Anonymous ID: 71db46 Feb. 3, 2021, 10:36 p.m. No.12817908   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7924 >>7934 >>7943 >>7982 >>8018 >>8059

all PB

 

anons posoverlookedPB should have been looked at by more anons as his post is a HELL YEAH post

 

>>12817700

 

330.0 Million Americans

–79.2 24% under 18

250.8 Adults

42.636 Million, per survey at 17%

Equals HOLY SHIT! Self-sustaining momentum achieved.

The Great Awakening is Habbening NOW.

 

Q, YOU DID IT!

 

 

 

all PB

>>12817566

>>12817700 <<<<<<<< anon what was your image? post it again

>>12817715

>>12817731

>>12817428

 

>>12814724 In Nov 2020 Pew Research survey showed that 20% of adults in America thought the Q movement was a good thing for the country.

 

 

From NYTimes Qanon hit piece: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/03/opinion/qanon-conspiracy-theories.html?smtyp=cur&smid=tw-nytimes

 

According to the survey, nearly a fifth of American adults, 17 percent, believe that “a group of Satan-worshiping elites who run a child sex ring are trying to control our politics.” Almost a third “believe that voter fraud helped Joe Biden win the 2020 election.” Even more, 39 percent, agree that “there is a deep state working to undermine President Trump.”

Anonymous ID: 71db46 Feb. 3, 2021, 10:38 p.m. No.12817924   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7934 >>7943 >>7982

>>12817908

 

ALL PB

 

related:

 

>>12814724

>>12813726 (pb about # favorable of Q movement)

 

 

It's more than that. In Nov 2020 Pew Research survey showed that 20% of adults in America thought the Q movement was a good thing for the country.

 

78% of the population is 18 years or older.

 

78% of 330,000,000 is 257,400,000

 

20% of those 18 or older (adults) is 51,480,000

 

And this was even using the bs "qanon conspiracy theory" language, so likely the number is even higher.

 

https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/11/16/5-facts-about-the-qanon-conspiracy-theories/

 

 

Want to see some numbers of the Q movement, I will bet min 70% members on Gab are digital soldiers.

 

33 million people

Anonymous ID: 71db46 Feb. 3, 2021, 10:39 p.m. No.12817934   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7943 >>7982 >>8082

>>12817908

>>12817924

 

 

>anons post overlooked PB

should have been looked at by more anons

as his post is a HELL YEAH post

 

330.0 Million Americans

 

–79.2 24% under 18

 

250.8 Adults

 

42.636 Million, per survey at 17%

 

Equals HOLY SHIT! Self-sustaining momentum achieved.

 

The Great Awakening is Habbening NOW.

 

Q, YOU DID IT!

Anonymous ID: 71db46 Feb. 3, 2021, 10:58 p.m. No.12818018   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8031 >>8032 >>8187 >>8198 >>8297 >>8391 >>8472 >>8482 >>8486 >>8534 >>8561

>>12817982

>>12817908

 

33 million on Gab

probably a ton are pro Q and Trump?

 

https://www.dailydot.com/debug/gab-ceo-qanon-letter/

 

@th3j35t3r/Twitter Andrew Torba/Gab

 

Gab CEO outs self as QAnon supporter in diatribe to user base

Torba says Q might not be real, but he's all in on QAnon.

 

Dec 2, 2020, 11:48 am*

 

 

Tech Claire Goforth Claire Goforth

This morning, Gab subscribers woke to a lengthy email diatribe from CEO Andrew Torba validating QAnon and claiming that the doubters are the real conspiracy theorists.

QAnon is a conspiracy theory that the world is controlled by a shadowy network of Satanic pedophiles who sacrifice children, drink their blood, wear their skin, and are addicted to a fictitious drug called adrenochrome that is supposedly harvested from their brains. They believe this cabal includes Democrats, entertainers, and the "deep state," and that a secretive government insider known as Q feeds them clues on 8kun.

It is, in a word, nonsense. Nevertheless, in the three years since its founding, QAnon has attracted millions from all over the globe.

 

Gab, long a haven for the dregs of the far-right, such as the Pittsburgh synagogue mass shooter, has flirted with QAnon before. Torba's letter is the most public declaration of outright support for the conspiracy theory, however.

 

Torba's letter, which he also posted in a blog on Nov. 30, was prompted by Business Insider reporter Yelena Dzhanova emailing Torba for comment on an upcoming story about prominent QAnon supporters, which he would be included in because he "welcomed QAnon accounts to move over to Gab after Facebook's ban."

Torba prefaces his response by claiming that Bussiness Insider is "working on a major hit piece attacking everyone and anyone connected to the community of millions of great patriots who are seeking the truth outside of legacy media narratives." (Torba likes to construe stories as hit pieces that really aren't, such as the recent Vice News piece about a former Facebook software engineer becoming Gab's chief technology officer.)

 

Torba rants that QAnon isn't a conspiracy theory, but a "decentralized community of millions of people who are researching and reporting on news that so-called 'journalists' refuse to cover."

 

As proof of journalists' refusal to cover the "wicked and corrupt" oligarchs, Torba points to billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, the sex offender whose exploits were outed by the Miami Herald.

Intriguingly, Torba expresses doubt that Q is real, but says it isn't important. "That part may or may not be true, but I don’t think it really matters either way," he writes.

 

Torba then claims that the media maligns QAnon because it views it as direct competition over the flow of information, and also because they're Christians.

 

"Ultimately what the anti-Christian legacy press and the wicked oligarchs in power fear the most is Christians coordinating and unifying on the internet." When this happens, he says, "their evil will be exposed and their names will be named." He claims avoiding this is the real purpose of coronavirus-control measures, such as the limits on church services that the U.S. Supreme Court recently struck down.

Many laughed it off. David Gilbert of Vice News tweeted sarcastically that the way the media portrays the conspiracy has "nothing to do with QAnon's baseless claims that Democrats and Hollywood elite are global, Satanic, cannibalistic child sex trafficking ring."

One Twitter user pointed out that Torba's missive is likely an effort to persuade QAnon followers to join Gab, which is increasingly losing the battle to become the favored social media haven for right-wing outcasts to Parler.

Torba's fans were thrilled by the attention, as was he.

"Our enemies are very, very mad about my reply to the Business Insider hit piece," Torba wrote on Gab, along with a screenshot of Gilbert's tweets. "This pleases me."