A QAnon revelation suggests the truth of Q’s identity was right there all along

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The extremist movement’s leader had purported to be a top-secret government operative. But a possible slip-up in a new documentary about QAnon suggests that Q was actually Ron Watkins, the longtime administrator of the 8kun message board.

The identity of Q, the supposed top-secret government operative and prophet of the extremist ideology QAnon, has for years been a fiercely debated mystery. But a possible slip-up in a new documentary suggests the answer was always the most obvious one: Ron Watkins, the longtime administrator of the message board 8kun, the conspiratorial movement’s online home.

Most major QAnon researchers have long speculated that Watkins had written many of the false and cryptic posts alleging that former president Donald Trump was waging war against an elite international cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles. Watkins has long denied his involvement, saying he was merely a neutral backroom operator of the site and never a participant.

But in the Sunday finale for the HBO series “Q: Into the Storm,” filmmaker Cullen Hoback points to what he argues is a key piece of evidence that Watkins had lied about his role in the more than 4,000 messages Q had posted since 2017. Continue reading.

New doc makes convincing case right-winger who’s denied he’s QAnon’s ‘Q’ is lying

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In an upcoming 6-part investigation into QAnon appearing on HBO beginning on March 21, the man suspected of being the mysterious “Q” — who has promoted conspiracy theories about dark doings in the U.S. government– is confronted by the producers and once again denied the assertion despite substantial information that casts doubt on his refusal to own up.

According to a report from Newsweek, in the first episode of Q: Into the Storm, Ron Watkins, son of 8kun’s founder Jim Watkins, appears uncomfortable while denying being Q under questioning.

he report states, “Many of the extreme beliefs and theories behind QAnon stem from thousands of coded and cryptic messages which began appearing on 4chan—a forerunner of 8chan—before moving to 8kun,” before adding, “The coded messages or ‘drops’ would be interpreted by QAnon followers to form what would evolve into the radical claims made by the movement involving satanic pedophiles and the ‘deep state.'” Continue reading.