.@donie continues to do essential reporting on QAnon https://t.co/Wg4tse8VvE
— Chris Cillizza (@ChrisCillizza) February 3, 2021
House Democrats plan to mount an offensive to tie Republicans to QAnon because they think voters are concerned about the fringe conspiracy movement https://t.co/UlKaD56Fbm
— CNN Politics (@CNNPolitics) February 3, 2021
“Nothing in recent American history has reached the crazed intensity of Donald Trump’s perseverating, mendacious insistence that he won a second term in November,” @edsall writes. https://t.co/2YxpfHhyBp
— New York Times Opinion (@nytopinion) February 3, 2021
House Democrats are preparing to center their strategy for the far-off midterm elections on a simple, aggressive message: Republicans are the party of QAnon. https://t.co/Fra7cSFysM
— POLITICO (@politico) February 3, 2021
"When newly elected Rep. Burgess Owens (R-Utah) appeared on a QAnon streaming site, the National Republican Congressional Committee responded to criticism by noting his opponent appeared on 'Russia conspiracy network MSNBC.'"
— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) February 2, 2021
NRCC officially defends QAnon.https://t.co/nV3G3fVB0P
She is the party; the party is her. https://t.co/AAdViv9BPS
— David Roberts (@drvolts) February 1, 2021
General appreciation thread for people who do great work investigating the origins of QAnon.
— Travis View (@travis_view) January 31, 2021
This is a challenging niche of Q research, which requires a great deal of skepticism, technical knowledge, and willingness to chase down many dead ends before uncovering useful info. 👇
None of this took place in a vacuum. The former president’s aides did winks and nods at QAnon, the president himself described them as people who wanted good government (as @jonathanvswan reporter). Trump took cues from some of his voters and then fed those cues right back. https://t.co/UuX03KWfFC
— Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) January 30, 2021
Former QAnon believer to @andersoncooper: "I apologize for thinking that you ate babies" pic.twitter.com/IcVIwpYykd
— Oliver Darcy (@oliverdarcy) January 30, 2021
“I was one of those people too" Former QAnon believers are turning to online support forums and therapy to help them move on, @DavidKlepper reports. https://t.co/fdziLAzNQM
— The Associated Press (@AP) January 28, 2021
A Qanon mayor in Washington state.
— Donie O'Sullivan (@donie) January 30, 2021
A great @KyungLahCNN report that highlights the central role YouTube plays in spreading this conspiracy and radicalizing Americans.
pic.twitter.com/KsGaudFE2K
"I believe we can find common ground again if you’ll just acknowledge the possibility that gravity is an actual scientific phenomenon and not a magical deep-state plot."https://t.co/jaeSjP6Fib
— Timothy McSweeney (@mcsweeneys) February 3, 2021
It would certainly be a lot harder for Democrats to tie the Republican Party to QAnon had the GOP not tied themselves to it already.
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