You know @abbieasr updated her chart and considering everything that's happened in the past three weeks, it's about time I updated my Faqtions diagram.
New entries include:
Grown from Qvangelicals: The Woodies
The Superspies are now basically the Flynnians
The Dallas Cult
To be clear: not because new factions formed in three weeks, but because the last three weeks have revealed the factions that formed in the last several months.
I would say in a general sense, factions are now much more centered on individual influencers & celebrities in the QAnon movement, and not really on different interpretations of Q.
Without Q they're becoming a series of interconnected cults of personality.
I actually forgot that the Dallas Cult calls itself "the Called" and "the Remnant"
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One of the fascinating things about the current faction drama is that Flynn's side largely consists of the fading stars of old QAnon, while Lin's banner is being carried by many of the new celebrities of the post-Q era.
I'm really interested to see how this will go.
I mean obviously this is a "whoever wins we lose" situation.
But Team Lin has -48, GhostEzra, Stew Peters, and more-- basically everybody Jordan Sather hates for stealing all the eyeballs with their nonsense fantasies.
In the ecosystem of QAnon, that's the winning side.
Here's the other thing: Flynn can't win by saying Lin's nuts because that implies they're all nuts. But Lin can score massive points by showing that Flynn's dishonest or corrupt.
Mike Penny and ML, answering viewer questions: "well Peg, your understanding is correct. It's part of protecting the Jesus Bloodline."
Sixty thousand subscribers, one hundred twenty thousand views.
"We'll come to learn, through the reveal of truth, that our Civil War was more about killing vampires than stopping slavery or taxation" is a sentence Mike Penny said to 120,000 viewers.
Everything is just pop culture, remixed in their worm-eaten brains into a secret reality.
I have no need to make anything up about post-Q QAnon beliefs
I'm not at work today, so I am in a position to join one of Negative48's video chats on Telegram.
I have no idea what's going to happen, but this is an important day for them: the anniversary of the JFK assassination.
It started about 10 or 15 minutes ago, and so far it's just one of Neg48's admins (the oft-discussed Shelly) playing Christian rock songs as people filter in.
There's about 200 people watching right now.
Shelly is the one who showed up "in the decodes" the other day.
I'm mentally preparing myself to do a piece about what exactly is happening in Dallas, but what you have to start with is that they believe two words, phrases or sentences with the same 'total' (A=1, B=2, etc & then all letter-values are added together) have divine significance.
At the same time BY THEIR OWN ADMISSION the rules are fast and loose. One of Neg48's admins suggests you do whatever is "fun" and makes the best "story."
This contradiction-- do whatever you want to the numbers VS the finished product is a message from God-- is dangerous.
The basic idea that God is speaking through you isn't uncommon, existing in lots of belief systems.
But when the charismatic leader and his closest disciples start showing up in the 'messages from God' made by their own followers, it creates a highly toxic cultic environment.
Kirk's sources are probably a lot like Emerald's sources or Posobiec's sources
why do these people have checkmarks
This is not the first time Posobiec has been the source for an outrage-fueled right wing media swirl, and it won't be the last because @jack won't do anything.