He's been "not a Q guy", more or less "Q neutral" throughout the entire Devolution timeframe. IMHO it's to distance himself and his work from the drops and the movement, and allow his (extensive) research and conclusions to stand on their own merit. I sort of get it, it feels more like independent corroboration rather than having "arisen from" the Q canon.
Wonder what made him finally break down and accept the Qbvious.
If those who were distanced from Q suddenly start moving toward Q, it tells you we are entering a deeper stage of the plan. The need to distance from the untouchable topic has been eliminated.
He talks about it in the episode. It was the research he did for parts 22 and 23 of the Devo series, that finally convinced him. Those articles focused on irregular warfare and psyops, and Q, he concluded, seemed to perfectly fit the requirements for a 'counter' psyop run by white hats to sidestep the enemy's information control.
He's been "not a Q guy", more or less "Q neutral" throughout the entire Devolution timeframe. IMHO it's to distance himself and his work from the drops and the movement, and allow his (extensive) research and conclusions to stand on their own merit. I sort of get it, it feels more like independent corroboration rather than having "arisen from" the Q canon.
Wonder what made him finally break down and accept the Qbvious.
Think strategy.
If those who were distanced from Q suddenly start moving toward Q, it tells you we are entering a deeper stage of the plan. The need to distance from the untouchable topic has been eliminated.
Mass pop awakening.
He talks about it in the episode. It was the research he did for parts 22 and 23 of the Devo series, that finally convinced him. Those articles focused on irregular warfare and psyops, and Q, he concluded, seemed to perfectly fit the requirements for a 'counter' psyop run by white hats to sidestep the enemy's information control.
Thanks anon because I didn't get a chance to listen to the whole 2+ hours