POLL: Republicans/Conservatives do you follow 'QAnon'?

YES OR NO, ARE YOU A FOLLOWER?

  • YES

    Votes: 6 18.2%
  • NO

    Votes: 27 81.8%

  • Total voters
    33
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News



Q is one of my all-time favorite horror/sci-fi movies.

 
Like Limbaugh and others... the left paid more attention to and blabbered on about him far more than anyone on the right.
 
Perception Management as defined by the DOD: Actions to convey and/or deny selected information and indicators to foreign audiences to influence their emotions, motives, and objective reasoning as well as to intelligence systems and leaders at all levels to influence official estimates, ultimately resulting in foreign behaviors and official actions favorable to the originator's objectives. In various ways, perception management combines truth projection, operations security, cover and deception, and psychological operations.

The whole purpose and methodology of QAnon is in that definition except that QAnon is Perception Management directed at domestic audiences instead of foreign audiences..
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News


I ran into q lovers and haters on 4 chan and later on the Donald.....q followers get nothing but grief on 4 chan ....for a long time now ...

In the beginning of q They would throw it all together on someone else's site. ....neon something or another
You idiots on the left are fascinated by it becuase the msm is ramming it down your throats ....in a bad way

I was never a follower
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News


I ran into q lovers and haters on 4 chan and later on the Donald.....q followers get nothing but grief on 4 chan ....for a long time now ...

In the beginning of q They would throw it all together on someone else's site. ....neon something or another
You idiots on the left are fascinated by it becuase the msm is ramming it down your throats ....in a bad way

I was never a follower
Yet you and every other idiot trump supporter believe the same goofy conspiracy theories.
 
Fuckin q gives anonymous
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News


I ran into q lovers and haters on 4 chan and later on the Donald.....q followers get nothing but grief on 4 chan ....for a long time now ...

In the beginning of q They would throw it all together on someone else's site. ....neon something or another
You idiots on the left are fascinated by it becuase the msm is ramming it down your throats ....in a bad way

I was never a follower
Yet you and every other idiot trump supporter believe the same goofy conspiracy theories.
Like what ?Russia collusion ...oh wait that was the brainless morons of the always angwy and on anti depressants leftist
 
So how many of you believe there actually IS a "deep state"?

How many believe that there is a giant pedo cabal?

That's Q

How many people believe QAnon nonsense and don't realize that's what it is..

How many believe it and won't admit it...
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News
I have never actually seen a QAnon article. Ive only heard democrats talk about them.
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News
I have never actually seen a QAnon article. Ive only heard democrats talk about them.

If you ever heard a tump speech, you heard Q ideas.
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News


How about how many republicans even know what it is? The only people who actually know what it is are democrat politicians pushing it to attack republicans.....republicans who have never heard of it before the democrats brought it up...
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News


How about how many republicans even know what it is? The only people who actually know what it is are democrat politicians pushing it to attack republicans.....republicans who have never heard of it before the democrats brought it up...
Seems like some republicans would have at least been curious about all those Q signs at every one of Trump's rallys.
1613581246236.png
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News


How about how many republicans even know what it is? The only people who actually know what it is are democrat politicians pushing it to attack republicans.....republicans who have never heard of it before the democrats brought it up...
Seems like some republicans would have at least been curious about all those Q signs at every one of Trump's rallys.
View attachment 458247

Democrats show up and hold those signs........ask actual republicans if they know what it is...you doofus.
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News
Unlike the left, I dont FOLLOW anyone. I SUPPORT those who agree with me
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News


How about how many republicans even know what it is? The only people who actually know what it is are democrat politicians pushing it to attack republicans.....republicans who have never heard of it before the democrats brought it up...
Seems like some republicans would have at least been curious about all those Q signs at every one of Trump's rallys.
View attachment 458247

Democrats show up and hold those signs........ask actual republicans if they know what it is...you doofus.

Sure. That doesn't sound like a childish excuse at all.
 
So how serious are we supposed to take this organization? Are they all crackpots? How many of you are actually followers?

Please be honest as to your involvement, we need to know!

Note to MODS. Please I beg you, leave this here, don't send it to the conspiracy board, flame zone, or one of the other boards where no one will see it.

This IS current news, obviously.

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from?


Supporters of the QAnon movement were among the crowd that stormed the US Capitol building on Wednesday.
Several prominent activists were spotted inside the building, and others flew Q-themed banners inside and out.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
President Trump - viewed as a hero by the movement - has stopped short of endorsing the conspiracy theory but has described QAnon activists as "people who love our country."
So what is QAnon and who believes in it?
What is it?
At its heart, QAnon is a wide-ranging, completely unfounded theory that says that President Trump is waging a secret war against elite Satan-worshipping paedophiles in government, business and the media.
QAnon believers have speculated that this fight will lead to a day of reckoning where prominent people such as former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will be arrested and executed.


media captionTrump on QAnon: 'They do like me'
That's the basic story, but there are so many offshoots, detours and internal debates that the total list of QAnon claims is enormous - and often contradictory. Adherents draw in news events, historical facts and numerology to develop their own far-fetched conclusions.
Where did it all start?
In October 2017, an anonymous user put a series of posts on the message board 4chan. The user signed off as "Q" and claimed to have a level of US security approval known as "Q clearance".
These messages became known as "Q drops" or "breadcrumbs", often written in cryptic language peppered with slogans, pledges and pro-Trump themes.
Picture of a snake in the shape of a letter Q and the slogan where we go one we go all

image caption"Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans
Nobody actually believes it, right?
Actually, thousands do. The amount of traffic to mainstream social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and YouTube has exploded since 2017, and indications are the numbers have gone up further during the coronavirus pandemic.
The big social media companies subsequently tightened their rules about QAnon content and took down hundreds of Q-supporting accounts and videos.
But social media and opinion polls indicate there are at least hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who believe in at least some of the bizarre theories offered up by QAnon.

And its popularity hasn't been diminished by events which would seem to debunk the whole thing. For instance, early Q drops focused on the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller.
QAnon supporters claimed Mr Mueller's inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 US election was really an elaborate cover story for an investigation into paedophiles. When it concluded with no such bombshell revelation, the attention of the conspiracy theorists drifted elsewhere.
True believers contend deliberate misinformation is sown into Q's messages - in their minds making the conspiracy theory impossible to disprove.
QAnon supporters bring banners and flags to rallies in support of President Trump
IMAGE

QAnon: What is it and where did it come from? - BBC News


How about how many republicans even know what it is? The only people who actually know what it is are democrat politicians pushing it to attack republicans.....republicans who have never heard of it before the democrats brought it up...
Seems like some republicans would have at least been curious about all those Q signs at every one of Trump's rallys.
View attachment 458247
You'd think that wouldn't ya?

It's not like those Q signs didn't show up at Trump rallys...right?

Oh wait...they did
 

Forum List

Back
Top