Anonymous ID: 4c4bbf April 5, 2021, 1:50 p.m. No.13367047   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>7069

>>13367000

Is this where the 4-6% lost forever come in?

 

What about the people, who got the shot, that "Coincidently" died within a short period of time. Know of someone IRL that did. So, are there "coincidences" or not?

 

BIG Pharma is EVIL. How do we destroy them, before they destroy us? Not all vax's are bad? Well, your trips confirm we are still flying with ZERO Visibility. ZERO Transparency.

 

Fauci/Gates/16 yr plan etc all designed to Depopulate? What would wake up the sheep? A fake vax that's safe, or one that they planned on killing us all with? The sheep will take it, will they regret it?

Anonymous ID: 4c4bbf April 5, 2021, 2:11 p.m. No.13367161   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>7185 >>7195

4 LARP? April?

 

What This Documentarian Learned After Three Years Spent In the Deep Dark Rabbit Hole of QAnon

 

What's an idea so dangerous that it warrants being banned?

 

That was the initial question in filmmaker Cullen Hoback's head when he set out to uncover who is behind the far-right conspiracy known as QAnon β€” a movement, dating to 2017, that warns of secret evil among the American elite being secretly battled by Donald Trump.

 

The theory takes its name from the so-called "Q," who first began posting on the internet in October 2017, styling themselves as a government insider incorrectly predicting Hillary Clinton's imminent arrest.

 

In the years since, QAnon has become larger and more diffuse, more like a series of overlapping conspiracies united by common themes of exploitation, coverups and covert messages. Based on forums and in social media posts, its true popularity β€” the number of its true believers β€” is hard to measure. But its profile is clear: QAnon has spawned countless amounts of merchandise, been referenced approvingly by conservative lawmakers and had a presence at the Jan. 6 Capitol attack by a pro-Trump mob.

 

More and more, QAnon has also been booted from mainstream platforms, though it still thrives in some digital corners.

 

In attempting to answer the question of who was behind it all, Hoback may have gotten more than he bargained for β€” ultimately spending three years embedding himself with both those who believe in the conspiracy and those who just may have created the entire thing to begin with.

 

Much has been written about those who follow the QAnon narrative, which alleges a number of wild and macabre claims, including that a group of cannibalistic pedophiles run a global child sex-trafficking ring and actively plotted against President Trump while he was in office.

 

Far less has been confirmed about who is actually pulling the puppet strings at the center β€” as the author of the Q posts β€” which is what Hoback says he wanted to do: Determine who, exactly, was behind the conspiracy-laden prophecies purporting to share insider information about the White House and top levels of government.

 

In short, Hoback wanted to use his six-part HBO docuseries, Q: Into the Storm, to out the anonymous part of the movement.

 

"I thought that unmasking 'Q' might bring this whole thing to a conclusion," he tells PEOPLE.

 

The QAnon phenomenon is rooted in the series of posts purportedly written by someone with "Q-level" security clearance, who first appeared on the anonymous forum 4chan nearly four years ago. (The "Q drops" have since made their way to the similarly-named message board website 8chan.)

 

Q's conspiratorial predictions were dense and jargon heavy β€” or nonsensical, depending on the view β€” and read to fans like a code to be cracked.

 

Over time, as the number of posts by Q grew, an online community sprouted up around it. Eventually, Q's warnings (the bulk of which never came true) found their way to other websites, drawing in more and more followers and launching YouTube channels from those attempting to decode the latest "drops."

 

QAnon, though still viewed as something of a fringe group, has no doubt had an impact on the American electorate. The conspiracy has even made its way into mainstream politics thanks to the Trump administration and lawmakers like Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who expressed her support for QAnon in the past. (Her spokesman has since said she thinks it's "disinformation.")

 

Many observers also noted the amount of QAnon paraphernalia at the deadly insurrection at the the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

 

While Hoback says he doesn't blame QAnon for the riots, he also says the attack likely wouldn't have happened without it.

 

"It's the idea of meme and magic β€” memeing something into reality. Jan. 6 was the attempted manifestation of that," Hoback says. "You had a number of people … trying to make the Q narrative real."

 

Indeed, an ABC News report examining the court records of those arrested for participating in the riots showed a large number of them appeared to be followers of QAnon.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/documentarian-learned-three-years-spent-160311470.html

Anonymous ID: 4c4bbf April 5, 2021, 2:19 p.m. No.13367217   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>7237

>>13367162

Had a discussion with an Anon about a yr or so ago, right after a school shooting. Other Anon makes vids, and said it was a clear FF. I told Anon, that muh grandson knew the child killed. Other anon said, real people die in FF's. Some are actors, some are sacrifices. Other Anon said, "This is WAR". Realized at that moment, this isn't an innocent "movie."

 

So to me, any death caused by them, is their offering to their Dark lord.

Anonymous ID: 4c4bbf April 5, 2021, 2:39 p.m. No.13367334   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun

NASA's Mars helicopter survived its first night alone on the red planet after the Perseverance rover set it free

 

NASA's new space helicopter has survived its first night alone on Mars.

 

After slowly unfolding from its hideaway in the rover Perseverance's belly, the 4-pound robot called Ingenuity dropped the last four inches to the ground on Saturday. By weathering freezing temperatures, Ingenuity has overcome one of the biggest hurdles in NASA's quest to fly the first drone on another planet.

 

Ingenuity is set to conduct its first Martian flight as early as Sunday. If that goes well, the space drone will have a roughly 30-day window to attempt up to five increasingly difficult flights, venturing higher and further each time.

 

NASA's Perseverance rover, which carried Ingenuity to Mars, will perch nearby and record video. That footage will help NASA collect crucial data about this technological demonstration, and it could pioneer a new method of exploring other planets.

 

Having been deployed, Ingenuity is now in position for those flights.

 

After depositing the helicopter on the ground, the rover backed away, exposing Ingenuity's solar panels so they could soak up sunlight. This also exposed the rotorcraft to frigid Martian nights. In Jezero Crater, the ancient lake basin where Perseverance landed, nighttime temperatures can plunge as low as negative-130 degrees Fahrenheit.

 

"This is the first time that Ingenuity has been on its own on the surface of Mars," MiMi Aung, NASA's project manager for the helicopter, said in a press release. "But we now have confirmation that we have the right insulation, the right heaters, and enough energy in its battery to survive the cold night, which is a big win for the team. We're excited to continue to prepare Ingenuity for its first flight test."

 

NASA spent $85 million developing Ingenuity. The rotorcraft has already proved tough enough to survive the nearly 300-million-mile journey to Mars and weather the planet's extreme temperatures. But it also has to fly.

 

Mars has an incredibly thin atmosphere; it's just 1% of the density of Earth's. To catch enough air, the helicopter's four carbon-fiber blades have to spin in opposite directions at about 2,400 revolutions per minute - about eight times as fast as a passenger helicopter on Earth.

 

Ingenuity's first flight will just test whether the helicopter can successfully get a few feet off the ground, hover for about 30 seconds, and then touch back down. From there, each test will get more difficult, culminating in a final flight that could carry the helicopter over 980 feet (300 meters) of Martian ground.

 

more kek

https://www.yahoo.com/news/nasas-mars-helicopter-survived-first-170103291.html