is a conspiracy theory in the sense that it talks about things that people in power don’t want average people to know for the purpose of maintaining their positions in power,” he said. “One of the big elements of QAnon is that political elites are engaged in sex trafficking and child abduction, and how are they able to hide that? Well, because they are all elites and are trying to protect themselves.”

 

The movement started with a post by “Q” on 4chan, an online forum infamous for spreading misinformation and fostering hate speech. But Q’s message has now spread into the offline world, where its followers are moved to commit real-life crimes. For instance, on June 15, 2018, an Arizona resident pled guilty to a terrorism charge after blocking a bridge near the Hoover Dam with an armored vehicle. Given its link to several violent acts since 2018, the FBI identified fringe conspiracy theories such as QAnon as a domestic threat, according to a document dated May 30, 2019, obtained by Yahoo News.

 

But what started as a far-right fringe conspiracy online since Oct. 2017, has been seeping through the cracks of our mainstream political sphere in the past year. President Donald Trump has interacted with QAnon adherents by sharing posts on Twitter and publicly supporting pro-QAnon politicians like Marjorie Taylor Greene, a congressional candidate who won the Republican primary runoff in Georgia on Aug. 11.

 

“With this conspiracy theory, there are a lot of folks who are politically conservative and are behind it,” David Vila, professor of religion and philosophy at JBU, said. “It’s been connected to the support for President Trump, and if it gives conservatives a reason to support him, I think sometimes they will want to believe that the claims are true even if they might not have done the research.”

MORE AT LINK:

http://advocate.jbu.edu/2020/10/23/qanon-explained-the-conspiracy-theory-spreading-in-christian-circles/

Anonymous ID: 071f31 Oct. 24, 2020, 1:11 a.m. No.11250025   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11250023

MORE:

According to Pew Research, liberal democrats are most likely to have heard or read about QAnon (28%) compared to 18% of Republicans and GOP supporters. Although this movement garners more sympathizers with far-right ideologies, it is not a partisan issue. “We are now a divided nation with two major political parties and not many other options,” Vila said. “You are either for Trump or for Biden, democrat or republican, and that’s the kind of thought that’s always been a part of Christianity. People tend to see the fight against good and evil as binary opposites.”

 

As the conspiracy theory spreads further into social media feeds, it is simultaneously gaining attraction from Christian audiences, particularly from evangelicals. An article originally published on Religion News Service by reporter Katelyn Beaty refers to QAnon as “the alternative religion” that is increasingly dividing churches.

 

Josiah Wallace, associate professor of speech and theatre at JBU, points out the underlying religious tones in QAnon’s message. “This conspiracy theory is highly persuasive in terms of how they present the information,” he said. “It gives them the ability to no longer have any cognitive dissonance between scientific information and their Christian faith.”

 

However, the most concerning aspect of QAnon’s claims is its misuse of the Bible to appeal to evangelical Christians, according to an article published by Christianity Today. From quoting Scripture to sending cryptic messages such as, “Watch the water,” this movement depicts Trump as its messiah, the underdog whose personal mission is to defeat the cabal and usher in the “Great Awakening,” the new age of American greatness.

 

The dangers of conspiracy theories such as QAnon do not apply only to one political party or the other. QAnon’s message, which is rapidly spreading on social media despite efforts from Facebook and Twitter to ban its message, is not always easily avoided.

 

A study conducted in July 2020 found that QAnon has seen a 71% increase in Twitter content and a 651% increase on Facebook since March 2020. Furthermore, a poll by Morning Consult reported that 39% of respondents said sharing QAnon content online was a “major problem” while 28% labeled it a “minor problem.”

 

“I think the danger, especially for Christians, is that we are looking for answers in ways that don’t reflect the truth of Christ,” Bennett said. “That can be dangerous because it could be another idol of sorts to say, ‘This is what we are putting our hope in to explain the world.'”

http://advocate.jbu.edu/2020/10/23/qanon-explained-the-conspiracy-theory-spreading-in-christian-circles/