The viral online movement, which took root on Internet message boards in the fall of 2017 with posts from a self-proclaimed government insider identified as Q, has triggered violent acts and occasional criminal cases. Its effects were catalogued last year in an FBI intelligence bulletin listing QAnon among the anti-government, identity-based, and fringe political conspiracy theories that very likely motivate some domestic extremists to commit criminal, sometimes violent activity.
that very likely motivate some domestic extremists to commit criminal, sometimes violent activity.
I only needed to read this far.
Linky for that enemy deposit you dropped?
I researched your “.. 2019 FBI intelligence bulletin..”, on “Q”, but came up with only Think Progress, Salon, The Telegraph, The Washington Post, etc., all with reports of a report that the FBI reported your HSt, but not a peep from the DOJ or FBI, with one single Q reference.
I do recall, well, the DC institutional flogging of the 2019 Anti-Trump “RUSSIA, RUSSIA, RUSSIA” influence campaign, promoting division and false flags, disinformation and creative “conspiracies”.
Not a peep heard of that hst, since the top of the house has been cleaned out, (and which Q explained in the inimitable style of “questions”.
Got milk?