As the day has gone on, QAnon is doing what it always does: slowly rewriting events in a never-ending game of telephone.
Popular additions to the story today are "Lin Wood sent an ambulance to try to rescue her" and "she had ivermectin at home and was trying to get to it."
As soon as a new part of the story is accepted as true, someone else builds on it or changes it slightly to see whether this will also be accepted as true. QAnon has always done this, building their narrative by consensus.
Within three minutes, a different Anon "confirms" the new story that Veronica has been getting ivermectin at the hospital, and it was working, but then they stopped giving it to her because reasons.
Any Anon reading the thread will likely believe this forever.
In fact, it is the exact same Anon, MM, who goes from "she was trying to get home to take her ivermectin" to "I don't have all the details" to "she was being given ivermectin at the hospital and it was working" in under ten minutes.
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Noelle pointed me to the FB of one of the January 6th, defendants, Tammy Bronsburg, where she's been watching Ted Gunderson's old presentations about the "tunnels" under the McMartin School.
Crypto, like gold, isn't really so much a currency. It's a commodity. Its value is based less on what it can buy and more on how many people want to own it and stockpile it.
People in crypto are always shouting HODL (their meme version of 'hold') because if people sell, supply would go up, value would go down, and their own stockpile would be worth less.
Followup posts on Telegram clarify that Veronica's husband is NOT the person with medical PoA. This detail of her story seems important: did she give PoA to someone because her husband is not a Q believer, or for some other reason?
News articles from the past few days don't really illuminate the matter. It was reported on NBC 5 Chicago that Lawrence, her husband, told their reporter that Veronica was requesting ivermectin, but no one asked Lawrence what he thought? nbcchicago.com/news/local/ami…
Meanwhile, QAnon believers who followed Lin Wood's call to action and went to the hospital complained he was rude and had asked them to leave.
Again, is this because he was dealing with more than he could handle or because he doesn't like them?
Also, I'd be interested to know who this "medical power of attorney" person is. Veronica is married. But no one is saying "her husband," they're all saying "her representative"
I swear if she signed over PoA to some QAnon friend I am going to scream
hey @daithaigilbert any chance you're on this? Who holds Veronica Wolski's medical PoA?
if he's telling the Ivermectin brigade to leave, this would suggest that her husband is not her PoA, which pretty much answers half my question
For anyone who's curious, no, so far not a single QAnon account I follow has said a word about Trump heaping praise on the Moonies tonight
checking Telegram this morning, and there's still no mention whatsoever
the timeline of Trump's activities yesterday is the police precinct visit, followed by the recorded statement for the day of prayer, and concluding with the fight commentary
they may have to formulate some sort of response if the story gets bigger, though
GhostEzra is a perfect example of how extremists infiltrate and co-opt a welcoming big-tent movement.
We've seen it before with other infiltration efforts, but QAnon made it particularly easy for them.
1/15
Since its inception, QAnon has pursued a growth strategy based on unity, summed up by their ‘Where We Go One, We Go All’ slogan, and has painted anyone who criticizes a fellow believer as someone sowing dangerous discord.
2/15
Q told their followers that ‘together we are strong, divided we are weak’ and Anons fully embraced that notion whenever a feud broke out among influencers.