But because she was a QAnon believer - and she was holding a giant Q on a staff maybe twice her height - she said she wasn't just there to, you know, see Trump reinstated or see him get another four years or disrupt the vote count. I spoke with a woman named Teresa (ph) who had come from the Midwest to come out to D.C. So I spoke with a woman - and this is before the riot happened. So just go through what this one person told you about why they were there to give back the presidency to Trump. You quote what one of them told you, which pretty well sums up a lot of the craziest of the QAnon beliefs. You were outside the Capitol speaking to QAnon followers. Sommer is a political reporter for The Daily Beast and co-host of the podcast "Fever Dreams." Sommer says he has an unusual passion for consuming huge amounts of right-wing media after having been raised in a conservative Texas family where road trips meant listening to Rush Limbaugh's talk radio show. His reporting has made him a target of QAnon, making it essential for him to wear disguises when he shows up at their rallies. He's been following QAnon from its very beginning and was writing about the far right even before that. It's just the start of the all-consuming conspiracy theory movements to come. These are among the questions journalist Will Sommer deals with in his new book, "Trust The Plan: The Rise Of QAnon And The Conspiracy That Unhinged America." He warns that QAnon isn't a one-time phenomenon. How did that become a foundational belief of QAnon? How did it reflect and add to the antisemitic beliefs of this conspiratorial group? How did QAnon enter mainstream politics? This substance called adrenochrome is a liquid fountain of youth that will help keep the users alive. A substance with special, energizing qualities that can only be found in the brains of children who have been sexually tortured in satanic rituals is harvested from children and distributed to top Democrats, Hollywood celebrities and bankers in the cabal.
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