(Washington) Followers of the QAnon conspiracy movement gathered in Dallas, Texas on Tuesday, hoping to witness the reappearance of John F. Kennedy’s son, who died in a plane crash 22 years ago, media reported local.
At around 1 p.m. local time, hundreds of people gathered at Dealey Plaza in the heart of Dallas, where President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, according to the newspaper. Dallas Morning News.
One of the theories circulated by the QAnon Nebula claims that President Kennedy’s son John F. Kennedy Jr, who died in 1999 with his wife Carolyn and his sister-in-law Lauren when the plane he was piloting crashed in sea off the state of Massachusetts, was to reappear around noon, to announce the return of Donald Trump to the presidency of the United States.
Donald Trump was to become “the king among kings”, assured a publication posted Monday on a QAnon account.
Sadly, the revelation did not take place, and within hours the rain dispersed the last of QAnon’s supporters.
“The very large crowd gathered for the reappearance of JFK Jr. after his simulated death is not something funny,” responded Democratic Senator from Connecticut Chris Murphy on Twitter.
This is an extremely disturbing sign of how the political debate has become completely detached from the truth.
Democratic Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy
Born in 2017 in the United States, the QAnon movement takes its name from enigmatic messages posted by a certain “Q”, supposed to be a senior American official close to former US President Donald Trump.
The QAnon Nebula is notably a proponent of a theory that Joe Biden and the Democrats are part of a global Satanist and pedophile conspiracy.
Over the years, these theories have convinced more and more Americans, and the FBI is monitoring this far-right group, seen as potentially dangerous. Many QAnon activists were among the crowd that attacked the Capitol on January 6.