Late last week, a nearly six-year-old story made a comeback, blazing a trail through Facebook groups and Twitter accounts dedicated to the QAnon conspiracy theory and to supporting President Donald Trump.
“NBC Admits Hillary Clinton Used her Job to Cover up Pedophile Rings as Secretary of State,” read the false headline on a story from the Washington Pundit, which labeled the Obama-era story as “Breaking.”
The text was largely a transcript of an NBC News report from 2013 that aired allegations of a cover-up of sexual misconduct at the State Department while Hillary Clinton was in charge. The core allegations against an ambassador were later disproven and he received a public apology from the State Department. Clinton herself was not accused of anything directly, and NBC News “admitted” nothing.
But on Facebook and Twitter, the story spread as if it were new, inspiring gleeful exclamations that Clinton was finally going to face justice, and that the sickos running global pedophile rings would soon be brought down. In recent years, pedophilia has become something of a point of fascination among the far right. The existence of a worldwide cabal of corrupt pedophile politicians, business leaders, and other prominent people is at the heart of the confusing QAnon conspiracy. And now, thanks in part to QAnon’s rabid adherents on social media, stories about pedophiles have emerged as a huge traffic generator on Facebook and Twitter.
Late last week, a nearly six-year-old story made a comeback, blazing a trail through Facebook groups and Twitter accounts dedicated to the QAnon conspiracy theory and to supporting President Donald Trump.
“NBC Admits Hillary Clinton Used her Job to Cover up Pedophile Rings as Secretary of State,” read the false headline on a story from the Washington Pundit, which labeled the Obama-era story as “Breaking.”
The text was largely a transcript of an NBC News report from 2013 that aired allegations of a cover-up of sexual misconduct at the State Department while Hillary Clinton was in charge. The core allegations against an ambassador were later disproven and he received a public apology from the State Department. Clinton herself was not accused of anything directly, and NBC News “admitted” nothing.
But on Facebook and Twitter, the story spread as if it were new, inspiring gleeful exclamations that Clinton was finally going to face justice, and that the sickos running global pedophile rings would soon be brought down. In recent years, pedophilia has become something of a point of fascination among the far right. The existence of a worldwide cabal of corrupt pedophile politicians, business leaders, and other prominent people is at the heart of the confusing QAnon conspiracy. And now, thanks in part to QAnon’s rabid adherents on social media, stories about pedophiles have emerged as a huge traffic generator on Facebook and Twitter.
Even the fact check bullshit you pasted had several damning things you left out that they couldn't gloss over and lie about. Nice try
“There is an old saying in Washington that the cover-up is worse than the crime. But in this case, both parts of it are disturbing.
“Allegations of prostitution and pedophilia, and allegations that those crimes were somehow covered up or not looked into. So, the State Department this morning is having to respond to those claims, and those investigations involve misconduct by State Department officials, including an ambassador and security agents attached to then secretary of state, Hillary Clinton.
“The allegations are that these investigations were whitewashed, quashed altogether, and that those orders came from high up.
“NBC News has obtained documents relating to ongoing investigations into some disturbing allegations involving State Department personnel and at least one ambassador. A State Department memo says the ambassador, quote, ‘routinely ditched his protective security detail in order to solicit sexual favors from both prostitutes and minor children.’
“The memo also says a top State Department official directed State Department investigators to, quote, ‘cease the investigation into the ambassador’s conduct.’ It’s just one of what another document describes as, quote, ‘several examples of undue influence from top State Department officials.'”
When confronted about the allegations, a State Department spokeswoman explained she could not talk about specific cases, but said “the notion that we would not vigorously pursue criminal misconduct in any case is preposterous.”
Todd continued:
“A former investigator for the department’s inspector general has complained to Congress and the media that the investigations have not been thorough because of the pressure from those high-level officials.”
Late last week, a nearly six-year-old story made a comeback, blazing a trail through Facebook groups and Twitter accounts dedicated to the QAnon conspiracy theory and to supporting President Donald Trump.
“NBC Admits Hillary Clinton Used her Job to Cover up Pedophile Rings as Secretary of State,” read the false headline on a story from the Washington Pundit, which labeled the Obama-era story as “Breaking.”
The text was largely a transcript of an NBC News report from 2013 that aired allegations of a cover-up of sexual misconduct at the State Department while Hillary Clinton was in charge. The core allegations against an ambassador were later disproven and he received a public apology from the State Department. Clinton herself was not accused of anything directly, and NBC News “admitted” nothing.
