Anonymous ID: 095238 March 25, 2021, 3:54 p.m. No.13298426   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8572 >>8665

>>13298408

>https://www.forbes.com/sites/suzannerowankelleher/2021/03/25/qanon-conference-omni-dallas-hotel-memorial-day-weekend-michael-flynn-sidney-powell/?sh=560434353778

 

 

 

In this politically charged, hyperpartisan era, many hospitality brands would go out of their way to avoid being linked to a group that helped fuel the Capitol riot on January 6.

 

But this Memorial Day Weekend, the Omni Dallas Hotel is slated to host a QAnon conference, reports the Dallas Morning News. Attendees who stay at the upscale 1,001-room property in downtown Dallas for $149 a night can enjoy eight restaurants, a heated infinity pool, a full-service spa—and a stacked lineup of QAnon favorites.

 

The “For God & Country Patriot Roundup” kicks off at 5 p.m. on Friday, May 28, with a private VIP meet-and-greet reception at the hotel’s Texas Spice restaurant. The hotel is connected by skybridge to the Dallas Convention Center, though event organizers have scheduled the bulk of the activities at Gilley’s Dallas, a seven-venue complex just down the road.

 

“Although this has been a time of uncertainty for many, it is also a time of excitement as we witness political history being made before our eyes,” says the event website. “What better time and place to get together to fellowship and celebrate with your Patriot family?!?”

 

Headlining the conference are two of the country’s best-known “deep state” conspiracy propagators—Michael T. Flynn and Sidney Powell. Flynn, who was President Trump’s national security advisor for 24 days, pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about contacts with the Russian ambassador but was subsequently pardoned by Trump. Last year, Flynn made a public show of taking the QAnon “oath,” and has promoted an online store that sells QAnon merchandise.

 

Sidney Powell, one of Trump’s former attorneys, is currently being sued for $1.3 billion in damages in a defamation lawsuit brought by Dominion Voting Systems over her repeated claims that the company was part of a far-reaching conspiracy to rid the White House of Trump by rigging voting machines. Part of her legal defense is that “no reasonable person” could have possibly believed her.