Anonymous ID: 725acd Aug. 24, 2018, 8:57 a.m. No.2723268   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3276 >>3347 >>3475 >>3503 >>3522

>BY ROSE MINUTAGLIOAUG 24, 2018

 

>How Conspiracy Theories Like QAnon Affect Relationships - Esquire

 

>My Boyfriend Reads QAnon Theories. I Still Love Him—But I'm Worried.

 

>The mother of all conspiracy theories disrupts family dynamics and tests loved ones.

 

https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/a22664244/qanon-boyfriend-conspiracy-theorist-my-partner-deep-state/

 

Looks like Esquire is lurking here too stealing our chats to write up stories for profits. We were talking about this yesterday in one of the bakes.

Anonymous ID: 725acd Aug. 24, 2018, 9:04 a.m. No.2723328   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3337 >>3342 >>3347 >>3367 >>3575

>>2723276

 

The world is watching

 

The "journalist" really put some effort into that. It's long.

 

>How Q Breaks Up Families

 

>With a conspiracy theory like QAonon that is so multifaceted and inherently based on the news cycle, it can be difficult for loved ones to have conversations without Q coming up, according to Benjamin Decker, a research fellow at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy at Harvard. It's not unusual for people to reach a point where they either put up with each other's opinions or distance themselves, he says.

 

>When 49-year-old Connecticut native Susan tried to convince her Trump-supporting mother that QAnon was nothing more than a baseless conspiracy theory last year, the response was a resounding: No! Hillary Clinton was involved in this and will be charged for this.

 

>"I was flabbergasted, it was like she'd morphed into this person that believes in utter farces," says Susan, who requested her last name be kept from this article to avoid harassment from QAnon followers. "I was sad and, honestly, worried about would come next."