interesting, I hadn't heard of this Cates dude before... If I'm understanding correctly, he was a Q naysayer and fence sitter, then latter tries to take credit for predictions and happenings... In all honestly that sounds exactly like what I have been and done. In wanting desperately to appear 'right' and being afraid to say things that may later be proven 'wrong'. I think we will see more of this within the movement as it picks up speed. Someone above commented,
It will be the final insult to have all the wobblers who disavowed claim the stolen valour when victory comes.
consider me a wobbler... I don't know that it's an insult, I think it's more akin to the sinner that repents only once judgement is imminent and they realise everything they ignored and dismissed was actually of the utmost importance... On the one hand, I see the perspective that they lacked 'faith' and were cowardly and lazy. On the other hand, is it not something that they eventually came to the truth at all? 'Better late than never'?
Wouldn't it be worse if you were faced with the Truth, and you continued to deny and disavow it, even as you faced it's judgement? I don't know, maybe that's just me trying to justify it to myself.
Thought about it a bit more and just wanted to add, like I say, I would have considered myself 'Qanon-adjacent' the entire time. I just never had the courage to really plant my flag and mention certain talking points to people, because I didn't have that pop-culture 'thing' to be 'proud' of, until this movie. Now I've got something I can talk about that won't scare away the normies, something real and powerful. It's so powerful to me, even just the idea of this film before I managed to find a way to see it, it has given me the courage to admit certain things to myself, and the courage to speak to others about it. Yes I am a coward and a Johnny-come-lately, but to be fair, I have spent this time redpilling my family, partner and close friends who all agree with the basic 'tenets'. Now I've gone full 'Qtard', with some of the recent deltas, and have openly shared the actual drops. There are just going to be a lot of cowards like me coming forward, necessarily so.
Something like 15-20% of US citizens 'agree with some of the tenets of Qanon' - https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/meet-the-press/study-finds-nearly-one-five-americans-believe-qanon-conspiracy-theories-n1268722
I mean you do the math on that one. That's probably around 30-50% of 'Trump supporters', including a huge chunk of the MAGA base. That's a fuckload of people. Compare that to the relatively small chunk of people that openly consider themselves part of this movement. Multiply that by the Streisand effect and power of the new movie. There are going to be a lot of last minute boarders on the train.
interesting, I hadn't heard of this Cates dude before... If I'm understanding correctly, he was a Q naysayer and fence sitter, then latter tries to take credit for predictions and happenings... In all honestly that sounds exactly like what I have been and done. In wanting desperately to appear 'right' and being afraid to say things that may later be proven 'wrong'. I think we will see more of this within the movement as it picks up speed. Someone above commented,
It will be the final insult to have all the wobblers who disavowed claim the stolen valour when victory comes.
consider me a wobbler... I don't know that it's an insult, I think it's more akin to the sinner that repents only once judgement is imminent and they realise everything they ignored and dismissed was actually of the utmost importance... On the one hand, I see the perspective that they lacked 'faith' and were cowardly and lazy. On the other hand, is it not something that they eventually came to the truth at all? 'Better late than never'?
Wouldn't it be worse if you were faced with the Truth, and you continued to deny and disavow it, even as you faced it's judgement? I don't know, maybe that's just me trying to justify it to myself.
Thought about it a bit more and just wanted to add, like I say, I would have considered myself 'Qanon-adjacent' the entire time. I just never had the courage to really plant my flag and mention certain talking points to people, because I didn't have that pop-culture 'thing' to be 'proud' of, until this movie. Now I've got something I can talk about that won't scare away the normies, something real and powerful. It's so powerful to me, even just the idea of this film before I managed to find a way to see it, it has given me the courage to admit certain things to myself, and the courage to speak to others about it. Yes I am a coward and a Johnny-come-lately, but to be fair, I have spent this time redpilling my family, partner and close friends who all agree with the basic 'tenets'. Now I've gone full 'Qtard', with some of the recent deltas, and have openly shared the actual drops. There are just going to be a lot of cowards like me coming forward, necessarily so.
Something like 15-20% of US citizens 'agree with some of the tenets of Qanon' - https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/meet-the-press/study-finds-nearly-one-five-americans-believe-qanon-conspiracy-theories-n1268722
I mean you do the math on that one. That's probably around 30-50% of 'Trump supporters', including a huge chunk of the MAGA base. That's a fuckload of people. Compare that to the relatively small chunk of people that openly consider themselves part of this movement. Multiply that by the Streisand effect and power of the new movie.
interesting, I hadn't heard of this Cates dude before... If I'm understanding correctly, he was a Q naysayer and fence sitter, then latter tries to take credit for predictions and happenings... In all honestly that sounds exactly like what I have been and done. In wanting desperately to appear 'right' and being afraid to say things that may later be proven 'wrong'. I think we will see more of this within the movement as it picks up speed. Someone above commented,
It will be the final insult to have all the wobblers who disavowed claim the stolen valour when victory comes.
consider me a wobbler... I don't know that it's an insult, I think it's more akin to the sinner that repents only once judgement is imminent and they realise everything they ignored and dismissed was actually of the utmost importance... On the one hand, I see the perspective that they lacked 'faith' and were cowardly and lazy. On the other hand, is it not something that they eventually came to the truth at all? 'Better late than never'?
Wouldn't it be worse if you were faced with the Truth, and you continued to deny and disavow it, even as you faced it's judgement? I don't know, maybe that's just me trying to justify it to myself.
interesting, I hadn't heard of this Cates dude before... If I'm understanding correctly, he was a Q naysayer and fence sitter, then latter tries to take credit for predictions and happenings... In all honestly that sounds exactly like what I have been and done. In wanting desperately to appear 'right' and being afraid to say things that may later be proven 'wrong'. I think we will see more of this within the movement as it picks up speed. Someone above commented,
It will be the final insult to have all the wobblers who disavowed claim the stolen valour when victory comes.
consider me a wobbler... I don't know that it's an insult, I think it's more akin to the sinner that repents only once judgement is imminent and they realise everything they ignored and dismissed was actually of the utmost importance... On the one hand, I see the perspective that they lacked 'faith' and were cowardly and lazy. On the other hand, is it not something that they eventually came to the truth at all? 'Better late than never'?