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  1. Jan 6, 2021 · "Where we go one we go all", often abbreviated as "WWG1WGA!" is one of the most popular QAnon slogans. Nobody actually believes it, right? Actually, thousands do.

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    • The Story of Q
    • Enter "The Storm"
    • Bakers and Breadcrumbs
    • Q's Identity
    • Qanon on Social Media
    • Evolution of Qanon
    • Qanon in Congress
    • There Is No Qanon?
    • Qanon, Violence, and The January 6th Capitol Riot
    • Qanon Casualties

    QAnon purports that America is run by a cabal of pedophiles and Satan-worshippers who run a global child sex-trafficking operation and that former President Trump is the only person who can stop them. The information supposedly comes from a high-ranking government official who posts cryptic clues on 4chan and the even more unfettered site 8chanunde...

    The storm takes its name from then-President Trump's enigmatic comment from October 2018 about "the calm before the storm." Q began posting soon after and said that the storm Mr. Trump referenced is a coming series of mass arrests that would end the deep state forever. In QAnon lore, President Trump was secretly working with special counsel Robert ...

    Q's posts tended to be either vague or totally incomprehensible, but QAnon believers have been more than happy to try and decipher them. At one point in 2019, for example, Q posted a photo of an unnamed island chain. Eager to divine the reasoning behind the post, QAnon adherents tried to "prove" that the photo must have been taken on Air Force One ...

    The name refers to Q-level clearance at the Energy Department. But who's behind the posts is anybody's guess. According to Sommer, the QAnon faithful sometimes point to former national security adviser Michael Flynn and White House aide Dan Scavino as possibilities. Others believe it's Mr. Trump himself. Another theoryis that John F. Kennedy Jr. fa...

    QAnon spread from its fringe beginnings on 4chan and 8chan to larger social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. These platforms have faced increasing pressure to crack down on these accounts and groups, but have found it difficult to do so. "QAnon is not one organization that you can just cancel or remove," says CBS News technol...

    As the QAnon movement migrated to more mainstream social media platforms, it developed new conspiracy theories that have helped subsume more followers. Many QAnon supporters believe that President Kennedy was set to reveal the existence of the secret government when he was assassinated. They also believe President Reagan was shot on the deep state'...

    At least 19 House Republican candidates who support or have elevated the QAnon movement were on the November ballot, according to trackingby Media Matters. Two QAnon supporters were elected to the United States House of Representatives: 1. Marjorie Taylor Greenewon her race in Georgia's 14th congressional district. 2. Lauren Boebertwon her race in ...

    QAnon influencers recently started using the phrase "There is no QAnon," insisting that the conspiracy was invented by the media. The trend began on October 17, 2020 when the infamous user "Q" updated the message board 8kun with a post that read: The ploy is an attempt to gaslight the public into believing that QAnon was invented by the media and t...

    When Jacob Chansley, the so-called "QAnon shaman," planted a spear-tipped flag in the U.S. Capitol during the January 6th insurrection his intent was to "capture and assassinate" elected officials, according to U.S. prosecutors. In an interview with 60 Minutes+, Chansley denied that, saying his actions "were not an attack on this country." The FBI ...

    When "Q's" predictionsfailed to materialize — Donald Trump was not sworn in for a second term, and there were no mass arrests of Satan-worshiping child abusers in an event called "The Storm" — true believers were stunned. Some of the believers migrated to private Facebook groups, alternative social networks like Parler, and messaging apps like Tele...

    • 26 min
  2. Jul 30, 2019 · WWG1WGA stands for Where We Go One, We Go All. That’s an adage or motto associated with a string of interconnected conspiracy theorists known collectively as Q, or QAnon. Just like the hacking collective known as Anonymous, anyone can claim to be part of QAnon or Q, and anyone can support the conspiracies proffered by the group.

  3. Jun 6, 2022 · Where the QAnon slogan 'WWG1WGA' likely came from. CNN's Donie O'Sullivan spoke with three long-shot Republican House candidates about references they've made to the QAnon conspiracy theory...

    • 8 min
    • 140.9K
    • CNN
  4. May 20, 2022 · CNN's Donie O'Sullivan spoke with three long-shot Republican House candidates about references they've made to the QAnon conspiracy theory online.

  5. Feb 11, 2021 · QAnon has been linked to several crimes and helped fuel the January 6 insurrection on the US Capitol. Here's where the conspiracy theory came from.

  6. Oct 12, 2020 · People were dressed in QAnon shirts or ones displaying the slogan "WWG1WGA". Short for "Where we go one we go all", it is the best-known rallying cry for QAnon believers.

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