While some interpreted Trump’s pre-recorded comments as a concession, others divined a more hopeful message in his ambiguous promise to supporters.
news.yahoo.com
Ever since a violent mob, including some with ties to the cultlike Q movement, invaded the U.S. Capitol in a failed attempt to stop Congress from certifying the results of the presidential election, Q believers have been trying to reconcile what did — and didn’t — happen in Washington this week with their own conspiracy-ridden world view.
Did the bombshell evidence they had been promised that the election had been stolen really exist? If so, why has it still not been released? Did Trump actually concede after months of insisting the vote had been rigged, or was there a secret message hidden in the video statement put out by the White House Thursday night? Was that even really Trump in the video? And what will happen now to the ring of Satanic pedophiles that Trump was supposed to destroy?
LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL at that last paragraph. ****ing idiots.
But their delight quickly turned into denial as it became obvious that the invaders had no actual plan and the occupation descended into an orgy of selfie-taking, juvenile vandalism and violence that resulted in the deaths of at least four participants. (A Capitol police officer was also injured in the attack and later died.)
Argentino said he soon saw QAnon followers pivot to spreading the preposterous belief that the mob of rioters, who had marched on the Capitol from a Trump “Save America” rally outside the White House less than an hour before, was actually made up of
left-wing provocateurs in MAGA hats.
lol
@babe
“All of a sudden, when they realized ... that it wasn’t the revolution they expected, then they really pushed the false-flag narrative,” Argentino told Yahoo News. Like so many other events in QAnon’s warped version of history, Wednesday’s attack on Congress had morphed into a “part of this massive plan to try to destroy America” and more specifically, Trump.
The belief that Trump is locked in a good-versus-evil battle to save America from a nefarious cabal of “global elites'' and “deep state” government officials has been QAnon’s core narrative since its early days on the internet fringes. Also central to the QAnon belief system is both an apocalyptic faith in the imminence of “the Storm,” a day of reckoning in which members of this non-existent cabal will be arrested en masse, and an almost limitless ability to rationalize repeated failed predictions for when the “Storm” will take place.
man this sounds so much like babe that im starting to think that babe is actually Q!
While some interpreted Trump’s pre-recorded comments as a concession, others divined a more hopeful message in his ambiguous promise to supporters that “our incredible journey is only just beginning” and resolved to continue to “trust the plan.”
Dave Hayes, a popular QAnon influencer known as “Praying Medic,” suggested on Twitter that while Biden might be inaugurated despite “stealing an election and getting caught,” there’s nothing to stop Trump’s supporters from “physically removing” Biden from the White House. (Hayes’ Twitter account has since been suspended).
Many others refused to believe that Biden will even be sworn in, noting that Trump’s video never mentioned the president-elect by name, and suggesting that the “new administration” he was referring to was actually a new Trump administration, perhaps replacing the suddenly out-of-favor Mike Pence with a more accommodating vice president, such as Michael Flynn.
LOL. They still think trump will be president just with michael flynn as VP instead of pence. Dummies
“Wording is key..he never said biden..period,” read one comment on the QAnon message board, the Great Awakening.
Many have expressed disillusionment and frustration in the aftermath of Wednesday’s attempted insurrection, particularly toward figures like Lin Wood, a Trump ally and pro-QAnon attorney who emerged along with former Trump lawyer Sidney Powell as a prominent voice in the “Stop the Steal” movement, an effort to overturn the election through the courts. Though their lawsuits were rejected over and over for lack of evidence, lack of standing or amateurish drafting (one of Wood’s briefs
misspelled his own name) their bogus claims of an international conspiracy involving Democrats, rigged voting machines, and foreign governments resonated with Trump loyalists, including followers of QAnon.
This article blows my mind. I have never been to this qanon site before and didn't know exactly how crazy and delusional these people are. They are way crazier than I thought.