What's new
  • ICMag and The Vault are running a NEW contest in October! You can check it here. Prizes are seeds & forum premium access. Come join in!

The Great Awakening

Is the Great Awakening happening?

  • Yes

    Votes: 16 39.0%
  • No

    Votes: 21 51.2%
  • Not Sure

    Votes: 4 9.8%

  • Total voters
    41

moose eater

Well-known member

Maybe that's why the National Archives has asked the DoJ to assess if laws were broken when DJT stole the boxes, some of those which were returned now alleged to have contained classified info.?

Hempy, if you bend over backward any further to shield your criminal idol, you may find yourself in serious need of a chiropractor.
 

Microbeman

The Logical Gardener
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Oh no... Freedom Truckers are trading children back and forth and feeding them PIZZA!!!! They are engaged in tobogganing and we all know the secret meaning of that! This pedo activity must be put to a halt!

 

Microbeman

The Logical Gardener
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Okay, so neither of us got the exact quote correct. But, to my point, he was obviously clear that he wasn't saying "all people from Mexico are..." And again, the statement was proven to be accurate.

Everybody notice how Hempy just cannot say 'okay you were right, I was wrong'? I was correcting his blatant error and never even attempted to make an exact quote. He, however, got the whole meaning/incentive of Trump's statement WRONG. He just added, that besides the rapists et al, 'and some I assume are good people' See how unbelievably brainwashed and narcissistic some of these Trump zealots can become?
 

Microbeman

The Logical Gardener
ICMag Donor
Veteran
but they don't get pizza(ed)

OR DO THEY.jpg
 

moose eater

Well-known member
Oh no... Freedom Truckers are trading children back and forth and feeding them PIZZA!!!! They are engaged in tobogganing and we all know the secret meaning of that! This pedo activity must be put to a halt!



I believe I encountered a potential family member of the OP, when I read an article from an unknown online rag, that alleged the mayor of a small town in Ohio (Hudson, Ohio?) had argued against letting people icefish in their local lake that shared the town's name. His contention arose from his belief that if ice fishing were permitted on their lake, that would lead to ice shanties, and the presence of the shanties would lead to prostitution.

We've never used an ice shanty that I can recall, though the concept was attractive. But ordering a hooker out onto the ice here? In the places we fish? Never even thought about it. To-go food maybe? Pizza? Good dope? Sure. But ordering hookers out onto the ice?? I could envision some logistical and other problems arising.
 

Microbeman

The Logical Gardener
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I believe I encountered a potential family member of the OP, when I read an article from an unknown online rag, that alleged the mayor of a small town in Ohio (Hudson, Ohio?) had argued against letting people icefish in their local lake that shared the town's name. His contention arose from his belief that if ice fishing were permitted on their lake, that would lead to ice shanties, and the presence of the shanties would lead to prostitution.

We've never used an ice shanty that I can recall, though the concept was attractive. But ordering a hooker out onto the ice here? In the places we fish? Never even thought about it. To-go food maybe? Pizza? Good dope? Sure. But ordering hookers out onto the ice?? I could envision some logistical and other problems arising.

Hey you don't know what yer missin mister (john wayne voice)
 

unclefishstick

Fancy Janitor
ICMag Donor
Veteran
A Michigan man who says he killed his wife because a member of the QAnon conspiracy movement told him she was a CIA agent trafficking children and needed to die, won’t now stand trial for her murder.

Troy Burke, 45, admitted to killing his wife, Jessica, 29, by shooting her three times in the head in their home in Gratiot County on Jan. 27 last year. But on Tuesday, a judge allowed Burke to enter a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity, after psychiatric evaluations by both the state and independent experts concluded that he was not fit to stand trial.

Advertisement








According to local media reports, prosecutors told the court that Burke believed his tablet device was sending him signals from QAnon members who told him that his wife was working for the CIA. The defendant told police that the messages directed him to kill his wife to save the world from child sex trafficking, 12News reported.

It’s unclear if the messages Burke was speaking about were real of imaginary, but the QAnon conspiracy movement was built on the false claim that a so-called deep state is helping Democrats and Hollywood elites to operate an underground child sex-trafficking ring.

Burke, who had a history of mental health problems, also told investigators that he had a neural link implanted into his brain. “He said that other people could read his thoughts,” Gratiot County Prosecutor Keith Kushion told the court, the Morning Sun reported.

Advertisement








Burke also believed that his wife was in fact Joe Biden’s son who had undergone a sex change.

“He believed [these conspiracies],” Burke’s attorney, Sarah Huyser told the court, 12News reported. “They may sound illogical to us. They may, when we hear them, we are thinking that’s crazy for the lack of a better way to say that, but imagine being in the mindset where all of that is very real and very scary.”

Burke has been sent to the Michigan Center for Forensic Psychiatry, where he will spend 60 days and undergo more tests. After that, the court will determine if it will require him to spend the rest of his life in a state mental health facility.

Whether or not the messages Burke mentioned were real, he believed they were real and coming from someone within the QAnon movement, which has shown itself to be a significant catalyst for real-world violence.

This is at least the sixth murder case linked to QAnon. Most recently, in August of 2021, a father of two took his young children from their home in Santa Barbara and drove them to Mexico, where he killed them both by stabbing them repeatedly with a spear gun.

When Matthew Coleman was subsequently arrested by the FBI, he told investigators that he did it because he believed his children would grow up to be monsters, adding that he had been “enlightened” by QAnon conspiracies.
 
Top