If you’re a hardcore QAnon believer, you had high hopes for January.
Among other things, you expected Donald Trump to remain president. You expected mass arrests and public executions. You expected an underground cabal of child-trafficking Democrats to finally be captured.
None of those things happened.
Instead, Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th president of the United States. So if you’re one of those people perhaps millions who were deeply invested in the various QAnon conspiracy theories, the past few weeks likely produced an immense amount of dissonance.
But for the most die-hard QAnon followers, hope springs eternal! The next big prophecy is supposed to unfold on March 4, which had been Inauguration Day before the ratification of the 20th Amendment in 1933 and the day Trump will gloriously return to power and retake the White House, according to the febrile imaginings of the QAnon movement.
Világ: Robbanás történt egy hatemeletes házban Madrid belvárosában
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Émeutes au Capitole américain : Le guide des symboles de la haine
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The sweatshirt, spotted amid the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol, seemed designed to provoke fear.
“Camp Auschwitz,” it read, along with the message “Work brings freedom” a rough translation of the message that greeted Jewish prisoners at the infamous Nazi concentration camp.
The back of the shirt said “Staff.”
A photo of the man wearing the sweatshirt was just one of the images of hateful symbols that have circulated from the mob, whose violence led to four deaths and wreaked havoc on Congress. Swastikas and Confederate flags were among the overt hate signs that the insurrection brought into the Capitol.