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Post by librarylady on Aug 1, 2018 19:32:01 GMT
News to me, but it sounds like they are believing Alex Jones or his ilk.
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MizIndependent
Drama Llama

Quit your bullpoop.
Posts: 5,927
Jun 25, 2014 19:43:16 GMT
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Post by MizIndependent on Aug 1, 2018 19:36:04 GMT
I have, and actually, Q-Anon disavows Alex Jones.
(this is all very right-wing media stuff. I'm just posting what they are actually saying about all this)
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Post by PolarGreen12 on Aug 1, 2018 19:38:56 GMT
I'm still not quite sure what it is, but they have another thing coming if they think they're going to talk shit about Hanks!
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Post by peano on Aug 1, 2018 19:45:48 GMT
I just posted a WaPo article about this group on the Trump catch all thread. Scary people not in touch with reality.
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Post by SockMonkey on Aug 1, 2018 19:59:51 GMT
Roseanne is big into QAnon if that's any indication of the crazy-stupid level we're dealing with.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Aug 18, 2025 19:45:27 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Aug 3, 2018 5:01:05 GMT
Watching them tonight be interviewed at a PA rally. They sound SERIOUSLY out of touch. They believe that the media and the FBI are evil. Anything you ask them, they have an answer for. They say, "How do you know it's NOT true?" Weirdest crap ever! Wherever these people are coming from, I wish they'd crawl right back under their rocks and stay there!!
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Post by gar on Aug 3, 2018 6:13:22 GMT
I've just read a BBC online article to figure out what it was after someone mentioned it on Rainbow's thread about paedophiles. Makes sense now.
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scrappinmama
Drama Llama

Posts: 5,672
Jun 26, 2014 12:54:09 GMT
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Post by scrappinmama on Aug 3, 2018 12:24:44 GMT
They are Trump's base. The man who is out of touch with reality belongs with them.
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Post by mrssmith on Aug 3, 2018 12:31:11 GMT
Terrifying. How long do you think before Trump starts retweeting them?
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pyccku
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 2,831
Jun 27, 2014 23:12:07 GMT
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Post by pyccku on Aug 3, 2018 13:14:00 GMT
When I was in Germany this summer, I saw a sticker in Stuttgart for QAnon.
It just goes to show that there is a whole world full of crazy people, not just in the US.
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Post by gar on Aug 3, 2018 13:30:45 GMT
When I was in Germany this summer, I saw a sticker in Stuttgart for QAnon. It just goes to show that there is a whole world full of crazy people, not just in the US. Oh that’s certainly true - it’s just that yours (or their leader) are particularly vocal at the moment!! 😛
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Aug 18, 2025 19:45:27 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Aug 3, 2018 13:49:45 GMT
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Post by iamkristinl16 on Aug 3, 2018 13:56:10 GMT
I saw a story on this on cnn last night. I don’t know whether to laugh or cry that there are this many stupid people in this country. Many of them didn’t seem to fully understand what it was they were supporting, and had no facts to back anything up.
And I’m still confused...nobody really knows who “Q” is? Yet they are following him/her wholeheartedly?
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Post by scrapsotime on Aug 3, 2018 14:09:57 GMT
My son told me that these are people that got kicked off 4chan for being too out there. How ridiculous do you have to be to get kicked off 4chan?
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AmeliaBloomer
Drama Llama

Posts: 6,842
Location: USA
Jun 26, 2014 5:01:45 GMT
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Post by AmeliaBloomer on Aug 3, 2018 15:29:38 GMT
I first saw this photo a few days ago and I can’t stop thinking about it. What do all these bright eyed, happy children think they’re supporting?
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Post by crimsoncat05 on Aug 3, 2018 15:34:05 GMT
Terrifying. How long do you think before Trump starts retweeting them? I'd give it a week, tops. Probably a lot sooner.
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Post by iamkristinl16 on Aug 3, 2018 15:43:03 GMT
I first saw this photo a few days ago and I can’t stop thinking about it. What do all these bright eyed, happy children think they’re supporting? It's bad enough that they are at a Trump rally in the first place. But then to take it even further and support an anonymous person who is likely either a) mentally ill or b) foreign trying to further interfere in our country. Everyday I am more and more shocked at what people will believe.
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seaexplore
Prolific Pea
 
Posts: 9,366
Apr 25, 2015 23:57:30 GMT
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Post by seaexplore on Aug 3, 2018 15:47:08 GMT
QAnon has been around for a while.
