by Mike Nichols, Publisher | March 9, 2021 | 1434 CT
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The Communist Democrats want us to believe that something called "QAnon" is the domestic terrorist arm of the "vast right-wing conspiracy" alleged by many, including Hillary Clinton.. But is QAnon even real? (Photo: Rick Loomis/Getty Images
Flashback to January 6. The media of all stripes put live cameras on a small group of rabble-rousers who broke off from the peaceful protests in front of the U.S. Capitol rallying in support of President Donald Trump's efforts to make right what he alleged was a fraudulent election process. There were at least 800,000 Trump supporters in Washington, D.C. that day. Fewer that 200 invaded the Capitol.
Five people died — all of them Trump supporters, including the Capitol police officer who died the next day. We were told a "QAnon rioter" struck him in the head with a fire extinguisher. After weeks and weeks of trying to prove that story, the Department of Justice eventually had to give up on it as a false narrative. His cause of death is still not known.
We know exactly what killed Ashli Babbitt, though. The Ocean Beach, California resident, a 14-year Air Force veteran who self-described as a "Trump devotee," was standing on the other side of a door Capitol police had blocked and that some demonstrators were trying to push open. None of them were armed, they were simply pushing on the door when a police officer who had his gun drawn throughout the confrontation inexplicably fired, striking Ashli in the head and killing her.
The other deaths were from heart attacks or strokes. Despite numerous false media narratives told throughout that day, there were no guns recovered from those who were arrested. But from the very beginning, the media painted the tragic events as having been spurred by QAnon, to that point nothing more than a name attached to a mysterious online character and a few conspiracy theorists who identified in public demonstrations as QAnon.
In fact, the online presence and the microscopic presence of those who claimed to be part of the organization was the only evidence QAnon existed.
The character that gave life to QAnon existed only on a sketchy and now defunct 4chan website. Someone calling themselves “Q Clearance Patriot” posted to 4chan’s "/pol" message board. The now-infamous so-called “Bread Crumbs” post asked a series of rhetorical questions, insinuating, more or less, that Donald Trump had been hand-selected by the military to clean out a secret pedophile ring that had taken over the highest levels of government.
From there, the notion metastasized on Reddit and YouTube into a master narrative tying in everything from Kim Jong Un (who it seems is secretly no longer in charge of North Korea) to JFK, Jr. (who obviously faked his own death). Before being kicked off TV, Roseanne Barr amplified the fringe idea to her considerable Twitter following.
Others joined in the fun, apparently. Someone calling himself "King Smarty" on Twitter began claiming that Bill and Hillary Clinton, the Pope, all the cardinals in the Vatican, and Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Phillip had been "arrested and executed." Obviously, when all those people kept showing up on television, it was excellent proof QAnon was a hoax.
That did not deter the tin-foil-hat crowd. When "Smarty" simply explained that the "dead" they seeing were body doubles or perhaps clones, "CGI" or holograms, or maybe it was old video digitally altered. Thus reassured, the nut cases on the far right — not to be confused with the nut cases on the far left — felt free to continue building their own little fantasy world.
It continues today, with President Trump hiding on an unnamed U.S. military base, directing the operation to bring down the international pedophile ring while simultaneou9sly unraveling the fraudulent election conspiracy, to emerge on March 4 to arrest Biden, the Democrats and retake the White House. Oh, wait, no ... make that March 20, because no one actually showed up on Washington on March 4.
It is a theater of the absurd.
It is nearly impossible to pin down a single version of the QAnon theory, but despite — or perhaps because of — that lack of specificity it has mushroomed in influence. Nothing could stop the momentum. When Buzzfeed exposed the Q as an elaborate hoax on Trump supporters pulled off by Leftist artists,
In its fundamentals, the idea is that the QAnon conspiracy seems suspiciously similar to the plot of Q, a best-selling novel by a team of anarchist media activists collectively known as “Luther Blissett,” first published in Italian in 1999. The suggestion, evidently, originates with Twitter posts (below) by the “Wu Ming Foundation,” the name of a present-day literary collective formed by former Luther Blissett members:
The insinuation essentially would be that the “QAnon” posts were somehow started originally by left-wing cultural activists inspired by Luther Blissett's work, looking to hack right-wing online culture by planting disinformation so over-the-top that, if repeated by Republicans and Trump populists, it would totally discredit them.
In fact, conservative Republicans and loyal Trump su9pporters, alarmed that the QAnon obsession was primed to hurt the party in the 2018 midterms were a key part of the effort to unmask it as a hoax. All but a very few of QAnon believers first felt foolish then backed off the movement, recognizing it for the fraud it was — and remains today.
QAnon wouldn't even be a factor today if not for the need the Communist Democrats had for a scapegoat for the January 6 tragedy they most likely manufactured to attempt to discredit President Trump once and for all. Knowing there were going to be huge numbers of Trump supporters in Washington that day, the corrupt career politicians simply arranged for a few Antifa and BLM members to mingle with the crowd until the president stopped speaking and incite a riot.
The biggest example of their treachery is the fact CNN paid Antifa member John Sullivan $70,000 to video the riots once inside the Capitol. Unless the network knew there was going to be a breech of the building, they had no reason to lay out that kind of money to real left-wing insurrectionist to "prove" a right-wing insurrection.
It is extreme irony those who claim to be QAnon don't recognize they are being used as "right wing insurrections" by left-wing insurrectionists who accuse them of the very cause the left is attempting — the overthrow of the constitutional government of the United States of America.
Instead of seeing the trap into which they have been lured, they have deluded themselves into believing that the hero is about to emerge, overthrowing the villains, rescuing the damsel ... uh, country ... and taking his rightful place in the Oval Office.
Instead, if they are dumb enough to go to Washington on March 20, far greater bloodshed will occur, they will be arrested and accused of insurrection that will be evidenced by careful manipulation of their gullibility and the takeover by the Communist Democrats will be complete.
There is no QAnon outside the minds of the naïvé. Which is to say, there is QAnon, but it is not the frightening insurrectionist ideology the Left is claiming, nor is the the vast heavily-armed militia that is going to again storm Capitol Hill on March 20.
So who is QAnon then? The communist media and politicians in power would have you believe it is the vast army ready to respond to President Trump's beck and call to overthrow a "legitimately elected president."
QAnon is no such thing. Largely, QAnon has returned to its original home: Social media. You can find many groups on Facebook that espouse the ridiculous, hair-brained belief that all those politicians and Catholics are long dead, replaced by holograms, that tribunals are still being held at that "secret military base" where President Trump is meting out justice at the hands of either a guillotine or a firing squad, planning his triumphant return.
That is QAnon, a sad collection of magical thinkers who praise each other for their pseudo-patriotism and quixotic resolve, keyboard warriors who live the heroic life vicariou9sly through their pathetic posts, finding confirmation for their convictions in the affirmations of other like-minded magical thinkers.
These are the people who are going to rise up, following President Trump into Washington on March 20 to claim their share of the throne with him. These are the "insurrectionist army" the media uses as the boogieman to keep frightened little communists in line, not thinking outside the carefully formulated Pablum being bottle-fed them on CNN, MSNBC and in The New York Times.
If only the two extremes could see that neither of them is the real enemy. The real enemy is the shadowy puppet master pulling both sets of strings.
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