Sudden Return of Elusive Q-Anon ‘Leader’ Raises Eyebrows

0
652
Q-Anon

All of a sudden, after two years under a rock, the notorious “Q” of “Q-Anon” fame has resurfaced. Well, his easily forged digital signature has. Even if it is the same “person” who used that account before, the timing is really suspicious. The self-proclaimed “leader” of an anarchist collective wants to “play a game.” Those who sign up as playmates could wind up behind bars. Just like all the January 6 barbarians who rioted right on “Q.”

Q-Anon cryptically returns

After two years of total silence, a post appeared on 8kun bearing “Q’s unique signature.” Q-Anon followers are all abuzz. “Shall we play a game once more” the account posted Friday night, June 24. You might want to ask Jake Chansley for his advice on that before you RSVP. He’s the instantly recognizable guy everyone calls the Q-Shaman.

Folks who follow 8kun, which used to be 8chan and before that 4chan, seem to think that the founder of the sites, Ron Watkins, is the “real” Q. Just about everyone else thinks that Q is Christopher Wray in a Guy Fawkes mask.

There are many reasons to believe that the Federal Bureau of Instigation is running Q-Anon. It would answer a lot of dangling questions about the staged barbarian invasion of the Capitol Building on January 6, 2021. It’s funny how Q hasn’t been seen around since that mission went down. It’s even funnier that he’s back now.

Those made for TV dramas produced by Nancy Pelosi’s propaganda department might have something to do with it. For some reason, the FBI happens to be convinced the timing lines up with the Roe v Wade decision. Probably because they’re trying to stir up trouble between rabid baby killers and fundamentalist Christians. They need players on both sides for some big extravaganza they’re engineering in the Deep State darkness.

It’s not surprising that the alleged Q the magnificent would use that phrase. It comes from the movie “War Games.” Just about anyone will pick up the reference to the Matthew Broderick character hacking a Department of Defense computer and nearly starting nuclear war for fun.

What only folks in the hard-core hacking culture would know is that also in that movie, Broderick “uses a pull-tab from an aluminum can, found on the ground at a truck stop, to make a free long-distance call via payphone to his friend,” played by Ally Sheedy. It adds all the credibility that gullible Q-Anon followers need to accept the message as authentic.

Throw us a bone

Even the devout Q-Anon disciples were wondering why he’s back now after such a long absence. “Throw us a bone Q, we’ve all been waiting for what seemed like an eternity. What’s going on?” A reply actually came back. It’s cryptic and meaning free so the faithful will swallow it hook-line and sinker without question. “It had to be done this way.” Oh, that explains it. Sorry we asked.

Later another post materialized out of the ether “Are you ready to serve your country again? Remember your oath.” BEWARE! This could be another false flag insurrection or attempt to kidnap a governor or something.

All the way back in the dim and distant prehistoric past before computers were available to the masses, anarchist opportunists shared various methods of hacking free phone calls. When the Phreakers were made obsolete by digital technology, they embraced the new millennium as anarchist computer hackers.

Q-Anon

Their shared tips and techniques spontaneously produced a few “collective” operations and “Anonymous” slowly coalesced out of the fog. Q and Q-Anon are supposed to be the latest incarnation of that hactivist hive collective. They’re nothing of the sort.

Most people today never heard of Phreakers or blue boxes. They only have vague ideas about Anonymous and are easily sucked into the engineered hype swirling around Q-Anon. Most importantly they don’t know that when Sabu went down, he trained the FBI on everything they needed to know to take his place. They instantly started infiltrating conservative groups and intentionally stirring up trouble. Allegedly.

According to Ars Technica, “It didn’t take much time to turn Hector ‘Sabu’ Monsegur into an FBI informant.” Hours. “Since literally the day he was arrested, the defendant has been cooperating with the government proactively,” Assistant U.S. Attorney James Pastore told a federal judge. Sabu was “a key member of Anonymous and later the ‘happy hackers‘ of LulzSec, a spinoff group that broke into servers around the world during the summer of 2011 and taunted the FBI about it.” Chris Wray is having the last laugh over that now.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here