QAnon Was Created By The Tavistock Institute (Liam Denis Tuohy)

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Qanon Was Created By The Tavistock Institute

Q and the anons came onto the scene around 2017 with a plan for the far right to trust in. A plan to stop the new world order and Trump is the leader who traveled the world making deals to jail the Jesuits. I believed in it. I thought that after 25 years of researching the Nazis that took over America that maybe we may be able to get our country back from a corporation of the crown. A year and a half ago, I got off the Trump train after I saw the inside of his mansion which was all masonic symbolism. And seeing him support the zionists and the genocide of the paelstinians in gaza, that was it for me. This artocle will explore all sides and attempt to expose Q and the real story.

According to the Anti Defamation League (the zionists):

QAnon is a decentralized, far-right political movement rooted in a baseless conspiracy theory that former President Donald Trump is waging a secret war against the “Deep State,” a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles who control the world and run a global child sex trafficking ring, murdering children in ritual Satanic sacrifices in order to harvest a supposedly life-extending chemical from their blood known as adrenochrome. QAnon theories, which are popular among far-right extremists and some Trump supporters, are an amalgam of novel and well-established conspiracy theories, with marked undertones of antisemitism, anti-LGBTQ+ hate, and anti-immigrant bias. 

According to QAnon lore, nearly every recent president has been a puppet put in place by the so-called Deep State, but Donald Trump was recruited by top military generals to run for president in 2016. Trump’s mission: to expose and take down the Deep State, which will take place during “the Storm,” a violent day of reckoning in which Deep State actors and their collaborators will be arrested en masse and sent to Guantanamo Bay, where they will face military tribunals and be executed for their various supposed crimes against humanity.

In the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic and 2020 presidential election, QAnon has bolstered anti-vaccine skepticism and false claims that the 2020 election was “stolen” from Trump. QAnon followers played a significant role in efforts to overturn and discredit the results of the 2020 election, including the January 6, 2021 Capitol insurrection.

What followers believe

QAnon consists of a number of deeply convoluted conspiracy theories and elevates theories ranging from Satanic blood rituals to the faked death of John F. Kennedy Jr., all tenuously centered around the belief that the world is controlled by a global cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles. This kitchen sink approach is a major reason why QAnon has gained such a substantial following in its relatively short life; since its 2017 inception, the movement has become a “big tent” conspiracy capable of accommodating and encompassing all sorts of theories and global events.
It’s not all doom and gloom: QAnon followers also believe there are good forces at play, men and women working within the government to thwart the Deep State. QAnon followers refer to these people as “white hats.”

According to “Q,” the mysterious insider who is “leaking” information to their followers about the plan to takedown the Deep State, the white hats stopped Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton from stealing the 2016 election. As the theory goes, the Democratic elites needed to win the presidency in order to pay back funds that the Clinton Foundation stole from other nations under the guise of 2010 emergency earthquake aid to Haiti. Rather than help Haitians in dire straits, Q claimed thatthe Clintons supposedly used the money to fund a massive child sex trafficking operation from the disaster-stricken nation.

The white hats identified the only person they consider honest and moral enough to resist the evils of the Deep State: Donald Trump, who they recruited to run for president in 2016.

Ever since Trump’s election, Q, Trump and the white hats have been embroiled in what QAnon adherents view as an epic battle with the Deep State. QAnon followers believe a team of military and government insiders, posting under the “Q” identity, is leaking information to the public in order to enlighten them to “the Plan” and quell any civil unrest that may occur when “the Storm” begins. QAnon adherents call this process “the Great Awakening.”
“The Storm”

The successful completion of the Plan hinges on hundreds of thousands of alleged sealed indictments, supposedly being compiled by the Department of Justice against the prominent Democrats, Hollywood celebrities, business leaders and other elites who make up the cabal. These indictments are set to be unsealed during a violent day of reckoning known as “the Storm,” when the cabal and its collaborators will promptly be arrested and sent to Guantanamo Bay, where they will face military tribunals and possible execution for their crimes. The Storm takes its name from a comment then-President Trump made during a photo op held before a White House military dinner on October 5, 2017, in which he remarked that the dinner was “maybe the calm before the storm.” When a reporter asked, “What storm, Mr. President?” Trump responded, “You’ll find out.”

Q has repeatedly suggested that the “storm” was imminent, even going so far as to claim that certain members of the cabal, such as Hillary Clinton and John Podesta, would be arrested on certain dates. While those dates have all come and gone with no arrests, QAnon adherents have remained steadfast in their support for Q, who has explained away these failed predictions by claiming that the arrests had to be delayed for various reasons and that “disinformation is necessary” to throw the Deep State off the white hats’ plan.

