Trump supporter claims Space Force will overturn the election — and there are 269,000 sealed indictments Supporters of Donald Trump are voicing insane conspiracy theories ahead of his Saturday rally in Michigan. The "opening prayer" for the rally was delivered by a conspiracy theorist who falsely claimed Trump is the "current" president of the United States. One Trump supporter interviewed by Right Side Broadcasting Network said that the Space Force is part of efforts to return Trump to power in a bizarre QAnon rant caught on camera. "The election, I believe, was stolen," said a woman with an America flag draped over her shoulders. "But we know that, Space Force has it all, Trump has all the information, it's going to be overturned," the woman claimed. "What do you think Space Force has?" the interviewer asked. "Space Force is a military branch, you know, just like the Army, you know, all the military. And they literally...the night of the election they literally watched the election be stolen. They watermarked the ballots, they know exactly what happened with every ballot," she said. "They know what countries were involved, they followed the money, they know what every every politician that's been paid off." "There was 260,00 — 269,000 sealed indictments, but I think it might even be up to 500,000 sealed indictments. And I believe that we're going to have an emergency broadcast and the military is going to come in with martial law and we're going to be shown, 8-hours on, 8-hours off, of videos for seven days — the world. And they're going to be showing us taped tribunals, taped confessions, and the world is going to be awakened to what's really going on with the deep state," she claimed.
This is what happens when QAnon nonsense runs amok in the small twisted minds of idiots... Conservative power broker charged with assaulting air conditioning repairman over fake voter fraud claims https://www.rawstory.com/steven-hotze-charged/ A prominent Texas GOP activist has been charged with unlawful restraint and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in connection with a bizarre incident in October involving an air conditioning contractor whom he suspected of vote tampering. Lawyers for Dr. Steven Hotze, who runs the Houston-based nonprofit Liberty Center for God and Country, told the Associated Press that their client was indicted over allegations against a former police officer, Mark Aguirre, who worked for Hotze. They said Hotze will plead not guilty. The current charges can be traced back to an incident that occurred in October 2020 in which Aguirre, allegedly acting on Hotze's behest, conducted a private investigation of a man he suspected of being involved in what authorities now call a bogus voter fraud scheme. Aguirre claimed that an air conditioner repairman, who Hotze had hired, was the mastermind of the plot and had "approximately seven hundred and fifty thousand fraudulent mail ballots and is using Hispanic children to sign the ballots because the children’s fingerprints would not appear in any databases,” according to an arrest affidavit. Aguirre told police that he and some friends set up a “command post” at a Marriott hotel in suburban Houston and conducted 24-hour surveillance on the repairman for four days. According to the Associated Press report, "Lt. Wayne Rubio with the Texas Attorney General’s Office later told police that Aguirre had asked his office to conduct a traffic stop for his investigation. When Rubio said he could not do that, Aguirre said he would do it himself and 'make a citizen’s arrest.'" On Oct. 19, 2020, Aguirre ran the man’s truck off the road, pointed a gun at him, forced him onto the ground and put a knee on his back, the affidavit said. Police who responded to the incident reported finding only air conditioning parts and tools after a search of the truck. Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said Aguirre’s actions “crossed the line from dirty politics to commission of a violent crime.” “We are lucky no one was killed,” Ogg told the Associated Press. “His alleged investigation was backward from the start — first alleging a crime had occurred and then trying to prove it happened.” Aguirre, who was paid $266,400 by Liberty Center for God and Country according to police, was fired from the Houston Police Department in 2003 after a botched raid in which nearly 300 people were arrested in a crackdown on illegal street racing. Most who were arrested were not linked to street racing and charges were dropped. Hotze is a conservative power broker and unsuccessfully sued to stop the extension of early voting in Texas for the 2020 election. He also sued officials in Harris County to limit in-person and absentee voting, alleging without evidence that Democrats were engaged in “ballot harvesting” by gathering votes from individuals who are homeless or elderly.
Trump supporters use less cognitively complex language and more simplistic modes of thinking than Biden supporters, study finds
In a video interview, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) said it “may be true” that vaccines against COVID-19 cause AIDS, the Wisconsin Examiner reports.
"Covfefe" is a chemical antidote to 5G towers, explains one of Trump's very stable geniuses https://boingboing.net/2022/05/04/c...lains-one-of-trumps-very-stable-geniuses.html In the wee hours of May 31, 2017, Trump tweeted, "Despite the constant negative press covfefe." Hours later he deleted the post, saying it was in error. Most people assume Trump meant to spell "coverage" and accidentally published the tweet while trying to correct the typo. But Johnny Enlow, a unique thinker, Trump admirer, and self-described social reformer, knows the real deal. In a video posted to Twitter by Right Wing Watch, Enlow explains that covfefe is "the antidote to the 5G towers that were really designed to work with the (COVID) vaccines and essentially hack human beings." From the video: Covfefe is C-O-V-F-E-F-E. And so that's how it's spelled, OK. C-O-V-F-E-F-E. And yes, people thought that was an error for spelling "coffee." Like they haven't learned yet that President Trump doesn't really miss anything. If something is spelled… if he leaves out an L he adds an R, everything has a reason and a purpose. This is very strategic what is taking place. So covfefe… there are three from the Table of Elements: CO is for cobalt. V is for vanadium. Fe Fe is two molecules of iron. This is the solution, the antidote to the 5G towers that were really designed to work with the vaccines and essentially hacking beings. And so what he implemented… when he was telling covfefe before he was… so they created, essentially, if I understand it correctly, some sort of magnet that they put at every pole, 5G pole that essentially doesn't allow it to do the hacking that they wanted to do. Aren't you glad we have experts in the world like humble Mr. Enlow who selflessly dedicate their lives to exposing grifting charlatans like Dr. Fauci who serve reptilian overlords Bill Gates and George Soros? If it weren't for people like Johnny Enlow, we might never know the truth!
“About a third of our population is African American; African Americans have a higher incidence of maternal mortality. So, if you correct our population for race, we’re not as much of an outlier as it’d otherwise appear.” — Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), quoted by Politico, saying maternal death rates are only bad if you count Black women.
Many statistics are much different if you pull out certain groups Crime is one example... Having a mature approach the the reality of data is needed to fix these problematic groupings