Trump had amplified QAnon at least 20 times on twitter and their slogan has been used by speakers at his rallies… as well as being a ubiquitous feature on the signs of his moronic followers.
Down on the floor of the arena, in the standing VIP section, was a woman named Michelle Sellati, wearing a shirt adorned with the letter “Q.” She was part of a noticeable contingent of rallygoers wearing the symbols of the QAnon conspiracy theory, which at least one FBI field office has identified as a domestic terrorist threat, according to a Yahoo News story published earlier in the day. Besides being a portal to uncertain revelations of a dubious nature, QAnon also helps explain the president’s foibles to those who see him as the author of living scripture.
“I wait for him to misspell or mispronounce something, and then I wait for my Serial Brain to decode,” said Sellati, referring to a YouTube channel that she says analyzes the missing letters in the president’s tweets — and the garbled words in the president’s mouth — for clues to what’s going to happen in the future.
What’s an example of something that’s happened, after a clue?
“The chemtrails,” Sellati said.
The chemtrails.
“The chemtrails are gone. Since July 4. Look at the sky. It’s beautiful.”