But on Facebook and Twitter, the story spread as if it were new, inspiring gleeful exclamations that Clinton was finally going to face justice, and that the sickos running global pedophile rings would soon be brought down. In recent years, pedophilia has become something of a point of fascination among the far right. The existence of a worldwide cabal of corrupt pedophile politicians, business leaders, and other prominent people is at the heart of the confusing QAnon conspiracy. And now, thanks in part to QAnon’s rabid adherents on social media, stories about pedophiles have emerged as a huge traffic generator on Facebook and Twitter.
Is that better or worse than falling for the Trump staged photo story?
Late last week, a nearly six-year-old story made a comeback, blazing a trail through Facebook groups and Twitter accounts dedicated to the QAnon conspiracy theory and to supporting President Donald Trump.
“NBC Admits Hillary Clinton Used her Job to Cover up Pedophile Rings as Secretary of State,” read the false headline on a story from the Washington Pundit, which labeled the Obama-era story as “Breaking.”
The text was largely a transcript of an NBC News report from 2013 that aired allegations of a cover-up of sexual misconduct at the State Department while Hillary Clinton was in charge. The core allegations against an ambassador were later disproven and he received a public apology from the State Department. Clinton herself was not accused of anything directly, and NBC News “admitted” nothing.
But on Facebook and Twitter, the story spread as if it were new, inspiring gleeful exclamations that Clinton was finally going to face justice, and that the sickos running global pedophile rings would soon be brought down. In recent years, pedophilia has become something of a point of fascination among the far right. The existence of a worldwide cabal of corrupt pedophile politicians, business leaders, and other prominent people is at the heart of the confusing QAnon conspiracy. And now, thanks in part to QAnon’s rabid adherents on social media, stories about pedophiles have emerged as a huge traffic generator on Facebook and Twitter.
WTF is Q? Serious question.
Coming from you my guess is it's another establishment conspiracy theory.
Late last week, a nearly six-year-old story made a comeback, blazing a trail through Facebook groups and Twitter accounts dedicated to the QAnon conspiracy theory and to supporting President Donald Trump.
“NBC Admits Hillary Clinton Used her Job to Cover up Pedophile Rings as Secretary of State,” read the false headline on a story from the Washington Pundit, which labeled the Obama-era story as “Breaking.”
The text was largely a transcript of an NBC News report from 2013 that aired allegations of a cover-up of sexual misconduct at the State Department while Hillary Clinton was in charge. The core allegations against an ambassador were later disproven and he received a public apology from the State Department. Clinton herself was not accused of anything directly, and NBC News “admitted” nothing.
But on Facebook and Twitter, the story spread as if it were new, inspiring gleeful exclamations that Clinton was finally going to face justice, and that the sickos running global pedophile rings would soon be brought down. In recent years, pedophilia has become something of a point of fascination among the far right. The existence of a worldwide cabal of corrupt pedophile politicians, business leaders, and other prominent people is at the heart of the confusing QAnon conspiracy. And now, thanks in part to QAnon’s rabid adherents on social media, stories about pedophiles have emerged as a huge traffic generator on Facebook and Twitter.
WTF is Q? Serious question.
Coming from you my guess is it's another establishment conspiracy theory.
Realize this is wiki but it was the first thing to come up. Feel free to google if you want a deeper dive into insanity.
QAnon[a] (/kjuːəˈnɒn/) is a far-right conspiracy theory[7][8] detailing a supposed secret plot by an alleged "deep state" against U.S. President Donald Trump and his supporters.[9] The theory began with an October 2017 post on the anonymous imageboard 4chan by someone using the name Q, a presumably American[10] individual that may have later grown to include multiple people,[11][12][13] claiming to have access to classified information involving the Trump administration and its opponents in the United States. Q has falsely accused numerous liberal Hollywood actors, Democratic politicians, and high-ranking officials of engaging in an international child sex trafficking ring and has claimed that Donald Trump feigned collusion with Russians in order to enlist Robert Mueller to join him in exposing the ring and preventing a coup d'état by Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and George Soros.[14][15][16] "Q" is a reference to the top-secret Q clearance. QAnon believers commonly tag their social media posts with the hashtag #WWG1WGA, signifying the motto "where we go one, we go all."