As the QAnon movement grew and migrated to more mainstream social media platforms, it developed numerous subplots, such as the far-fetched conspiracy theory that John F. Kennedy Jr. is still alive and will become Trump’s new vice president, that various politicians and celebrities (such as Michelle Obama) are transgender, that you can order trafficked children online from Wayfair and that tweets from various celebrities and politicians about the deaths of their dogs are secret messages about members of the Deep State being arrested or executed (i.e., “dog code”).

Amidst the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the QAnon and anti-vaccine communities have become increasingly intertwined. In the early days of the pandemic, QAnon adherents latched onto theories that the Covid-19 virus was a bioweapon, created by the Deep State to help sway the results of the 2020 election and usher in a “great reset.” QAnon followers have also promoted numerous false claims and disinformation about Covid-19 vaccines, claiming that the vaccines are being used to implant microchips to track people, that the vaccines can alter people’s DNA and that the vaccines are being used to sterilize and kill off parts of the population. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 has ushered in additional theories about the Covid-19 virus’ origins, with some QAnon adherents claiming that the virus is a bioweapon created in U.S.-funded bioweapons labs in Ukraine.

Election conspiracies

The QAnon movement has continued to evolve following Trump’s defeat in the 2020 presidential election, incorporating new conspiracy theories and other forms of extremism. QAnon adherents have repeatedly promoted false claims that the 2020 election was “rigged” to rationalize their belief that President Joe Biden is a “fake” president and will soon be removed from office, with some even going so far as to claim that former President Trump is still in control. Devolution, an outlandish conspiracy theory created by QAnon influencer Patel Patriot (Jon Herold), posits that Trump, aware that the Deep State was planning to “steal” the 2020 election, “devolved” the U.S. government via an Executive Order right before he left office and is still secretly president, working with the military behind the scenes to expose China and the Deep State for teaming up to steal the election. QAnon supporters have also repeatedly claimed that Trump will eventually be reinstated as president. One of the earliest forms of this reinstatement theory settled on the date of March 4, 2021, promoting a sovereign citizen-linked theory that former President Trump would return to power on that date, succeeding former President Ulysses S. Grant as the 19th president. Although nothing happened on March 4, some QAnon adherents have continued to promote the belief that Trump will soon be “reinstated” as president.

It is important to note that several aspects of QAnon lore mirror longstanding antisemitic tropes, and multiple QAnon influencers, such as GhostEzra (Robert Smart), IET (Craig Longley), Negative48 (Michael Protzman) and QAnon John (John Sabal), have been known to peddle antisemitic beliefs. The belief that a global “cabal” is involved in rituals of child sacrifice has roots in the antisemitic trope of blood libel, the false theory that Jews murder Christian children for ritualistic purposes. In addition, QAnon has a deep-seated hatred for financier and philanthropist George Soros, a name that has become synonymous with perceived Jewish meddling in global affairs. And QAnon’s ongoing obsession with a global elite of bankers also has deeply antisemitic undertones.

According to academia and mainstream media

QAnon was the offspring of a conspiracy theory known as Pizzagate. In 2016 the website WikiLeaks released a trove of e-mails that Russian hackers had stolen from the account of John Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s campaign chair for her 2016 presidential election bid. On the website 4chan—a forum characterized by trollish behaviour, extreme content, and lax moderation—anonymous users posited that the use of the term “cheese pizza” in Podesta’s e-mails was code for “child pornography” and that a Washington, D.C., pizzeria named Comet Ping Pong, from which Podesta had ordered, was engaged in the sexual exploitation of children. Ultimately, Pizzagate conspiracy theorists invoked the existence of an elite cabal of satanic cannibals operating a child sex trafficking ring out of the basement of Comet Ping Pong (the restaurant does not, in fact, have a basement). Edgar Welch, a Pizzagate conspiracy theory believer, decided to “self-investigate” the matter, so on December 4, 2016, he drove from North Carolina to Washington, D.C., armed with an AR-15, a shotgun, and a revolver. He entered Comet Ping Pong and fired several rounds in an effort to uncover the pizzeria’s nonexistent basement, but he surrendered to police after determining that the “intel” on Pizzagate “wasn’t 100 percent.” In 2017 Welch was sentenced to four years in prison on federal weapons charges.

