(Stillness in the Storm Editor) The following is another hit-style piece by Daily Beast targeting Q, discussing how the Secret Service is turning away Anons who wear Q gear.
The reason we’re sharing this story is to draw your awareness to the fact the Secret Service is turning Anons away with Q gear on.
Why is this important? Consider how the writer in the below article characterizes Q Anon. This is a standard propaganda tactic of painting a topic and those who acknowledge it as socially taboo and stupid. We provided an in-depth analysis of that technique in the below-related article.
It appears that Q Anon is part of a multipronged operation to take down the Deep State, an opinion shared by Simon Esler, a researcher who’s heading a Q Anon Think Tank on Facebook. Trump also appears to have endorsed Q indirectly, by pointing to Q Anon shirts at a Trump rally and meeting with a Q Anon in the White House recently.
So why not allow Q Anons to wear their shirts at Trump rallies? If Trump and Q are so aligned, why not allow them to wear the shirts?

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The Daily Beast article suggests that it’s because some fake Q Anons are showing up at rallies with the intention of committing violence. Perhaps that is the case.
I suggest the following possibility.
What if Trump and the Q Anon team need to create some distance between POTUS and the alliance? If Trump comes out publicly as supporting Q Anon, this will be one more piece of dirt the propaganda media can use against him.
“Who cares about the media or those non-believers! Trump should endorse Q and take down the Deep State already!”
Here’s the problem, the people are the ones the alliance is trying to free from the Deep State, at least that’s the claim. Assuming this is true, it would stand to reason that carefully preparing all the people for the eventual takedown is required.
POTUS appears to be playing a very specific role. He plays the fool and embodies the arrogant capitalist white-man, enraging Clinton supporters who are still reeling from the 2016 election. The effect of this “arrogant Trump” tactic is to slowly convert open-minded people to the cause. And by all accounts, it appears to be working. The wilder and insane the resistance against Trump becomes, the more reasonable people are convinced he is actually good for the country—at least better than the Clinton aligned anti-Trumpers.
Frankly, prior to Trump winning the 2016 election, I just thought he was another bought and paid for politician. But now, I’m more open to the possibility he could truly be part of an alliance to take down the Deep State. Of course, I hold no concrete opinions on this matter. The point is that if someone like me is open-minded, an extreme skeptic of government and a researcher who’s dedicated their life to uncovering the truth, surely the average joe is capable of entertaining the idea of an alliance against the Deep State.
If my supposition is correct, if Trump is trying to distance himself a bit from Q, while still giving plenty of signals to those with the eyes see, we could see similar type moves in the future. Trump and Q Anon might not be holding candlelight vigils for the public’s benefit, but they do seem to be reading off the same playbook.
At this point, I’d say, Anons should focus on learning as much as they can about the corruption that plagues our world, sharing that knowledge with their friends and family in a tactful compassionate way. We need to keep this phase of the operation going—awareness spreading and data collection.
In short, we need to be patient.
I’d love for Q Anon to be vindicated, proof that there is an alliance to come out, and mass arrests to start tomorrow. But I also want real and lasting change. If I have to wait a bit longer for that, so be it.
A goose gets cooked slowly. Pulling it out of the oven early will just ruin the meal.
– Justin
by Will Sommer, October 1st, 2018
QAnon conspiracy theorists have begun sneaking their QAnon shirts into Trump rallies amid reports that people wearing the shirts have been turned away by people they claim are Secret Service officers staffing Trump events.
QAnon is founded on a series of anonymous clues posted online by a person named “Q” that purport to show a secret world where Trump is engaged in endless battle with a pedophile cabal of high-ranking Democrats and where Trump’s foes will soon be banished to Gitmo. It is an inherently ludicrous idea but one that’s managed to gain a ton of traction through Trump rallies, where attendees regularly show up with Q shirts and signs.
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Indeed, the conspiracy theory jumped into the mainstream in July, when a number of people with QAnon shirts and signs were shown on TV at a Trump rally in Florida. Other QAnon supporters who get caught on camera at Trump rallies have earned cryptic shout-outs from Q, and believers in the theory scrutinize Trump’s hand gestures at rallies to claim he’s pointing to QAnon believers.
But now QAnon fans hoping for a viral moment of their own say they’re being told they can’t wear QAnon-related shirts to the Trump rallies. On Monday, a QAnon supporter trying to attend a rally the president was holding in Tennessee claimed on Twitter that a Secret Service agent told her that “Q” shirts weren’t allowed at the rally.
https://twitter.com/MariaWall93/status/1046822478054658049
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This isn’t the first time QAnon supporters have claimed their gear is being banned at Trump events. Lisa Thornburg, a QAnon believer, told The Daily Beast that a Secret Service officer told her husband that he couldn’t wear QAnon T-shirt to a Trump rally in West Virginia.
https://twitter.com/LisaMThornburg/status/1046138669797711872
The Secret Service didn’t respond to requests for comment.
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Other QAnon believers have started to get more creative, with one covering a shirt with a jacket in an attempt to get around the rally ban.
https://twitter.com/AMARLOW33/status/1046858764345913345
A ban on QAnon gear at Trump rallies would seem to conflict with the heart of the conspiracy theory, which is that Trump is communicating to his supporters with the anonymous clues that make up QAnon. But in a post, Q claimed that the shirts weren’t being banned because they embarrass Trump—instead, they’re banned because deep-state operatives posing as QAnon believers are calling in threats.
Either way, the mystery poster “Q” had a solution: just buy more QAnon shirts and wear it in layers.
“When one shirt is not enough,” the post reads, “TWO becomes the solution.”
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Not sure how to make sense of this? Want to learn how to discern like a pro? Read this essential guide to discernment, analysis of claims, and understanding the truth in a world of deception: 4 Key Steps of Discernment – Advanced Truth-Seeking Tools
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