>>12174838
well look here NEVADA recent Q article
https://knpr.org/knpr/2020-12/nevada-qanon-followers-spread-online-conspiracy-theories-real-life
Dec 09, 2020byBert Johnson
QAnon began as an online conspiracy theory.
But now, it’s a fully-fledged movement animating hardcore supporters of President Donald Trump as he falsely denies that he lost the election.
At its core, QAnon says Trump has been secretly fighting a shadowy group of devil-worshipping pedophiles who pull the strings in business and government.
But the movement has spread like wildfire since he took office – and even though Trump’s on the way out, it doesn’t show any signs of slowing down.
And it’s been showing up at recent pro-Trump protests on the streets of Nevada.
At the weekly protests in Carson City, QAnon has been a visible presence with people carrying signs and wearing T-shirts with well-known Q slogans.
A Q supporter interrupted an interview with a Boogaloo Boi, another far-right movement that advocates a second civil war, to explain one part of the conspiracy theory.
“What’s going on is they’ve put watermarks in the ballots to find out which ones are counterfeit and which ones are not. The National Guard has deployed to count the votes. This was the biggest sting operation in the world – was the election. They brought ‘em in. They let ‘em doing it and now we’re going to arrest them,” the supporter said.
Support comes from
What he’s describing is part of the Q mythology. They believe the National Guard has been activated to defeat Trump’s enemies in secret.
The events are a medley of far-right ideologies, including patriot movements and militias and the Proud Boys - a white supremacist gang supporting Trump. QAnon seems to be getting more visible
For example, right-wing radio host Monica Jaye gave a pro-Q speech at an event in Carson City while announcing she would run against Republican Congressman Mark Amodei in 2022
Other GOP political leaders have attended these events, including Assemblyman Jim Wheeler and State Senate Minority Leader James Settelmeyer, who were at an event in October.
Not everyone at these rallies is forthcoming about their QAnon beliefs. Some people don't talk about them because they just don’t like journalists, mainly because President Trump has been using journalists as punching bags throughout his term.
Other people talk about Q without saying it explicitly. They’ll use codewords and slogans like “trust the plan,” which is a reference to Trump’s purported plot to draw out pedophiles and arrest them.
They’ll also reference the “rabbit hole,” Q-talk for so-called research online that reinforces the conspiracy theory
The whole thing started in 2017 when someone calling themselves 'Q,' and claiming they had high-level national security clearance, started posting cryptic messages about President Trump's efforts to destroy the cabal run by liberal elites around the globe online.
"Qanon is essentially a cult-like conspiracy theory that holds that a military intelligence team is running a secret, yet also public, operation to root out and destroy large-scale, interconnected rings of sex traffickers and pedophiles and saboteurs that have infiltrated the heart of the Democratic Party, big business, Hollywood, the media, finance - basically anywhere where there are prominent liberals, these people see pedophiles and the Q team is supposedly working together with Trump to take these people out," explained Mike Rothschild, a conspiracy theory researching, who is working on a book about QAnon.
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