On October 28, 2017, an unidentified individual, or group of individuals, known as Q posted an entry on 4chan asserting that the arrest of Hillary Clinton was “already in motion,” a statement that was obviously false. In a later post Q claimed to be a government official with ties to the Trump administration and top secret “Q clearance.” Q asserted that Trump would initiate “The Storm,” an attack on deep-state officials responsible for the cannibalistic satanic pedophile cabal invoked by Pizzagate. The resultant conspiracy theory became eponymously known as QAnon. “Qdrops,” cryptic 4chan posts consisting of alleged intelligence from the highest levels of power, fed the conspiracy, while “bakers”—a collection of YouTube content creators and 4chan and Reddit users—wove Q’s latest “breadcrumbs” into the overarching narrative. In early 2018 Qdrops migrated from 4chan to 8chan (later 8kun), a similar message board that was owned by Jim Watkins, an American expatriate who was living in the Philippines. Watkins and his son Ron would play a significant role in the propagation—and, possibly, creation—of the Q mythos. Later in 2018 Reddit banned its most active QAnon subforums for inciting violence, a clear breach of the site’s terms of service. It would not be the last site to attempt to limit potentially harmful QAnon activity.

The spread of QAnon and its political influence

Over time, “bakers” and other QAnon-associated personalities expanded the conspiracy theory in response to world events and Trump’s actions, while Trump-aligned politicians and even Trump himself sometimes echoed QAnon beliefs online, at rallies, or at official appearances. For example, QAnon theorists addressed the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 pandemic by suggesting that drinking industrial bleach marketed as Miracle Mineral Solution could cure COVID-19, the potentially deadly disease caused by the virus. At a press conference in April 2020, Trump posited similar claims when he proposed that disinfectant agents like bleach could be administered by “injection inside or almost a cleaning” to combat the virus. Trump also used Twitter to boost QAnon’s reach. He retweeted scores of posts from QAnon believers and other conspiracy theorists; at least some of these posts came from accounts which were later determined to have been run by Russian intelligence agents. During wildfire season on the West Coast of the United States in the fall of 2020, Q reposted false claims made by a former U.S. Senate candidate from Oregon that six members of antifa had been arrested for starting wildfires. In this way QAnon and the broader Trump movement created a mutually reinforced shared reality.

As QAnon spread from 4chan, 8chan, and closed Reddit forums to mainstream social media sites, belief in the conspiracy spread rapidly across the United States and abroad. From October 2017 to June 2020, the Institute for Strategic Dialogue identified over 69 million tweets, 487,000 Facebook posts, and 281,000 Instagram posts mentioning QAnon-related phrases or hashtags. The conspiracy theory’s 4chan origins remained apparent, however, in its heavy reliance on memes, in-jokes, trolling, and other elements of Internet culture. Looming especially large in the QAnon belief system were phrases and concepts appropriated from a pair of films from the late 1990s. QAnon believers claimed to have been “red-pilled,” a description of the process of enlightenment in The Matrix (1999), and urged others to “follow the White Rabbit,” a line from The Matrix that was itself a reference to Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865). The theatrical trailer for White Squall (1996), an obscure Ridley Scott disaster film, warned of “the calm before the storm” and provided QAnon with perhaps its most recognizable slogan: “Where we go one, we go all.” (This phrase was often abbreviated as WWG1WGA.) On YouTube the comment sections for videos of The Matrix and White Squall were often filled with discussions of QAnon.

In the 2020 elections dozens of Republican congressional candidates voiced their support for QAnon. Two—Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Lauren Boebert of Colorado—were elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. Both were among the most vocal supporters of Trump’s “big lie” concerning the outcome of the 2020 U.S. presidential contest. By that time Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube had begun to quash QAnon content, an effort that only intensified after the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters.

Numerous QAnon believers committed crimes based on the conspiracy theory. In June 2018 Matthew Wright staged a nearly hour-long standoff with law enforcement on a bridge near the Hoover Dam. Armed with a pair of assault rifles, two handguns, and 900 rounds of ammunition, Wright blocked traffic with his armoured vehicle and stated that he was on a mission for QAnon. He demanded access to an “official” report on the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents who had investigated Hillary Clinton’s use of a private e-mail server for official communications; there had been a Qdrop referencing just such a report two days earlier. Wright attempted to flee, but he was ultimately apprehended by Arizona police. In 2021 he was sentenced to almost eight years in prison. In March 2019 Anthony Comello shot and killed Gambino crime family boss Francesco Cali, reportedly because Comello believed that he was Trump’s personal vigilante and that Cali was a member of the deep state.

