Anonymous ID: e93a71 June 5, 2019, 9:56 a.m. No.6678063   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>6677944

TY Baker!!!

 

>>6677920 (lb)

My motivation comes from my own personal convictions to do the right thing, sweetie. Q is great, and verifiable posts almost always lead to the discovery of something new; be it some news dig, globalist operations, scum getting outed as pedos, or "suicides" of the elite. Even when Q's posts aren't related to external digs, it's the hope that something is being done about the evil in this world that provide some anons with motivation to a better future. Having said that, Q isn't actually the reason a lot of people are here. Q just so happens to be the conduit of information that many anons have taken to be the justification of lifelong suspicions of just how the world has worked until now.

 

So, to your point:

Who, why, and how is this group of still anonymous contributors to a "behind the scenes narrative" doing what they're doing?

The answer is as complicated and diverse as anons are people. For some, it ties into their already established personal convictions. For some, it's the journey of discovery. There are many reasons people feel led to explore this whole "Learn to think and research for yourself" thing. Again, and it's been stated here, repeatedly, freeing your mind from the programming out there. So, if an anon comes along a posts a few "Q-esque" lines, what's the harm, really? Either you think it's Q, or it's not, but even if the person on the other end of the monitor is someone with ill-intent, that post might still give some anons some needed motivation to keep pressing forward.

Anonymous ID: e93a71 June 5, 2019, 10:35 a.m. No.6678395   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8643

>>6678355

>>6678336

https://www.webmd.com/healthy-aging/autopsy-decision#1

 

Scroll to the bottom. Autopsies are nearly almost always required by law (look up state by state laws on this) when a person dies outside of a hospital bed. When a person dies in hospital care, usually (not always) what kills them is what they were there for, or some sort of complications in health as a direct result from primary care concerns.

 

If a person dies at home or outside of a hospital (again, depending on state law and the circumstances behind death), coroner is called, and autopsies are performed to determine cause of death.

 

Anon's explanation is plausible, and the family needs to get a hold of the coroner.

Anonymous ID: e93a71 June 5, 2019, 11:18 a.m. No.6678674   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>6678643

Whoa, anon. Just quoting sources. Not everything is an overwhelmingly suspicious conspiracy. I agree, the organs should have been returned, but if the family wants to know WTF, the coroner is step one.