Anonymous ID: cf49ba March 30, 2019, 11 p.m. No.5987964   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Look we are now bad guys who kill mob bosses but that's bad because we are crazy so mob boss good

 

I fucking cannot

 

https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/03/28/qanon-maga-and-the-killing-of-a-reputed-mob-boss/amp/

 

When Comello appeared in court in New Jersey for an extradition hearing that would send him back to New York, he suddenly displayed a hand covered in scribbled text. “United we stand,” he’d written, along with “MAGA forever” – a reference to President Trump’s campaign slogan, “Make America great again.”

 

Drawn with thick lines at the center of his hand was a large “Q.”

 

Last summer, there was a flurry of reporting on “QAnon,” when adherents began popping up at Trump rallies. It’s a sweeping, bizarre theory that Trump’s presidency was secretly predicated on uprooting child molestation rings and in which an anonymous figure named Q revealed secret messages from within the White House about Trump’s hidden agenda. A president who’d based his election on the idea that he was battling a nefarious establishment cabal had transformed, in the eyes of thousands of supporters, into a president battling an even more dangerous and toxic group, leaking The Truth out to a select few through this anonymous account.

 

That Comello was sporting a “Q” on his hand in court, though, wasn’t an ironic statement or a wink at the broader conspiracy theory. In a phone call with The Post on Thursday, his attorney, Robert Gottlieb, argued that the QAnon theory was central to the incident on Staten Island.

 

“The evidence that I refer to, the QAnon, the other hate words and messages emanating from other extreme right-wing conspiracy websites, as well as statements made by the president, without any question will be critical and central to explaining what happened in this case,” Gottlieb said.