Conspiracy of the day

  • Started
  • Last post
  • 1,209 Responses
  • PhanLo0

    I hope he puts his money where his mouth is, he's been talking about being in a revolution for 20 years, he better put his man tits on the front line. His kids are better off with his wife.
    -

  • Bluejam1





  • PhanLo1

    They found Q, finally
    -

  • grafician-3

    • Dinosaur extinction is a lie!palimpsest
    • ^meaning they aren't extinct?lemmy_k
    • As opposed to them being extinct?palimpsest
    • Wait, what is the Mattress Firm conspiracy??randommail
    • People think it’s sus that there will be 3-4 mattress stores in one strip mall. Think it’s a front for organized crimescarabin
  • Bennn0

    Translated from french]

    - - - -
    It is impossible to fully explain what happened on Wednesday on the United States Capitol without going through the QAnon conspiracy.

    Certainly, the people who assaulted the building with the aim of stopping the confirmation of the election of Joe Biden as American president do not all necessarily belong to the movement. Outgoing President Donald Trump certainly encouraged his supporters to "walk on Capitol Hill" in a speech where he said he was never going to concede victory and that he intended to keep fighting. QAnon is not the only element in play. The presence of people carrying a secessionist flag or a neo-Nazi t-shirt is not trivial.

    However, for those like me who have watched this move for just over three years now, there is a feeling that this is the inevitable culmination of the QAnon galley. From a logical continuation. Sooner or later, we would come to this.

    It's easy to stop at the QAnon show and laugh at it without really trying to really understand it and grasp the risk it entails. Seen from the outside, the movement is a circus.

    Some supporters believe that John F. Kennedy, Jr., the son of the assassinated president of the same name, is still alive and working secretly for Trump. Others believe North Korea is in fact controlled by the CIA, thanks to Trump's interventions. QAnon's basic belief - that an American secret agent borrowing the moniker “Q” would post cryptic messages on an obscure forum once dedicated to Japanese pornography and cartoons to impart information of capital importance - is of a ridiculous absurdity for anyone with the slightest knowledge of web culture.

    Since the November 3 election, QAnon fanatics have claimed that US Special Forces raided Germany to obtain machines that were supposedly used to rig the vote in favor of Joe Biden.

    This week, the story had changed: Computers in Germany had simply served as a transit point between vote-counting machines in some key states and those seeking to alter the outcome of the ballot. It was, of course, the British secret services, which had obtained this data using Italian military satellites.

    And so on.

    QAnon is a bottomless pit. The movement is constantly changing and it is next to impossible to be aware of everything that its supporters, who now number in the millions, are saying. In return, it is not necessary to follow the latest developments of this sordid soap live to understand that what happened Wednesday is part of QAnon. His supporters are not subtle and they do not hide. You just have to listen to them to know exactly what they want.

    If QAnon had a constitution, the first article would be that Donald Trump must rule in the United States - and elsewhere - and forcefully put everything in its place. It has to go through a purge of unwanted elements - politicians, officials, journalists; to hell with democracy, the rule of law, political standards or any form of compassion for all those who are not sympathetic to his power. What QAnon wants is a violent coup. That's all. The rest is frills.

    This is not my opinion or an extrapolation on my part. This central foundation of the movement is at the very heart of QAnon's holy literature. Q's very first post, published on October 28, 2017, promised that former Donald Trump opponent Hillary Clinton would be arrested shortly. His second post - where he says Trump had already started cleaning up - couldn't be more explicit: "Whoever controls the presidency controls this beautiful country," he wrote. The US Constitution would tell us otherwise, but hey. QAnon has been an explicitly authoritarian and implicitly fascist movement since its founding.

    As the QAnon mythology developed, with its forks into satanic cannibalism and horoscopic interpretations of misspellings in Trump's Tweets, this central point has never been lost sight of. Worse, he was exacerbated by the election result, proof, according to his followers, that the "deep state" must be even more fiercely opposed.

    One of QAnon's countless pitfalls is viewing the movement as a web beast, a sordid pastime for the lost souls of social media. It may once have been the case. It is no longer. Wednesday's assault bears the indelible imprint of this movement.

    Among the very first to enter the Capitol were people wearing "Q" t-shirts. The woman shot yesterday while participating in the storming of the building had clearly displayed her membership of the movement on Twitter. One of the most prominent figures of yesterday's events, a shirtless, make-up man wearing a helmet with Viking horns was actually Jake Angeli, aka "Q Shaman", a well-known QAnon preacher.

    While some Republican politicians and supporters may well condemn these agitators and call them baselessly anti-Trump activists in disguise, the party itself is plagued by this conspiracy. Openly QAnon Republican politician Marjorie Taylor Green now sits in the House of Representatives. The party's body in Texas borrowed a slogan in August - "we are the storm", we are the storm - straight out of "Q" messages. Since the election, we can no longer count the politicians of this party who have brandished "evidence" of electoral fraud from the bottom of the web where QAnon faithful are rampant.