When I hear Q, I think Star Trek. Lol
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Post by dewryce on Aug 3, 2018 17:19:12 GMT
QAnon has been around for a while. When I hear Q, I think Star Trek. Lol I think Bond. Love the current actor playing Q.
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Post by dewryce on Aug 3, 2018 17:20:38 GMT
I first saw this photo a few days ago and I can’t stop thinking about it. What do all these bright eyed, happy children think they’re supporting? I see this and feel so much rage towards their parents.
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Post by crimsoncat05 on Aug 3, 2018 17:22:09 GMT
^^^ I hadn't even thought of that! I did NOT like him when I first saw him (I loooooved the original James Bond Q), but the new Q has grown on me. His cute dorkiness and his floppy, curly hair has won me over...  ETA: I'd MUCH rather talk about the James Bond Q than those kids, who are getting their heads filled with Trump's crap and his outright, blatant lies-- that just makes me mad. And sad.
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The Great Carpezio
Pearl Clutcher
Something profound goes here.
Posts: 3,165
Jun 25, 2014 21:50:33 GMT
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Post by The Great Carpezio on Aug 3, 2018 17:51:09 GMT
They scare me or at least the powers that manipulate them scare me. Right now they are still extreme, but what worries me is that parts of their theory can be seen in more “mainstream” right wing believers. The thread about pedophilia definitely has a lot of references to the “elite immoral cabal bogeymen.” I see it in the people who think that Trunp is winning and those that don’t see it are fools. That’s you shouldn’t listen to what he says. Look at he results. He is so far more intelligent than the rest of us that we just don’t get him.
It’s bad enough listening to the mocking some of the right do to put “libtards” in their place, but the out and out anger and vilifying is what scares me. Dehumanizing the “other” is incredibly dangerous.
Also, there is a lot of kayfabe going on too. That over the top wrestle mania mob mentality thing seems to get a lot of the pro Trump people worked into a frenzy. It can be annoying but fairly benign but I worry that it fuels the crazies in the crowd too. There WILL be more Trump based violence in the future. They are playing with fire imo.
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scrapngranny
Pearl Clutcher
Only slightly senile
Posts: 4,948
Jun 25, 2014 23:21:30 GMT
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Post by scrapngranny on Aug 3, 2018 18:16:16 GMT
Tin foil hats unite.
It is scary that they can actually get anyone to believe this crap. Between the White Nationalists and this group, I wonder if the voice of reason will ever exist again.
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Post by crimsoncat05 on Aug 3, 2018 18:37:24 GMT
. That over the top wrestle mania mob mentality thing seems to get a lot of the pro Trump people worked into a frenzy. It can be annoying but fairly benign but I worry that it fuels the crazies in the crowd too. There WILL be more Trump based violence in the future. They are playing with fire imo.I agree that sooner or later, something like this WILL happen. It's inevitable, with his over-the-top rhetoric and the crowd 'frenzy mentality' that he delights in fomenting with his speeches. I typically try NOT to listen to any of the news coverage of his [supposed Republican election] rallies, because, well... Trump = crazy + lies. And I think I've heard that a number of news outlets do NOT cover them much any more,for the same reasons. (and honestly, who really thinks they're election stump speeches for the Republican candidates? They're not. If I was one of those candidates I'd say NO THANK YOU if he wanted to come give a speech for me. These rallies are just put on to get Trump out of Washington, away from the news coverage, and to give him a 'feel good' experience for his narcissism and ego.) But I do hear clips from them now and then. Listening to those clips, I am reminded soooo much of the shtick from a stand-up comedian doing the cut-rate casino comedy show circuit. I can totally picture Rodney Dangerfield delivering all the standard Trump lines about Russia, Hillary, his electoral college win, etc. etc. He's just trying to get laughs from his audience, and it annoys the CRAP out of me, how non-intelligent the President of the United States is, in these public settings.