The conspiracy theory, mainly disseminated by supporters of President Trump under the names The Storm and The Great Awakening – QAnon's precepts and vocabulary are closely related to the religious concepts of millenarianism and apocalypticism[17] – has been characterized as "baseless",[18][19][20] "unhinged",[21] and "evidence-free".[22] Its proponents have been called "a deranged conspiracy cult"[23] and "some of the Internet's most outré Trump fans".[24]
Comments
#aclockworkshill #rightontim #lapdog
Why are you defending pedophilia? It's really not a good look. Even for you.
Late last week, a nearly six-year-old story made a comeback, blazing a trail through Facebook groups and Twitter accounts dedicated to the QAnon conspiracy theory and to supporting President Donald Trump.
“NBC Admits Hillary Clinton Used her Job to Cover up Pedophile Rings as Secretary of State,” read the false headline on a story from the Washington Pundit, which labeled the Obama-era story as “Breaking.”
The text was largely a transcript of an NBC News report from 2013 that aired allegations of a cover-up of sexual misconduct at the State Department while Hillary Clinton was in charge. The core allegations against an ambassador were later disproven and he received a public apology from the State Department. Clinton herself was not accused of anything directly, and NBC News “admitted” nothing.
But on Facebook and Twitter, the story spread as if it were new, inspiring gleeful exclamations that Clinton was finally going to face justice, and that the sickos running global pedophile rings would soon be brought down. In recent years, pedophilia has become something of a point of fascination among the far right. The existence of a worldwide cabal of corrupt pedophile politicians, business leaders, and other prominent people is at the heart of the confusing QAnon conspiracy. And now, thanks in part to QAnon’s rabid adherents on social media, stories about pedophiles have emerged as a huge traffic generator on Facebook and Twitter.
The NBC report was real and it happened
https://cloverchronicle.com/2019/06/19/hillary-clinton-allegedly-covered-up-elite-pedophile-ring-while-serving-as-secretary-of-state/
Partial transcript of Chuck Todd’s report:
“There is an old saying in Washington that the cover-up is worse than the crime. But in this case, both parts of it are disturbing.
“Allegations of prostitution and pedophilia, and allegations that those crimes were somehow covered up or not looked into. So, the State Department this morning is having to respond to those claims, and those investigations involve misconduct by State Department officials, including an ambassador and security agents attached to then secretary of state, Hillary Clinton.
“The allegations are that these investigations were whitewashed, quashed altogether, and that those orders came from high up.
“NBC News has obtained documents relating to ongoing investigations into some disturbing allegations involving State Department personnel and at least one ambassador. A State Department memo says the ambassador, quote, ‘routinely ditched his protective security detail in order to solicit sexual favors from both prostitutes and minor children.’
“The memo also says a top State Department official directed State Department investigators to, quote, ‘cease the investigation into the ambassador’s conduct.’ It’s just one of what another document describes as, quote, ‘several examples of undue influence from top State Department officials.'”
When confronted about the allegations, a State Department spokeswoman explained she could not talk about specific cases, but said “the notion that we would not vigorously pursue criminal misconduct in any case is preposterous.”
Todd continued:
“A former investigator for the department’s inspector general has complained to Congress and the media that the investigations have not been thorough because of the pressure from those high-level officials.”
Coming from you my guess is it's another establishment conspiracy theory.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QAnon
QAnon
QAnon[a] (/kjuːəˈnɒn/) is a far-right conspiracy theory[7][8] detailing a supposed secret plot by an alleged "deep state" against U.S. President Donald Trump and his supporters.[9] The theory began with an October 2017 post on the anonymous imageboard 4chan by someone using the name Q, a presumably American[10] individual that may have later grown to include multiple people,[11][12][13] claiming to have access to classified information involving the Trump administration and its opponents in the United States. Q has falsely accused numerous liberal Hollywood actors, Democratic politicians, and high-ranking officials of engaging in an international child sex trafficking ring and has claimed that Donald Trump feigned collusion with Russians in order to enlist Robert Mueller to join him in exposing the ring and preventing a coup d'état by Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and George Soros.[14][15][16] "Q" is a reference to the top-secret Q clearance. QAnon believers commonly tag their social media posts with the hashtag #WWG1WGA, signifying the motto "where we go one, we go all."
The conspiracy theory, mainly disseminated by supporters of President Trump under the names The Storm and The Great Awakening – QAnon's precepts and vocabulary are closely related to the religious concepts of millenarianism and apocalypticism[17] – has been characterized as "baseless",[18][19][20] "unhinged",[21] and "evidence-free".[22] Its proponents have been called "a deranged conspiracy cult"[23] and "some of the Internet's most outré Trump fans".[24]