So now that I've answered your question
You didn't answer my question.
I didn't say Q said Trump would be president through 2024, I quoted
you as saying QAnon followers (including you) knew it.
They know the same thing we Qanon followers know. Trump will be our president through 2024.
You basically said [the mythical] Q is so cryptic his followers have to literally
invent what he said based on what they *think* he might have said. You're making the story up as you go along. So who do you blame for getting it so wrong?
please answer mine. Please quote just one sentence from any speech or even a tweet where Trump advocated an insurrection.
You realize how this will go, right:
I'll say something and you'll say it's not enough, that's not what he meant, I twisted his words, etc. etc.
You know you can google Trump incited an insurrection" and find your own answers, but you'll only believe rightwing sites.
I can give you a pile of links, which we both know you won't accept.
I can't change your mind, but I'll answer your question.
"We will stop the steal...We never give up, we never concede... And we fight. We fight like hell and if you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore...We're going to walk down Pennsylvania Avenue, I love Pennsylvania Avenue, and we're going to the Capitol..."
But don't assume I'm the only one hearing that.
Take it from the Capitol Insurrectionists:
“Once we found out Pence turned on us”
Joshua Black, of Leeds, Alabama, said he joined in the storming of the Capitol to protest election theft.
According to charging documents, Black described his experience in two YouTube videos he recorded after the insurrection, including one where he said he’d been “pretty upset” because “they stole my country.”
Black said that Trump’s speech at the White House the morning of January 6, in which Trump scorned Vice President Mike Pence for failing to stop the election certification, fueled him and other rioters: “Once we found out Pence turned on us and that they had stolen the election, like officially, the crowd went crazy. I mean, it became a mob. We crossed the gate.”
“President Trump said to do so”
Robert Bauer of Kentucky, who entered the Capitol wearing a Trump 2020 hat, told investigators that he marched there at the behest of President Trump. According to a federal criminal complaint, Bauer said that “after President Trump told the crowd, ‘We are going down Pennsylvania Avenue to the Capitol,’ the crowd began moving towards the Capitol.” Then Bauer, his wife, and his cousin proceeded to move with the crowd “because President Trump said to do so.”
“Taking Pennsylvania Avenue”
Edward Hemenway, of Winchester, Virginia, made a
similar statement to FBI agents, explaining that
“during the rally President Trump said ‘something about taking Pennsylvania Avenue,’” so he headed for the Capitol. Hemenway told investigators that he and Bauer (his cousin) stayed at a DC hotel the night before the insurrection because they “didn’t know what was going to happen [on January 6, 2021],” but had heard “crazy things” on social media.
“Followed the president’s instructions and [went] to the Capitol”
Robert Sanford, of Chester, Pennsylvania, was identified in video footage allegedly throwing what appeared to be a fire extinguisher at police officers, striking an officer in the head. According to
an FBI statement of facts, investigators received a tip identifying Sanford and were told by the informant that
Sanford said he had traveled to DC on a bus with a group of people. The informant said Sanford had disclosed that the group “had gone to the White House and listened to President Donald J. Trump’s speech and then had followed the president’s instructions and gone to the Capitol.”
“The president asked people to come…it’s the least that we can do”
Christopher Ray Grider, of
Eddy, Texas, was captured on video inside the Capitol draped in a yellow “Don’t Tread on Me” flag, standing amid a group attempting to break into the Speaker’s Lobby
where one rioter was fatally shot by police. According to an
FBI affidavit, “Video footage also captured how Grider attempted to push open the doors and then kick the doors in an attempt to breach the entrance leading to House Chamber where members of Congress were located.” Grider was later interviewed by a Texas news station, according to the affidavit, where he was shown on camera saying,
“The president asked people to come and show their support. I feel like it’s the least that we can do, it’s kind of why I came from central Texas all the way to DC.”
“I’m here to see what my President called me to DC for”
Jorge Riley, a Sacramento, California, resident and former member of the
California Republican Assembly group, posted on Facebook the day before the insurrection,
“Do you really not get what is going to happen on the 6th? I absolutely am looking forward to that and NO MATTER WHAT THERE IS NOTHING THAT CAN STOP IT!!!!” An FBI statement of facts says Riley posted more than 150 messages, photos, and videos between January 6 and January 8 describing his activities in DC, including a post the morning of the 6th stating, “I’m here to see what my President called me to DC for. Hello from Sacramento!!!” In video footage cited by investigators, Riley referenced election fraud as a reason he stormed the capitol:
“We stopped the steal, because they were in there and they weren’t going to stop the steal, so we stopped the steal. We took our country back.
“I was doing what [Trump] asked us to do”
Jennifer Ryan, a real estate agent from Texas who
traveled to the Capitol on a private jet, defended her
participation in the siege and called for President Trump to
pardon her and others who took part.
“I thought I was following my president. I thought I was following what we were called to do,” Ryan said in an interview with a local Dallas news station.
“He asked us to fly there. He asked us to be there. So I was doing what he asked us to do.”
“I’ll be there”
Gina Bisignano, of Beverly Hills, California, was identified by the FBI in multiple videos encouraging rioters to bring weapons and fight Capitol police, and in other instances shouting
grievances and conspiracy theories through a megaphone:
“We the people are not going to take it anymore. You are not going to take away our votes…This is 1776, and we the people will never give up. We will never let our country go to the globalists.” According to charging documents, evidence in Bisignano’s case included a tweet posted on December 19, 2020 by President Trump: “Big protest in D.C. on January 6th. Be there, will be wild!” Bisignano replied in a tweet of her own: “I’ll be there.”
“The president is calling on us to come back to Washington”
Stephen Michael Ayers, of
Warren, Ohio, spoke in a YouTube video about breaching the Capitol, according to a FBI
affidavit. Ayers also posted multiple times on social media in advance of the insurrection about his plans to attend the “Save America” rally on January 6 and “hear about [how] all the DS are being tried for treason!!” In a January 2 post cited by investigators,
Ayers shared an image of a poster reading “January 6th Washington, DC, the president is calling on us to come back to Washington on January 6th for a big protest – ‘Be there, will be wild,” with a comment from Ayers that said, “History is being made right in front of your eyes! When your grandchildren ask “Where were you when………..happened?” What’s your answer going to be?”