    Inspired by social networks, the ideas of this movement travel. It is no longer necessary to be part of QAnon to propagate messages that come from it. The president himself, in an appeal to Brad Raffensperger, Secretary of State for Georgia, where he asked the latter to "find" him votes to overturn the outcome of the election, repeated conspiracies "circulating in the Internet "and which were created from scratch by followers. Pro-Trump lawyer Lin Wood was posting stories associated with QAnon on his Twitter account until the social network suspended him late Wednesday night.

    He is far from the only one. QAnon is now a main vector of political disinformation of all kinds. His ideas are circulating on pro-Trump media airwaves and in politicians' social media accounts.

    The prophet at the center of the movement, "Q", has not posted a post since December 8. But Ron Watkins, former administrator of the forum where these messages were broadcast and son of its owner, Jim Watkins, has now established himself as a central figure in the movement. Some observers believe Mr. Watkins and his father have been controlling "Q" 's account for some time, which they deny. Regardless, Ron Watkins has indeed taken his place. He is cited as a "computer expert" by pro-Trump media outlets and posts messages on Twitter that curiously resemble "Q" statements.

    In a tweet published a few hours before the assault, Mr. Watkins promised to unveil "a bomb" that would shock the planet. It was actually an article by Neon Revolt, a popular influencer in the QAnon sphere, who claimed, among other things, that Vice President Mike Pence was part of a plot to coup against the President. Trump.

    The article concluded: “I call for the immediate arrest for treason of Michael Richard Pence, 48th Vice President of the United States. Patriots, you are all in Washington DC today for a reason. that it matters. "

    Hours later, as Q Shaman stood behind the Senate podium leading an enraged crowd, New York Post reporter Steven Nelson took a snapshot of the scene.

    • https://www.vice.com…Bluejam
    • ^ One of QAnon’s Biggest Influencers Is a Failed Hollywood ScreenwriterBluejam
    • lol you were ahead of the game on this Bennn...I wonder how many of the people who attacked the Capitol were QAnon.yuekit
    • Recently I try to explain this Q thing to some of my friends in Asia who aren't that familiar with USA politics. They were like "wait what???" hahayuekit
  • Bluejam3


  • DRIFTMONKEY4

  • PhanLo0

    • kind spiciousdbloc
    • Subscribed instantly, this guy knows.PhanLo
    • Damn the video is gone. Deep State must have taken him out.PhanLo
  • cherub2

    If you skip to 2:00 you'll notice something very odd

    Based on that, you may come to another realization.

    I predict this will play out like the Mueller Investigation. The whole thing was designed to get you to deny reality. It worked. People came away having learned all the wrong lessons, and never once stopped to ask the most basic of questions.

    No different in the "death" of Jeffrey Epstein. No different here.

    What's being done here is on a very grand scale. If you hide something in plain sight, people won't see it.

  • imbecile5

  • Bluejam2
  • Nairn1

    • 4.4million views? This is a big one yeah?Ianbolton
    • More like 106+ Million viewsNBQ00
  • ShenanigansTV-2
  • NBQ00-4

    Bill Gates again...

    • 897.4 million acres of farmland in the usa, Gates owns 0.25 million acres. There are some real dumb fucks out there pffff...zarkonite
  • PhanLo2

  • grafician-1

    More like a mystery...

    "9 Russian Adventurers Mysteriously Froze to Death. A New Theory Explains Why

    More than 60 years after the incident, scientists say they have new evidence pointing to a peculiar kind of avalanche as the culprit."

    https://www.wired.com/story/dyat…

    "Over the decades, what became known as the Dyatlov Pass incident has prompted many a conspiracy theory. It must have been aliens that made the Russians flee to an icy death, as evidenced by the fact that some of the adventurers’ clothes bore traces of radioactivity. Or a Yeti had stumbled upon the camp. Or, more plausibly, the local humans didn’t appreciate the group’s intrusion on their lands. In the end, none of these were particularly convincing to the Russian government, which officially blamed an avalanche as the culprit, all those curious circumstances notwithstanding.

    Now, more than 60 years later, scientists say they’ve got new evidence to back up that claim, but with a twist: The killer was probably a peculiar kind of avalanche."

    • And the Roswell incident was a weather balloon, sure.Maaku
    • Good YouTube about it
      https://youtu.be/22O…
      12xu
    • the small avalanche as the trigger event, but after re-reading about it, still not convinced it fits the scenariografician
  • nb2

    What’s going on with qanon these days

  • _niko4

  • Gardener1

    found this ticket in a drawer for this event I went to

  • lemmy_k9

    • Watch the Hitchcock documentary about themnb
    • It heartens me to see Pluto re-elevated to its rightful place as a planet in this list.Continuity
    • Is everyone alright on the other planets then? Mind blown!Ianbolton