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Scoot: What is QAnon and does it pose a threat to America?

Woman holding a "Q sent me" sign
Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

Democrats and Hollywood elites will be free to continue their operations of a highly-organized child sex trafficking ring now that Donald Trump is no longer President of the United States. These Democrats and Hollywood elites that are in charge of the child sex trafficking ring are Satanic pedophiles. In some cases, the children are murdered and eaten.

Despite that being false, that is what QAnon supporters believe. They also believe that President Trump was the one person leading the crusade to expose this vast conspiracy.


The foundation of QAnon may seem too unbelievable to be true, but many Trump supporters, including many who stormed the Capitol on January 6th, believe the unbelievable.et’s start with what QAnon is.

QAnon is a far-right group of Americans that accepts and promotes the false claims that Democrats and Hollywood elites, like Tom Hanks and Oprah Winfrey, are behind a ring of Satanic pedophiles and that President Trump was the savior to bring an end to the atrocities being committed.

“Q” represents one, or several, high-ranking government officials with intelligence and security clearance. “Q” continues to work closely with Trump and his closest advisers to bring to justice those involved in the pedophile operation. The identity of “Q” is unknown, and QAnon stands for “Q” anonymous. The earliest QAnon conspiracy theory is believed to have started in 2017 and steadily grew until after the election when a new surge of believers joined the movement.

During the 2020 presidential campaign, President Trump stopped short of denouncing QAnon out of fear he would alienate many of his most loyal followers. In October of 2020, President Trump was asked about the conspiracy theory; and he said, “Let me just tell you what I do hear about it is they are very strongly against pedophiles and I agree with that.”

QAnon supporters try to say that if you condemn QAnon then you support Satanic pedophiles. That makes QAnon seem like a righteous group on a righteous path to end the sex trafficking of children. Obviously, criticism of QAnon does not translate into condoning the sex trafficking of children.

QAnon believers are supporting a movement seen as a struggle between right and wrong, and they are anticipating two events: the Storm and the Great Awakening. After the January 6th riots led by many QAnon supporters, the Texas Republican Party adopted the slogan, “We are the Storm,” but claims it has no connection with QAnon. The Storm is the arrest of high-ranking individuals that will face prison time or execution. The Great Awakening will follow with a new collective understanding of peace and tranquility in America.

In 2019, the FBI declared QAnon a domestic terrorist threat and expressed concern about “the potential for civil disturbance activity after the election. QAnon adherents were at the forefront of the attack on the American seat of government.

Two QAnon supporting Republicans were elected to Congress and sworn into office this month. Republican Congresswoman Lauren Boerbert of Colorado and Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene from Georgia.

Representative Greene has been in the news recently after the exposure of some of her past social media posts calling for the execution of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats. In April of 2018, Marjorie Taylor Greene implied that Obama and Hillary be hanged.

Greene has also tweeted, “I fully condemn ALL violence. The Antifa/BLM terrorism funded on ActBlue rests with Democrat accomplices like @CoriBush @Ilhan @KamalaHarris @AOC @timkaine and many more...Those who stoke insurrection and spread conspiracies have blood on their hands. They must be expelled.”

This week, the Oregon Republican Party formally condemned the ten House Republicans who voted for the impeachment of President Trump. In addition, the state party incorrectly dismissed the January 6th attack as a “false flag” - meaning that it was a staged event designed to make cast a negative light on President Trump. In the official proclamation, the Oregon Republican Party claimed without evidence:

Whereas there is growing evidence that the violence at the Capitol was a ‘false flag’ operation designed to discredit President Trump, his supporters, and all conservative Republicans; this proved the sham motivation to impeach President Trump in order to advance the Democrat goal of seizing total power, in a frightening parallel to the February 1933 burning of the German Reichstag.”

The 1933 burning of the German Reichstag was the burning of the German Parliament building that ushed in the beginning of Hitler’s evil reign. The Oregon Republican Party is saying that Democrats staged the insurrection of the U.S. Capitol on January 6th as an act of seizing power of the United States.

Over the weekend, the head of Hawaii’s Republican Party posted tweets that seemed to defend the QAnon believers who were part of the attack on the Capitol. The tweet read: “We should make it abundantly clear - the people who subscribed to the Q fiction, were largely motivated by a sincere deep love for America. Patriotism and love of country should never be ridiculed. Vice-chairman of Hawaii’s Republican Party, Edwin Boyette, resigned after posting the comments on the party’s official account claiming he made an “error in judgment.”

Fox News host Tucker Carlson joined to chorus Monday night when he defended the supporters of QAnon and blamed the mainstream media for trying to “silence people and control what they think - that, to use the modern parlance, they’re being ‘cancelled.’”

The mayor of Sequim, Washington is serving openly as a QAnon supporter. At a recent city council meeting, Mayor William Armacost dealt with questions from citizens over the town’s relationship with QAnon. He had no answer to the question about whether he still believes that QAnon is a truth movement following the January 6th violence in the Capitol. One resident of the town said during the meeting, “At the very least, for the rest of the month, if you could promise not to commit any acts of insurrection, that would be great. Just as a citizen of Sequim, I don’t like to be represented by terrorists. So if we could promise to finish out this month without killing anyone, that would be great.”

Belief in QAnon is real - what isn’t real is that any of their conspiracy theories can be substantiated. During the 2016 presidential campaign, the bizarre story about Hillary Clinton running a child sex trafficking ring out of the basement of a pizza parlor in a suburb of Washington, D.C. had the fingerprints of QAnon all over it.

A caller into my radio talk show accused me of protecting Hillary by not talking about the sex trafficking ring she was supposedly running. Upon first hearing the story of what was allegedly happening from the listener, I immediately dismissed the story are fantasy. The caller was insistent that it was real and I was a liberal hack who was protected Hillary. Facts proved it was, indeed, fantasy; but some people continue to believe it is real despite zero evidence to the contrary.

Supporters of QAnon believe they represent the righteous crusade to protect America; and as irrational as their beliefs may seem, they are convinced that they are the ones standing up for the country against evil forces that are trying to steal America away from the American people and that violence is a justified part of the crusade.

After President Trump lost the election, there were questions about what would become of QAnon. Those questions appear to have been answered.

QAnon remains a powerful force even though its supporters do not represent the majority of Republicans in America. But they are large enough and dedicated to the irrational theories to justify an attack on America.