Anonymous ID: 642a16 Jan. 1, 2021, 7:57 a.m. No.12267118   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7134

They read the bread and Q drops and make bets.

 

(Headline) The Dark Reality of Betting Against QAnon

 

(Brief excerpt)

That’s when Cage started paying attention to the PredictIt comments sections, where people were posting snippets of what looked like nonsense to him. And that’s how, years before most people had heard of QAnon, Cage learned that Q is an anonymous figure who claims to have a high-level security clearance and access to inside information about a devil-worshipping deep state.

 

All of a sudden, the bets made sense: QAnon followers believed that Q had special inside information about the future, and they bet accordingly.

 

“There were people who were so convicted in these beliefs that they were willing to put hundreds or thousands on the line,” Cage said. “So I started shoveling more and more money in.”

 

Cage began scanning PredictIt for QAnon theories and betting against them. He’d look for anything weird—usually something like suspiciously high odds that a Democrat would be indicted. Then he researched to make sure he hadn’t missed something in the news cycle. “If I saw conspiracy-theory chatter in the comments section of Google News articles, that was a plus for me,” Cage said.

 

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2021/01/betting-against-qanon-predictit/617396/