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Yeah that!!!RoadScholar wrote: ↑Tue Jan 15, 2019 10:32 pm Says a lot more about Joe than it does Chelsea.
And what it says isn’t good.
It ain't acid. It's an unguided Ayahuasca trip. and they ingested waaaaaaaaaaaaay too muchNorthland10 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 15, 2019 8:31 pm Has the quality of acid gone down since the old days? Asking for a friend.
You are assuming the average Poot has money for decent acid.Northland10 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 15, 2019 8:31 pm Has the quality of acid gone down since the old days? Asking for a friend.
More a meth crowd I would think.ArthurWankspittle wrote: ↑Thu Jan 17, 2019 1:44 amYou are assuming the average Poot has money for decent acid.Northland10 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 15, 2019 8:31 pm Has the quality of acid gone down since the old days? Asking for a friend.
Notorial Dissent wrote: ↑Thu Jan 17, 2019 11:37 amMore a meth crowd I would think.ArthurWankspittle wrote: ↑Thu Jan 17, 2019 1:44 amYou are assuming the average Poot has money for decent acid.Northland10 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 15, 2019 8:31 pm Has the quality of acid gone down since the old days? Asking for a friend.
Not a long article, but in a nutshell, many old, gullible people are spending their last holidays, and years, alone because their firm belief Hillary is eating babies, and Obama is about to be drug from his home and sent to Gitmo, has left them estranged from their families. I almost felt sorry for them. Almost.What I Learned Inside the Lonely, Sad World of QAnon Facebook Groups
The conspiracy theory seems to have created a lot of problems in the lives of its adherents.
Yeah, I know. Reading it reminded me of Butterzillon, Dr. Kate's fans, and many other birtherstani.Slim Cognito wrote: ↑Tue Jan 22, 2019 10:45 am Came upon this today on my twitter feed.
https://t.co/95oG0Wo2DP
Not a long article, but in a nutshell, many old, gullible people are spending their last holidays, and years, alone because their firm belief Hillary is eating babies, and Obama is about to be drug from his home and sent to Gitmo, has left them estranged from their families. I almost felt sorry for them. Almost.What I Learned Inside the Lonely, Sad World of QAnon Facebook Groups
The conspiracy theory seems to have created a lot of problems in the lives of its adherents.
An avid connoisseur of internet morons, the moment I learned about QAnon I was immediately curious...
***
As you probably noticed from the examples I have provided, the Q crew is made up of a very specific archetype of internet denizen: elderly right-wingers who have gone too far down the online rabbit hole. Diving into any given thread you’d be lucky to find someone who’s age drops below 55—but you will encounter one of the most unnerving melanges of psychotic ramblings and hateful screeds available anywhere. Calls for sanity are met with accusations of “controlled opposition,” and the only theories that are criticized are ones that question if the group has gone too far. But more importantly, almost every single member of Q’s following seems to have one glaring and unifying trait: They are deeply, heartbreakingly lonely.
***
Theories about Q’s endgame abound, but after watching closely for several months now, I think the odds are in favor of Q being an elaborate troll, aimed directly at one of the most gullible demographics in the world—old people on Facebook. A recent study found that people over 65 were several times more likely to share “fake news” online than young folks were, and nobody loves sharing a hot bowl of bullshit more than QAnon adherents. I thought early on that as more and more Q predictions did not come to pass, the following would dwindle, but these incredibly online grandparents have seemingly endless capacity for dissembling, and can conspiracy-brain themselves out of almost any corner.
Given the obviously bullshit premise of the entire thing, it seems likely that the Q movement will fall apart at some point in the future. A more open-ended question is what happens to the army of olds that it has amassed over the year, and what their lives will look like in a post-Q world. These people seem genuinely sad—quietly aware that the world has mostly passed them by, and desperate to define themselves as something more than simply a cog in society’s system. They see themselves as brave truth-tellers, warriors for unnamed children that Hillary Clinton is currently eating sous-vide, and from this they gain purpose and self-worth. When it becomes clear, as it invariably will, that they have been had, I wonder whether they will be able to comprehend this fact, or if they will be able to find their way back to the real world.
