>>9442152 lb
Maybe the key word is "wicked", connected to the year of the pic with dark White House, 2015.
Since Q used a Scripture verse, perhaps did so to point to another Scripture reference to this "wicked". (Note: I am NOT saying the following verses should be interpreted with this in mind, but only that Q was simply using it to point to something.)
Zechariah 5: 8 then he said,“This is Wickedness!”And he thrust her down into the basket, and threw the lead [b]cover over its mouth. 9 Then I raised my eyes and looked, and there were two women, coming with the wind in their wings; for they had wings like the wings of a stork, and they lifted up the basket between earth and heaven.
10 So I said to the angel who talked with me, “Where are they carrying the basket?”
11 And he said to me, “To build a house for it inthe land of Shinar;when it is ready, the basket will be set there on its base.”
So, Shinar is Babylon, today'sIraq.
I did a quick search and found this article by that spoopy "journalist"DAVID IGNATIUSfrom2015about the start ofISIS.
"How ISIS Spread in the Middle East And how to stop it"
And some quotes:
"Although ISIS took most of the world by surprise when it swept into the Iraqi city of Mosul in June 2014....This was a secret conspiracy hiding in plain sight."
Then this paragraph mentions the Episcopal church, coincidence about POTUS pic in front of St. John's?
"It appears less brittle than al-Qaeda because its members care less about religious doctrine and organizational hierarchy.As has been said of the Episcopal Church (forgive the comparison), ISIS is solid at the core but loose at the edges."
"Attempts by the United States or Islamist rebels to topple authoritarian regimes—in Iraq, Libya, and now Syria—create power vacuums. This empty political space will be filled by extremists unless the United States and its allies build strong local forces that can suppress terrorist groups and warlords both. When the U.S. creates such local forces, it must be persistent.If it withdraws from these efforts, as America did in Iraq in 2011, it invites mayhem. Halfway American intervention has produced nothing but trouble. Rebels have gotten enough support to continue fighting, but not enough to win."
Then Ignatius mentions 9-11's Zarqawi:
"The story of how the forebears of ISIS got started in Iraq is largely the story of a rough-hewn, charismatic al-Qaeda recruit named Abu Musab al-Zarqawi."
He mentions Osama bin Laden and al-Zawahiri:
"Zarqawi made his name challenging the grandees of al-Qaeda: the wealthy Saudi businessman Osama bin Laden and the Egyptian doctor Ayman al-Zawahiri."
He quoted Sheikh Khamis al-Hassnawi:
“If coalition forces withdraw now, the strong will eat the weak, and people will start killing each other in the street,” he said."
"The U.S. government was still in denial;a Washington Post reporter who scouted the morgues to count dead bodies was accused by officials of inflating the numbers.
Over the next two years, however, the prudence of al-Qaeda’s core leaders began to seem warranted. U.S. President George W. Bush embraced General David Petraeus’s “troop surge” and the counterinsurgency philosophy that drove it."
He goes on to talk about Syria:
"The best hope for Syria’s survival is a political solution—jointly brokered by the U.S., Russia, Iran, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia—that begins the transition to a new, post-Assad government.
But such a political solution will be impossible without a strong, U.S.-backed opposition that can merge with “acceptable” elements of the Syrian army to manage a transition from Assad.
This transition process will be fostered by safe zones in the north and south, where humanitarian assistance can be directed, Syrian refugees can return, and political compromise can be rediscovered.
If these steps cannot be taken, the result will be the continuing growth of ISIS and other extremist groups, and the full collapse of a fractured Syria into a failed state and terrorist haven. Russian-Iranian military intervention can widen the boundaries of Assad’s rump state, but it cannot rebuild a united Syria.
ISIS’s power will only be enhanced in Syria by Assad’s continued hold on power. That’s why a campaign against ISIS that doesn’t include the goal of bringing new leadership to Syria is short-sighted."
There's more of the article, too much to copy here:
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2015/10/how-isis-started-syria-iraq/412042/