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After a smooth event in Dallas over Memorial Day weekend, the organizers of Q Con are trying again, this time in Las Vegas.
Screenshot (thepatriotvoice.us)
QAnon John and QueenAnon Amy are the main characters behind The Patriot Voice. They hosted the For God & Country Patriot Roundup event or the Q Con on Memorial Day weekend in Dallas. They hoped it would be the first of many conventions they would organize.
Before their second event, due to take place in Las Vegas, John “QAnon John” Sabal called for a “military mutiny” following the withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan.
“As a US veteran, I’ve had ENOUGH and I’m officially calling for a TOTAL MILITARY mutiny from the highest ranks and brass all down to the E1s against this GUILTY ADMINISTRATION,” wrote Sabal. “To be CRYSTAL CLEAR, a ‘military mutiny’ ‘does NOT mean that I am calling for any kind of violence.”
He said the US military had an obligation to take action against and remove “this rogue actor,” referring to President Joe Biden.
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QAnon John and QAnon Amy prepare for October’s Las Vegas event, this time dubbed the For God & Country Patriot Double Down. The logo for the event includes the Queen of Seven and Queen of Hearts cards, a reference to Q, the 17th letter of the alphabet.
Sabal’s post reflects the feelings he shared at his Memorial Day weekend event in Dallas.
At the Dallas event, which organizers insisted unrelated to QAnon’s conspiracy theory, several high-profile Republicans spread conspiracy theories about the November 2020 presidential election, pandemic, and January 6 uprising in the Capitol.
“I’m officially calling for a TOTAL MILITARY MUTINY …” – John Sabal, Q-Con organizer
tweet that There were even a few prominent Texans on the bill, including Texas Congressman Louie Gohmert and former Texas Republican Party leader Allen West.
But the big speakers were retired Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, former national security adviser to former President Donald Trump, and Sidney Powell, former attorney for Flynn and Trump. With no evidence, they have promoted claims that the Trump presidential election was stolen, and both of them have spread other conspiracy theories related to QAnon.
A spectator asked Flynn why a coup like the one that killed hundreds of people in Myanmar earlier this year could not take place in the United States. Flynn replied, “No reason. I mean, it should happen here. ”
When this became known, Flynn made the following statement: “There is NO reason for a coup in America and I have not and at no time have called for such action. Any coverage of a different belief of mine is a bold invention based on twisted coverage of a lively panel of a conference of patriotic Americans who love this country as much as I do. ”He blamed the“ fake news media ”.
Flynn will be attending the event in Vegas, as will evangelist Sean Golliday from Dallas-Fort Worth and Vicki O’Brien, a TV and film producer from North Texas.
O’Brien heads the Texas-based media company Relevant Entertainment. She told the Dallas audience that Walt Disney was a level 33 Freemason, an organization she believes is designed to indoctrinate the masses. They do this in part through entertainment, pop culture, and the media.
If O’Brien isn’t quenching the Vegas audience’s appetite for Q, there are two other speakers at the event who could do so: father-son duo Jim and Ron Watkins.
They are two of the biggest names in the QAnon world. In the HBO series Q: Into the Storm, Jim and Ron become involved behind the latest version of conspiracy theory.
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QAnon acolytes gather outside the Omni Dallas Hotel for Q Con on Memorial Day weekend.
Jacob Vaughn
The FBI has identified QAnon as a domestic terrorist threat. The conspiracy theory is diverse but revolves around the idea that the so-called “deep state” is controlled by Hollywood pedophile elites and powerful democratic politicians, all of whom are allegedly waging a secret war against the former president.
QAnon established itself on Imageboard website 4chan in 2017, on which an anonymous poster claimed to be a senior government official with “Q Approved”. The poster claimed that this release gave him access to classified information about Trump and his enemies in the United States.
Those posts were eventually moved by 4chan to another image board site called 8chan, which ended up being owned by Jim and Ron Watkins. As administrator, Ron Watkins used the username CodeMonkeyZ. After a feud with Fred Brennan, the original creator of 8chan, the Watkinses rebooted the site as 8kun, where the last Q-Drop was released in 2020.
The HBO documentary series Q: Into the Storm heavily implies that Jim and Ron Watkins were behind the Q posts on 8chan and 8kun. As administrators and owners of the site, they were in control of the accounts that were published on the image boards. Plus, wherever Jim and Ron Watkins went, it seemed Q followed. 8chan went under in 2018 after its service providers removed the de-platform website. Q didn’t post until it restarted as 8kun months later. Jim and Ron Watkins are revered in many areas of the QAnon community for providing a platform for Q (whoever that is).
The event in Dallas lasted three days and cost attendees between $ 500 and $ 1,000. The Las Vegas event will last for four days and will range from $ 650 to $ 3,000 in attendance.










