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Is Post-Salt ‘Q’ a Chinese Imposter?

If “trust the plan” means parroting Chinese propaganda — specifically, the notion that the US Military unleashed the coronavirus, then we might have a problem.

Hi. Zero graphic anon here. To minimize conflict and avoid unnecessarily misframing innocent persons, we’ve been holding onto these questions until we saw the need to make them public. 

That time is now.

After extensive review, we made the editorial decision to cease publishing Q posts produced after the salt rotation that affected secure tripcodes on 8Kun, pending identity verification. Not only are these posts absent regular methods of identification, but we also find some of them to be failing the basic forensic thumbprint of and even antithetical to the Q message itself.

Prior to the salt rotation, Q was quick to point out vectors of disinformation, and the QAnon movement was avidly working on objectives that were in tandem with the President before it was news, exposing everything from “elite” pedophiles like Jeffrey Epstein, FISA Abuses and Fake News to Chinese spies.

Emerging from this same movement now, however, is a dangerous Communist agenda actively working against the President and our nation, and conveniently, during a time of international crisis.

“China was putting out information, which was false, that our military gave this to them,” President Trump said at a briefing Tuesday.

“That was false,” he said. “And rather than having an argument, I said I have to call it where it came from. It did come from China so I think it’s a very accurate term,” he said. The media continuously chastises him for using the phrase “Chinese Virus,” calling it racist, xenophobic and suggesting that it creates a stigma.

“No, I don’t think so,” Trump responded. “I think saying that our military gave it to them creates a stigma.”

And yet, that is exactly the narrative that QAnon followers have been repeating — that Q Team (apparently top-level US military intelligence) has poisoned Wuhan celebrity Adrenochrome supplies with coronavirus or that the virus is part of the plan, a hoax even, designed to keep everyone safe from false flags during mass arrests dealing with public corruption. The President has even had to repeatedly clarify to US Media that he never said the virus was a hoax.

In a world of imperfect weapons, I suppose it could make sense, but it’s important to get these things right. While the risk to the average American remains low, there is no evidence the virus is either fake or launched by the US, and it is dangerous to level such claims without question.

It should be stated that Q has never explicitly made these claims. In the midst of a global pandemic, multinational shutdowns and market crashes that appear to be pitting two great world powers against one other, post-salt Q haven’t said anything. Maybe they’re busy.

Yet, there is also evidence of possible photographic imitation and an alleged proof forgery by the 8chan founder using the Q moniker, missing posts, timestamp discrepancies and archiving interference. We know these things look bad. We also know that we don’t have the full picture.

For example, due to the nature of manual and programmatic archiving, we also found a number of discrepancies between different archival and tracking sites, including our own. We find the independent and collective cross-validation of the entire body of Q posts for the chain of custody to be imperative.

During times of extreme uncertainty, clarity is essential. It’s time to #AskTheQ

Mr President, #WhoIsQ?

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What do you think?

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