Q Anon: 01/06/20 Trust Trumps Plan ~ Vol.205, Q Day 801
1/7/2020, 11:09:12 PM · 693 of 708
Melian to TEXOKIE; Cats Pajamas
I think it was Schiff who has a tradition of chanting, rabbit, rabbit, rabbit at New Years. I think he tweeted about it.
Q Anon: 01/06/20 Trust Trumps Plan ~ Vol.205, Q Day 801
1/7/2020, 11:07:42 PM · 691 of 708
Farcesensitive to TEXOKIE; Cats Pajamas
Schiff is the rabbit worshiper
https://twitter.com/AdamSchiff/status/1212192015917518849
Q Anon: 01/06/20 Trust Trumps Plan ~ Vol.205, Q Day 801
1/7/2020, 10:54:25 PM · 682 of 708
aMorePerfectUnion to TEXOKIE
It was a Schiff on New Years Eve chanting something about a rabbit for good luck.
He tweeted it.
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THANK YOU ALL SO MUCH FOR THE INFO ON RABBIT WORSHIPPER SCHIFF!!
I do now have a specific file on “RABBITS”!
Was Jimmy Carter terrified while Schiff was chanting “rabbit, rabbit rabbit?
please check private message mail Texie. sent more rabbit stuff. it does not appear thread appropriate.
Groses 1785 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue” has
RABBIT CATCHER is A midwife.
rabbit (n.)
late 14c., “young of the coney,” from Walloon robète or a similar French dialect word, diminutive of Flemish or Middle Dutch robbe “rabbit,” of unknown origin. “A Germanic noun with a French suffix” [Liberman].
The adult was a coney (q.v.) until 18c.
CONY,CONEY-CATCHER. A sharper, or cheat. Minshew has well expressed the origin of the term: A conie-catcher, a name given to deceivers, by a metaphor, taken from those that rob warrens, and conie-grounds, using all means, sleights, and cunning to deceive them, as pitching of haies before their holes, fetching them in by tumblers, &c. [Nares, “Glossary”]
https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=coney+
...pamphlet literature of the 1590s, including those relating the exploits of London rogues, vagabonds, pickpockets, card-sharks and coney-catchers, to use the language of the day. In the contemporary vernacular, coneys (alternatively spelled conys, connys, connies) were domesticated rabbits (as opposed to wild hares), bred for the table and easy prey. Consequently coney-catchers were those who preyed on similarly-vulnerable human targets in the streets of London: in todays language, con-men.
https://streetsofsalem.com/2012/06/22/coney-catching/