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originally posted by: burritocat
a reply to: 777Vader
What? No. If anything I was not tricked by a giant psyop thats being used against people to entrap them and gather intel and make anyone who questions the government look crazy. If you want to believe in it, you do you. But Im not falling for it.
I think the whole Qanon thing is a giant plot by the FBi or CIA to trap people who like to think outside society.
originally posted by: nerbot
It's my 17th (Q) ATS Birthday today, the 22nd April 2007 was my joining date here and it's been Quite the ride.
Just to say a big thanks to all here in particular for the greatest and most interesting thread alive which is the one I read religiously like so many other folks do. A veritabl
Thanks for the window seat. Carry on.....
On March 3rd, 2024, Dr. Joseph Sansone filed a Writ of Mandamus in the Supreme Court of Florida seeking to compel Governor Ron DeSantis to prohibit the distribution of Covid 19 injections (nanoparticle injections/mRNA injections) in the State of Florida.
The mandamus also seeks to compel Attorney General Ashley Moody to confiscate the vials and conduct a forensic analysis of their contents.
The 74-page document cites state and federal biological weapons laws, domestic terrorism laws, treason laws, murder, fraud, and informed consent laws, as well as other laws being violated. It even cites Florida’s accessory after a fact law, which makes it a felony to allow a crime to continue to be permitted or shield perpetrators from prosecution.
I want to give a shout out to Karen Kingston for her countless hours of research and writing the scientific material that constitutes the Statement of Facts section of this legal brief. I also want to thank the friends that put eyes on this document before I submitted it.
The U.S. Census Bureau estimated there were 168,300,000 registered voters at the time of the election, according to a January 2022 population report (page 3) (here) – not 133 million. The same bureau reported similar figures in April 2021 (Table 1) (here).
The 133 million figure shared on social media is also far lower than the more than 136 million ballots cast in the 2016 election. “The number of 133 million registered voters is plainly false,” said Michael McDonald, a University of Florida political scientist who runs the election data site, U.S. Election Project.
In 2022, there were 161.42 million people registered to vote in the United States. This is a decrease from the previous election, when 168.31 million people were registered to vote.