The comments themselves were unchanged.
What changed was which comments appeared at the top of the response list.
For a while, negative comments by Ryan Hill were at the top of the list with positive comments by qanon further down the list. Then after a while, the qanon comments moved to the top and the RH comment moved further down the list.
This flip-flopped back and forth a couple of times over the next (approx) 30 minutes.
This flip-flopped back and forth a couple of times over the next (approx) 30 minutes.
Just checked and on that "MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!" again post all positive for at least the 1st 20 posts!
Checked his current tweet from 15 minutes ago and 1st 3 replies are Ed Krassenstein crap?
Thanks for splaining that to me!
The key was what bitt noted - set aside what generally & I were seeing after Trump’s tweet, but, then, after the “Q” post then came with the link to the tweet, it’s inevitable that people following drops would go to the tweet and vote up the “qanon76” reply - we’ve seen servers get crashed before (think Avenatti). So my guess is that reply quickly gained something like 10K upvotes. Did “Ryan” DS bot or whatever that was get corresponding upvotes? Not likely ... so how can it be explained that the “qanon76” reply then fell in rank. The only explanation is that there’s funny business afoot by @Jack