Q-Anon is a Psychological Operation Pushed by the Deep State

0

WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 06: A protester yells inside the Senate Chamber on January 06, 2021 in Washington, DC. Congress held a joint session today to ratify President-elect Joe Biden's 306-232 Electoral College win over President Donald Trump. Pro-Trump protesters entered the U.S. Capitol building during mass demonstrations in the nation's capital. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Q-Anon is a popular American political conspiracy theory and political movement, purportedly started by anonymous individual or individuals who are or were embedded in the military or intelligence apparatus and who go by the name “Q”.

Besides asserting that the US government is composed of cannibalistic child sexual abusers (Pizzagate), they consistently promoted the theory that there are good people in power—the White Hats—and that there is a plan to dismantle this anti-human cabal and restore Donald Trump to the presidency.

Their message has consistently been for people to “sit back and enjoy the show” and to “TRUST THE PLAN!”

The problem is, as General Michael Flynn has explained, “There is no plan. There are no ‘White Hats’. People who are into this are burning daylight. We have to work now to get this on track.”

What’s more is that this political movement was likely started as a tool of the Deep State Intelligence Community to control people inclined to distrust the government.

The Q movement appears to have a striking resemblance to a Bolshevik counterintelligence operation run in the Soviet Union called “Operation Trust”.

Operation Trust was a counterintelligence operation of the State Political Directorate (GPU) of the Soviet Union. The operation, which was set up by GPU’s predecessor Cheka, ran from 1921 to 1926, set up a fake anti-Bolshevik resistance organization, “Monarchist Union of Central Russia”, MUCR, in order to help the OGPU identify real monarchists and anti-Bolsheviks. The created front company was called the Moscow Municipal Credit Association.

Operation Trust was used to pacify subjects into believing that powerful people were actively working in their interest and also to out those subjects if they did not sit idly by. As Soviet defector Anatoliy Golitsyn explained in his book “New Lies for Old”, “These [Operation Trust] agents confided in their contacts that the anti-Soviet monarchist movement that they represented was now well established in Soviet Russia, had penetrated into the higher levels of the army, the security service, and even the government, and would in time take power an restore the monarchy.”

This was imitated almost to a T in the Q-Anon programing:

The Q operation may have culminated in the FBI-led storming of the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, which resulted in over 700 political prisoners being placed in American gulags and had one Q follower—Ashli Babbitt—killed by Capitol Police that day.

Ironically, as the new Republican House is set to investigate the weaponization of the federal government—particularly the DOJ—the criticism is that it will be used to “push Q-Anon”:

The US intelligence community used the term “conspiracy theorist” to disparage people who questioned the Warren Report’s ridiculous claim that Lee Harvey Oswald was the only person involved in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. It appears that they actively created conspiracy theories through Q-Anon in an attempt to pacify or alternatively out the political opposition. Now it’s a conspiracy theory to say that the intelligence community pushes conspiracy theories.