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Post by SockMonkey on Aug 3, 2018 23:38:11 GMT
My son told me that these are people that got kicked off 4chan for being too out there. How ridiculous do you have to be to get kicked off 4chan? You really have to be next level crazy.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Aug 18, 2025 19:45:27 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2018 19:12:04 GMT
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Aug 18, 2025 19:45:27 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Aug 6, 2018 19:49:10 GMT
linkI had no idea who or what Q Anon is until reading this thread. But it does explain why the Russians feel they can manipulate Americans via social media. Then I found this take from my favorite Washington Post columnist Paul Waldman. “ Why the GOP is so easily infiltrated by bonkers conspiracy theorists” “When people started showing up at recent Trump rallies waving signs with giant “Q”s on them and making references to QAnon, a conspiracy theory to end all conspiracy theories, members of the press, and no doubt many people at home, were puzzled. Aren’t things crazy enough already without this fresh new lunacy? The trouble is that this is neither the first nor the last absolutely bonkers conspiracy theory to infiltrate today’s GOP, getting both literally and figuratively within a few feet of the president of the United States. In fact, it would have been more surprising if the Republican Party wasn’t overrun with conspiracy theorists. It’s hard to do justice to the intricate madness of what QAnon is about in a concise manner, but I’ll let Molly Roberts give it a shot: The simplest description of the plot line goes something like this: President Trump isn’t under investigation; he is only pretending to be, as part of a countercoup to restore power to the people after more than a century of governmental control by a globalist cabal. Also, there are pedophiles.
A figure named “Q,” who supposedly possesses Q-level security clearance, disperses “crumbs” that “bakers” bring together to create a “dough” of synthesized information. (This is not how baking works, but that seems the least of our worries.) Because Q is the 17th letter in the alphabet and 17 is also a number Trump has said a few times, among other clearly-not-coincidences, he is the real deal, not an Internet troll engaged in an elaborate example of live-action role-play.She forgot to mention that JFK Jr., who faked his own death, may be Q. Ryan Broderick of Buzzfeed suggests that the whole thing may have actually started as a prank meant to make right-wingers look ridiculous, which sounds pretty plausible. If you hunger for a more detailed explanation, there’s one here. On the surface, what’s most curious about this kind of conspiracy theory emerging on the right is that it comes at a time when they control everything. “Can anyone recall another time when there was more conspiracy-mongering by supporters of the party in power than the party out of power?”, asked The Post’s David Weigel, and it’s true: Conspiracy theories are usually used by those who feel alienated from power to explain how things got the way they are. When they lose an election, at least some people will be pushed to believe that not just the election itself but lots of other things are controlled by dark, powerful forces whose machinations are hidden from ordinary people. That’s one of the reasons conspiracy theories are attractive: They tell you that everyone is stupid and ignorant, while you are one of the few people smart and clued-in enough to understand what’s really going on. Still, that doesn’t explain why Republicans would be so vulnerable to even the most deranged conspiracy theories, when there’s a far friendlier explanation for everything happening now, namely that Donald Trump is a fantastic president beloved by the people, which is why he won in 2016 and his party controls Congress and most of the power in the states. Why is that the less attractive story? The reason is simple: Conservatives have been trained by the people they trust most to believe that everything is a conspiracy. And not just a conspiracy; a conspiracy against them.No one embodies that more than Trump himself, of course. He transformed himself from a celebrity into a political figure by becoming America’s most prominent proponent of the racist “birther” theory that Barack Obama was not in fact born in America. No conspiracy theory seems too idiotic for Trump to at least consider, whether it’s that Ted Cruz’s father killed JFK, or that Antonin Scalia was murdered, or that millions of undocumented immigrants voted illegally against him, or that vaccines cause autism. He went on the radio program of the noxious conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who among other things asserted that the Sandy Hook massacre was staged with child actors, and told Jones, “Your reputation is amazing. I will not let you down.”But it started way before Trump. For years, conservatives have been fed one conspiracy theory after another by the hosts on Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, and many other right-wing media figures. They’ve been told that climate change is a hoax dreamed up by scientists running a grift for grant funding. They’ve been told that unlike, say, the Koch brothers, who are just patriotic Americans exercising their right to spend their money advocating political outcomes they favor, George Soros is a sinister puppetmaster who pays protestors to agitate for left-wing causes. In fact, even what we regard as relatively “mainstream” conservative news organizations offer their audiences a picture painted every day of a society run through with one conspiracy after another: a conspiracy of liberal professors to brainwash your children, a conspiracy of liberal journalists to twist the news, a conspiracy of liberals in Hollywood to undermine your values, a conspiracy in government to destroy Donald Trump. No matter who’s in power, there are still multiple conspiracies out to get you. One of the signal beliefs of the conspiracy theorist is that almost no one can be trusted, because the truth is buried under a mountain of lies. Don’t believe what you read in the newspaper or see on TV, because they’re all in on it. Or as Trump himself put it, “just remember: What you’re seeing and what you’re reading is not what’s happening.” It it any wonder that Trump’s Republican Party is particularly fertile ground for this kind of thing?”
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