In May 2019 an FBI intelligence bulletin identified followers of “fringe political conspiracy theories” such as QAnon as potential domestic terrorism threats. This assessment would be proved correct during the deadly events of January 6, 2021. Among the hundreds of pro-Trump rioters who were arrested after battling police and storming the Capitol building were members of neofascist white nationalist organizations such as the Proud Boys and more than 60 self-identified QAnon adherents. Perhaps the most recognizable rioter was Jacob Chansley, the so-called “QAnon Shaman,” who was photographed on the floor of the U.S. Senate bare-chested and sporting a spear and a horned helmet. Chansley was found guilty of unlawfully obstructing an official proceeding—the certification of the results of the 2020 presidential election—and sentenced to 41 months in prison.

QAnon also gained believers around the world. Between November 2019 and June 2020, after the United States, most QAnon-related posts came from the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia. In August 2020 street protests involving up to 500 participants occurred in 10 cities across the United Kingdom. The group Freedom for the Children UK organized the protests in response to concerns about the global pedophile cabal. Fear and anxiety over the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 pandemic fueled the spread of QAnon to more than 70 countries, with especially large groups of believers in Germany and Brazil.

Who was Q?

The final Qdrop appeared on December 8, 2020, a month after Trump’s election loss, with a link to a video that implied that Trump would soon be sworn in for a second term as president. Like the overwhelming majority of Q’s predictions, it did not come to pass, but this, along with silence from the movement’s ostensible leader, did little to check the spread and transformation of the baseless conspiracy theory. In the year that followed, scores of QAnon adherents converged on Dallas, Texas, to await the appearance of John F. Kennedy, Jr., at the location where his father had been assassinated in 1963. It was believed that the younger Kennedy, who died in 1999, would reappear and join Trump as his vice president. This is just one way in which the conspiracy evolved and remained relevant to its believers in the absence of Q.

The apparent end of Qdrops did nothing to address the lingering question at the centre of the conspiracy theory: the identity of Q. Some QAnon adherents proposed that Q was Trump himself, while others suggested Trump adviser Steve Bannon, former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn, or Republican political operative Roger Stone. Two teams of forensic linguists used machine learning to analyze thousands of Qdrops, and they determined that QAnon was most likely the work of South African software engineer Paul Furber and 8chan/8kun administrator Ron Watkins. Neither had any kind of special access to intelligence or classified information, but both were extremely well versed in the language and culture of conspiracy-themed message boards.

Furber, a 4chan moderator and one of the first public proponents of QAnon, was identified as the author of the earliest Qdrops. These messages echoed many of the themes of Pizzagate, but they eschewed the specificity of that conspiracy in favour of vague proclamations, often followed by questions that encouraged readers to engage with and build upon the narrative. Furber was among those who enlisted the initial “bakers” to spread QAnon beyond the confines of 4chan.

In early 2018 there appeared to be a struggle for control of the Q account, after which point Qdrops migrated to 8chan and Watkins likely became the sole voice of Q. Although both Furber and Watkins publicly denied knowing the identity of Q, Watkins appeared to admit to having authored some of the Qdrops during an interview for the HBO documentary Q: Into The Storm (2021). Watkins took back this admission almost immediately, but he subsequently turned his deep association with QAnon into a political career. In October 2021 Watkins announced his candidacy for a U.S. congressional seat in Arizona.

Bad investigators, misinformation & propaganda

According to New York Time, the newspaper used AI to find out who Q was by analyzing the writings and comparing to other writings online. “Sophisticated software broke down the Q texts into patterns of three-character sequences and tracked the recurrence of each possible combination. Their technique does not highlight memorable, idiosyncratic word choices the way that earlier forensic linguists often did. But the advocates of stylometry note that they can quantify their software’s error rate.

The teams studying Q got in touch with each other after the Swiss scientists released an earlier, preliminary study showing that the writing had changed over time. Each team applied different techniques. The Swiss scientists used software to measure similarities in the three-character patterns across multiple texts while comparing the complexity of vocabulary and syntax. The French team used a form of artificial intelligence that learns the patterns of an author’s writing in roughly the same way that facial-recognition software learns human features.”

Their conclusions was that Paul Furber was their first suspect and Ron Watkins was their second suspect. They were way off. Paul just helped spread the information while Ron mimicked Q after Q went silent.

