Saturday, March 20, 2021

This Is Fake News

Editor's note: The intelligence people who wrote this news story for Newsweek hit all the main points didn't they? Including "conspiracy theorists™", "anti-vaccine beliefs" and "linked to QAnon" all designed to make dissenters and Americans who have legitimate serious concerns about the Covid lockdowns and vaccines (injections) look like lunatics. Sorry, Newsweek, get with the times. Most people today are pretty savvy as to what is going on, especially in Europe, as well as knowing full well QAnon is another operation that has been debunked repeatedly here. We've also known for years Katz at SITE Intelligence Group is running some kind of an intelligence and counter intelligence news operation. Newsweek makes a mockery of intelligent people. 
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Source: Newsweek

Global March 20 Anti-Vaccine Protests Promoted by QAnon-Linked Groups

BY EWAN PALMER | March 16, 2021

number of anti-vaccine protests have been planned all across the world this Thursday which appear to be heavily linked to the QAnon movement in all but name. 

The "World Wide Rally for Freedom and Democracy" events on March 20 are being widely promoted online, with rallies against coronavirus restrictions and the "tyranny" of the vaccine implementation taking place in countries such as the U.S., Australia, Canada, Japan and Germany.

A channel on encrypted messaging service app Telegram promoting the anti-vaccine events across the world currently has more than 35,000 subscribers. There are also dozens of separate "World Wide Demonstration" Telegram channels promoting each planned protest in individual countries.

While the demonstrations are not appearing to be specifically tied to the QAnon, and are also promoted by other anti-vaxx groups, a number of QAnon supporters are pushing the events using language and phrases commonly associated with the conspiracy theorists.

The Twitter hashtag that the rallies are being organized under is "we will ALL be there"—a very similarly worded phrase to the QAnon slogan "Where We Go One We Go All," often abbreviated to WWG1WGA.

In the U.S., one such planned March 20 protest is being advertised as taking place at the Heritage Park in Olympia, Washington.

The link between anti-vaccine beliefs and QAnon is not a new development. Many of the conspiracy theorists frequently push false and even dangerous claims about the vaccine, with misinformation about it turning people homosexual or transgender being shared by influential and popular advocates of the movement in February.

Earlier in March, an internal Facebook study found there was a major overlap between those expressing skepticism about vaccines online and accounts affiliated with QAnon.
"Worldwide Freedom"—an international series of #QAnon rallies (tho intentionally lacking such branding) planned for March 20—announced in 46 countries across Europe, Asia, North America, showing how organized and coordinated QAnon/adjacent conspiracy theory movements are. pic.twitter.com/qAO5gUxN5g

— Rita Katz (@Rita_Katz) March 9, 2021
For years, QAnon was centered around the belief that Donald Trump was secretly battling a cabal of satanic pedophiles and will one day carry out the prophecy known as "the storm," ordering the mass arrests and executions of child abusers which include leading Democratic figures.

Please go to Newsweek to read more of this fake news. 
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