Did you even bother to read the second link? Here's an excerpt:
Eventually, Babbitt would post more than 8,600 tweets, offering a vivid account of her fall into a world of theories and illusion of conspiracy, but her first message was addressed to Trump, the man she thought was destined to rescue her country."#love," she posted Oct. 31, 2016, a picture of three signs nailed to a tree next to his name and above: "Make America Great Again," "H FOR PRISON" and "CHRISTIAN DEPLORABLES LIVE HERE."
A week later, on Election Day, she wrote again to Trump, "We're saving America today from tyranny, collusion, and corruption." Babbitt cried when he won.
She was an avid Fox News fan, praising Tucker Carlson on the network and other far-right media figures as she derided their liberal aims. A registered Libertarian, she didn't always hate the Democrats, announcing that she had voted for Obama at least three times in recent years.
"She wrote in November 2018, "I think Obama did nice things... I think he jacked some s——up," but I think he did a lot of good... at a time when we needed him."
But she had determined that Trump was the man we wanted now and for years to come, and her loyalty only grew as she became more consumed with baseless online propaganda, all while her professional life collapsed.
On July 1, 2019, because she had evidently failed to repay a loan, a judge imposed a $71,000 judgment against her pool company. Babbitt had proposed the day before to launch a GoFundMe to pay for Trump's Mount Rushmore extension, and the day after, she lodged an angry tirade at the U.S. Sen. Ocasio Alexandria-Cortez (D-N.Y.).
"You're losing it," wrote Babbitt, "seriously."
She spread far-right lies about the kidnapping of children by Hillary Clinton and portrayed the left as modern-day enslavers. For the first time, early last year, she appeared to use the QAnon hashtag, parroting the enigmatic jargon advocated by her most ardent supporters.
The best," she wrote on Feb. 24, "is yet to come.
It will come to light what is dark! "A month later, she said.
We have to #SaveTheChildren," she requested in one post, using a humanitarian hashtag hijacked by conspiracy theorists to encourage their claim that a secret elite group runs a pedophilia ring."
Witthoeft, her brother, had little understanding of his sister's side of things, he said. As millions of people do now, he knew that she was an emotional woman intensely committed to Trump, but she didn't press Witthoeft's politics, preferring to talk to her about sailing, hockey or comedy.
That's a pretty effin' cunning plot to plant all of those tweets YEARS before the Capitol building was breached.
Where’s the proof of her social media comments other than fake news sources?