Jacob Chansley is perhaps best known as the QAnon shaman and was catapulted to worldwide fame after he wore a horned helmet and a fur pelt during the storming of the Capitol on January 6.
The most in-depth and extensive docuseries to delve into QAnon, ‘Q: Into the Storm’, just finished airing recently, with one slip-up said to reveal the true identity of Q.
There is so much misinformation doing the rounds these days that it’s sometimes difficult to separate fact from fiction, if you don’t know what to look out for.
Greene has called for the public execution of Democrats, called school shootings “false flags”, talked about Jewish space lasers, and somehow still been elected to Congress.
Jacob Chansley, perhaps best known as the QAnon Shaman, is preparing to throw Trump under the bus and sing for his supper.
Facebook bans QAnon. Ace Magashule arrest warrant? Farm murder court chaos. Eddie van Halen dies. Baby shark song used as torture. What Britney really looks like.
Back in October 2017, QAnon started with a single post on message board 4chan. Three years later, and it’s surging in popularity across the globe.
Here in South Africa, we can laugh off the conspiracy theory/cult that is QAnon, but it’s becoming worryingly mainstream in the US.
The coronavirus pandemic is ripe for the spread of conspiracy theories and misinformation, and any trip down the rabbit hole can get weird pretty quickly.