The "QAnon" Fraud!

marke

Well-known member
I'll do that, in between other things I have to get done this afternoon. I agree with you to an extent, regarding corporate owners and following the money. Where we might differ is in approaching the two-party problem.
Unbelievers are greedy, envious, and unkind by nature. That is because of sin inherited from Adam. In America, under the influence of godly men and women, prosperity was achieved by hard work and responsible behaviors, not by government decree and welfare.
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
I vote republican because I know how damaging democrat communism and Marxism are to society and how democrat promotion of sin, depravity, and perversion of justice will lead to the total collapse of the nation if not checked.

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marke

Well-known member
Origin of democrat conspiracy theory labeled "Vast Right-wing Conspiracy":

"Vast right-wing conspiracy" is a conspiracy theory popularized by a 1995 memo by political opposition researcher Chris Lehane and then referenced in 1998 by the then First Lady of the United States Hillary Rodham Clinton, in defense of her husband, President Bill Clinton, characterizing the continued allegations of scandal against her and her husband, including the Lewinsky scandal, as part of a long campaign by Clinton's political enemies.[1] The term has been used since, including in a question posed to Bill Clinton in 2009 to describe verbal attacks on Barack Obama during his early presidency.[2] Hillary Clinton mentioned it again during her 2016 presidential campaign.[3]
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
Both QAnon and longtime supporters of former President Donald Trump criticized his Saturday night speech in Wellington, Ohio, accusing him of the "same-old, same-old" grievances against Democrats and his 2020 election loss to President Joe Biden.

QAnon supporters, some of whom are the former president's most fanatical online backers, sent a barrage of messages through the Telegram app that expressed boredom and even anger at the speech Trump described as "the very first rally of the 2022 election." They blasted Trump for not mentioning how his January 6 insurrection supporters are "rotting in jail." And numerous others said Trump should be booed by the Ohio rallygoers for even "bringing up the word 'vaccine,'" specifically because they believe COVID-19 was entirely a hoax.

But a majority of the top QAnon user comments simply expressed their outright boredom with Trump's post-election stump speech, in which he baselessly claimed to have won in November 2020 and blasted any dissenting GOP members as "traitors."

 

marke

Well-known member
You find wackos on both sides of the aisle. Consider this racist black supremacist armed militia terrorist organization:


According to Grandmaster Jay, the reasoning for the group’s formation is simple. “We live in a world where racism is appearing to rear its ugly head again the way it did back in the Jim Crow days,” he tells Complex via Zoom. “We didn’t create that. It recreated itself. So it proved to be fertile ground for the creation of the NFAC, the same way it was fertile ground in the ’60s to create the Black Panthers.” The organization is roughly three years old, according to Grandmaster Jay, but only recently has the NFAC reached the nationwide discussion about race and police brutality, with a number of demonstrations in Stone Mountain, Georgia, and Louisville, Kentucky...
 

marke

Well-known member
Both QAnon and longtime supporters of former President Donald Trump criticized his Saturday night speech in Wellington, Ohio, accusing him of the "same-old, same-old" grievances against Democrats and his 2020 election loss to President Joe Biden.

QAnon supporters, some of whom are the former president's most fanatical online backers, sent a barrage of messages through the Telegram app that expressed boredom and even anger at the speech Trump described as "the very first rally of the 2022 election." They blasted Trump for not mentioning how his January 6 insurrection supporters are "rotting in jail." And numerous others said Trump should be booed by the Ohio rallygoers for even "bringing up the word 'vaccine,'" specifically because they believe COVID-19 was entirely a hoax.

But a majority of the top QAnon user comments simply expressed their outright boredom with Trump's post-election stump speech, in which he baselessly claimed to have won in November 2020 and blasted any dissenting GOP members as "traitors."

Which of the following groups has a history of the most craziness?

KKK?
NFAC?
BLM?
QAnon?
DNC?
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
Both QAnon and longtime supporters of former President Donald Trump criticized his Saturday night speech in Wellington, Ohio, accusing him of the "same-old, same-old" grievances against Democrats and his 2020 election loss to President Joe Biden.

QAnon supporters, some of whom are the former president's most fanatical online backers, sent a barrage of messages through the Telegram app that expressed boredom and even anger at the speech Trump described as "the very first rally of the 2022 election." They blasted Trump for not mentioning how his January 6 insurrection supporters are "rotting in jail." And numerous others said Trump should be booed by the Ohio rallygoers for even "bringing up the word 'vaccine,'" specifically because they believe COVID-19 was entirely a hoax.

But a majority of the top QAnon user comments simply expressed their outright boredom with Trump's post-election stump speech, in which he baselessly claimed to have won in November 2020 and blasted any dissenting GOP members as "traitors."

Could be MAGA has realized Trump is useless to them if he's not in office and like Frankenstein's monster, they're moving on without him.

Looking at Breitbart last night, I took screenshots of two stories. Look at the comment count for each. Not surprising to see the comment count for the Gwen Berry story, with its triple whammy of race, flag, and authoritarianism, but it's interesting to see how few comments were being generated by Trump's Ohio appearance (and that the title refers to him as "former"). Checking the count of each this morning to see if the rally comment caught up, it hasn't come close.

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marke

Well-known member
Could be MAGA has realized Trump is useless to them if he's not in office and like Frankenstein's monster, they're moving on without him.

Looking at Breitbart last night, I took screenshots of two stories. Look at the comment count for each. Not surprising to see the comment count for the Gwen Berry story, with its triple whammy of race, flag, and authoritarianism, but it's interesting to see how few comments were being generated by Trump's Ohio appearance (and that the title refers to him as "former"). Checking the count of each this morning to see if the rally comment caught up, it hasn't come close.

Screen-Shot-2021-06-27-at-8-49-04-PM.png


Screen-Shot-2021-06-27-at-8-49-28-PM.png
That may be why leftist news organizations focus so much attention on public figures who disrespect God, America, and American values and traditions. They generate more fevered responses than those stories which celebrate American patriotism and greatness.
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
Could be MAGA has realized Trump is useless to them if he's not in office and like Frankenstein's monster, they're moving on without him.
Trump has clearly jumped the shark with his deranged fanbase because he repeatedly bragged about the coronavirus vaccines that were produced during his administration, and if we've learned anything from Trump's numpties on this forum, it's how much they hate those vaccines.
 
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marke

Well-known member
Trump has clearly jumped the shark with his deranged fanbase because he repeatedly bragged about the coronavirus vaccines that were produced during his administration, and if we've learned anything from Trump's numpties on this forum, it's how much they hate those vaccines.
Being wisely cautious about novel vaccines with short, troubled track records is not a political party imperative, it is a common-sense response to an ongoing threat.
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
Keep in mind as you read below that according to Bob Enyart, the QAnon crowd "are all pro-Trump people who truly have a problem with mental illness."

"Among all religious people, white evangelical Protestants were the most likely to wholly accept QAnon, with the poll finding that 22 percent of the group fully believe the conspiracy, while 58 percent are 'doubters' and only 21 percent reject it."


So 22% of white evangelicals believe in QAnon, and the article goes on to state that "23 percent of Republicans fully accept the conspiracy." These people comprise virtually the entire base of the Republican Party. So according to Bob Enyart, the base of the Republican Party is mentally ill.

Furthermore, 58% of evangelicals are "on the fence" about QAnon. That means that 58% of white evangelicals are "on the fence" about mental illness. That sounds about right.
 
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