Ryan Bennett
4 hrs ·
Military tribunals have begun.
Check out the Office of Military Commissions Court Docket.
So much for the lefts’ claim “Q is a LARP.”
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Call me cynical, but I suspect the author's primary target is the elderly (boomers, again), and chose to write about QAnon followers to support the overwhelmingly popular millennial contention that everything that is wrong in this world is because of the boomers. Thus, Exhibit A: Qidiots. But one of the photos included in her article belies the point: it's of a young woman wearing a Q hat and holding an infant.Slim Cognito wrote: ↑Tue Jan 22, 2019 10:45 am Came upon this today on my twitter feed.
https://t.co/95oG0Wo2DP
Not a long article, but in a nutshell, many old, gullible people are spending their last holidays, and years, alone because their firm belief Hillary is eating babies, and Obama is about to be drug from his home and sent to Gitmo, has left them estranged from their families. I almost felt sorry for them. Almost.What I Learned Inside the Lonely, Sad World of QAnon Facebook Groups
The conspiracy theory seems to have created a lot of problems in the lives of its adherents.
https://t.co/Mm1EqoNCeIBen Collins
Verified account
@oneunderscore__
15m15 minutes ago
More
New from me: Coordinated 4chan trolls flood laid off HuffPost, BuzzFeed reporters with death threats
Shortly after he tweeted the news of his own layoff, Nick Wing checked his inbox at HuffPost and saw an email with a few pictures from a troll.
One was an image of President Trump, and another was a Photoshopped meme of Fox News’ Tucker Carlson. The edited image shows two bodies hanging from a tree next to the words “Day of the Rope,” a far-right meme about their desire to execute journalists. Underneath Carlson, where the scrolling cable news ticker would usually appear, it reads “JUST KILL THEM. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN.”
Wing was one of many journalists who were let go by Buzzfeed and HuffPost this week and were sent death threats from trolls organizing their efforts on the far-right message board 4chan. Many of those targeted by the harassment campaign did not cover the far-right, including Wing, whose beat focused on inequality and guns.
“It really is upsetting to see such outright animus toward the entire journalism profession, to the point where trolls are openly reveling in people’s misfortune or even working to make it worse. But ultimately I think it says more about their character than anything,” Wing told NBC News.
Nicely put.DejaMoo wrote: ↑Thu Jan 24, 2019 9:03 amEvery youth generation has been convinced it's their parents' generation that screwed things up, and their own generation that will set things to rights. So they sit back and wait, confident that time will fix the world without their having to put in much effort themselves. Since the 1960s we've seen how that doesn't work. We've got to forcefully remind the youngsters that every generation has racists, bigots, kooks, cons, and creeps within its ranks. They've never died out.
Liz is giving them just 11 more months to act.Trouble in the QAnoniverse
It’s been more than a year since Q promised that top Democrats would be arrested and tossed into Guantanamo Bay, and a growing number QAnon conspiracy theorists are starting to catch on.
The rank-and-file have begun to post increasingly about their disappointment on the QAnon forums. On Wednesday, for example, a top post on the “Voat” forum devoted to QAnon was devoted to complaining that QAnon was filled with complaints about how long the arrests are taking.
“At what point do you stop researching and start arresting people for crimes we know they've already committed?” one poster wrote.
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Last night, diehard QAnon promoter Liz Crokin complained that she’s going to quit the movement if the often-promised mass arrests don’t happen by the end of 2019.
“It’s so depressing and I’m just over it,” Crokin said. “I’m going to have to move on because it’s just taken such a big toll on me and my health that I don’t think I can stay in this fight if it continues to drag on for years and years and if these mass arrests don’t happen this year.”
Yes. Nothing more and nothing less.