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QAnon fans gather to see the resurrection of JFK's son, who is still dead

2021-11-04T03:54:42.231Z


Hundreds of people were cited at the place where the former president died waiting for a miracle in the hope that his son will be Donald Trump's vice president in 2024.


Decked out in flags, umbrellas and any other

merchandise

imaginable, hundreds of fans of the conspiracy theory known as QAnon gathered Tuesday in Dallas, Texas, at the site where former President John F. Kennedy to witness a completely false event: the resurrection of his son.

History failed them because, of course, JFK Jr. didn't show up.

He died in 1999 when the plane he was piloting crashed off the coast of Martha's Vineyard.

Also on board were his wife Carolyn Bessette and his sister-in-law, Lauren Bessette, who also lost their lives.

Still,

hundreds of people waited several hours for the miracle to take place,

convinced that his death was just a conspiracy.

[What is QAnon, the group to which the 'Yellowstone Wolf' that stormed the Capitol belongs]

Many proudly wore T-shirts with the slogan "Trump-Kennedy 2024", revealing their greatest wish: that the son of the former Democratic president becomes the vice president of Donald Trump if he aspires to return to the White House in 2024.

At 12:30 pm, the time Kennedy was shot, the crowd joined in one voice to recite the Pledge of Allegiance, according to The Washington Post.

Tired, the group ended up dispersing, although some claimed that JFQ Jr. would appear that same night at a concert organized by The Rolling Stone magazine.

A simple anecdote?

Although this meeting remains an anecdote, some analysts believe that it reflects the danger posed by QAnon, a movement that encourages conspiracy theories on the Internet.

The best known is that Trump fights against a secret elite that governs the United States in the shadows and manages a network of sex trafficking of minors.

These misinformations have radicalized the followers of this extremist ideology, leading them to commit violent acts and crimes.

The gravity of the events has led the FBI to designate QAnon as a threat of domestic terrorism.

[QAnon Conspiracy Theory Fails: His Followers Get Angry and Neo-Nazis Stalk Their Disenchantment]

"That people are in a total state of mind and desperately detached from reality opens very dangerous possibilities about what they can do in the future," Jared Holt, a resident of the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Laboratory, told The Washington Post. investigating domestic extremism.

A mob climbs the exterior walls of the Capitol to prevent Congress from confirming the electoral victory of President Joe Biden on January 6, 2021.Jose Luis Magana / AP

Some QAnon fans, along with extremists and white supremacists, participated in the assault on the Capitol on January 6, an act organized to boycott the confirmation of the electoral victory of Joe Biden or, what is the same, the defeat of Trump.

"Although this event lends itself to mockery, and I think people should allow themselves to laugh, I think we must reconcile ourselves with the fact that hundreds of people turn to the streets for a celebrity who has been dead for two decades," said the expert.

[QAnon supporters set date for Donald Trump's return to US power]

"What made them go out is a kind of representation of a broader disease," he added.

Source: telemundo

All news articles on 2021-11-04

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