My Investigations

Last year, a listener named Amanda showed a thread online to me, “Q is a Tavistock operation and QAnons are Tavistock agents with Craig Oxley of JustInformed.com and theunhivedmind.com as a top member who is the Illuminati's Vicar of Prometheus and a high level member of the Tavistock Institute which was financed by the Rockefeller Foundation. Craig Oxley refers to himself as a Promethean, works in the United Kingdom where there is a statue of Prometheus the thief at the Rockefeller Plaza.”

Both websites JustiInformed and TheUnhivedMind were extremely popular around the year 2,000. I remember reading them and finding the information useful. But like all information we find about the illuminati, there is bait with disinformation to steer you in the wrong direction and Craig put out a ton of mininformation about the vatican but just enough to steer you away from the Orsini’s. After speading disinformation for years, he went underground and started helping Tavistock institute with the Q movement. He claims he made up the name Pepe, the nickname of the grey pope Prince Domenico Napoleone Orsini the 22th Duke of Gravina.

The Tavistock Institute of Human Relations is a British not-for-profit organisation that applies social science to contemporary issues and problems. It was initiated in 1946, when it developed from the Tavistock Clinic, and was formally established as a separate entity in September 1947. Coincidentally when Alice Baily wrote her new age manifesto, the roswell crash and when Israel became a nation. Tavistock has treated over 9000 children for gender dysphoria with “puberty blockers”, without adequate therapy beforehand.

Andrew Russell the 15th Duke of Bedford and Marquess of Tavistock is the top overseer of the Tavistock Institute and he is worth over 500 million. Andrew Russell is one of the most evil creatures on the planet. The Russell family also co-founded Yale University and Skull and Bones which is a military death cult that uses electronic weapons like voice to skull torture. The actress Keri Russell is from this family and she is a ruthless sadist directly working with Skull and Bones and the Bush family. The Bush family are top members of Skull and Bones and work with the Tavistock Institute and command the use of voice to skull torment technologies.

To quote Craig Oxley “May I remind you that The Worshipful Company of Barbers love Caesarean sections because this damages the child's brain function thus lowering IQ and also it lowers the immunity of the child.” Craig Oxley believes in euthenasia, depopulation and national socialism. Finding inforamtion on him now is extremely difficult. But seasoned patriot sites mentioned him routinely as they fought against his misinformation and recruitment of patriots to the dark side.

Pepe the frog is the brainchild of Craig Oxley and the phrase KEK. is a Korean imitative slang for laughter used similarly to LOL. Craig used the nickname Pepe for the frog as a hidden way of saying Domenico Napoleone Orsini the 22th Duke of Gravina is responsible for Q. The entire patriot movement in America was actually formed by the Tavistock institute who are a master of online disinformation and used this movement like the Russian Operation Trust. Elon Musk posts Pepe memes and often uses the phrase KEK as he is part of the Orsini control mechanism.

Back in 2006, British blogger Craig Oxley came onto the truther scene started dropping truth bombs about the Vatican on many forums. Things no one has ever heard of like the grey, white and black popes. He developed a following and then disappeared for 10 years thus returning again to develop another following, but this time, people started questioning his material and he left never to return. Craig Oxley gave the truthers enough information to start digging into the Vatican. They actually found more information than he did and by the time Craig returned for one last recruit, they called him out on a lot of incorrect statements. For example, he exposed Pepe Orsini but not Domenico Napoleone Orisini who is actually the real grey pope. He didn’t stay long this time and vanished completely.

Through my research of Craig Oxley, I noticed on one of the forums he used the nickname “2Tuff”. Many of the truthers called him Craig “2Tuff” Oxley. Ironically, there is an MMA fighter named Craig Oxley and I believe he used that name to conceal his identity. I started looking at UK businesses by the name of 2Tuff and coincidentally, there was a 2Tuff Health & Fitness Ltd a few miles away from the Tavistock Institute. The owner’s name is Liam Denis Tuohy, a middle aged ADHD sufferer whom opened up a gym to help other sufferes. There are boxing images on his Facebook page but not enough to pin him to Craig Oxley. Then I found proof. He has a video on his gym website describing his life story and I compared that video to some of the interviews he did back in 2009 on YouTube with truthers. They sound identical. This, in my opinion, is the Just Informed Craig Oxley who is responsible for directing the truther movement towards the Vatican back then.

But is he Q? I needed evidence to tie him to the Tavistock institute, which by the way, according to author and PHD Daniel Estulin, “is a nonprofit charity that applies social science to contemporary issues and problems. [His] book posits that [Tavistock] is the world’s center for mass brainwashing and social engineering activities. In his eye-opening book Tavistock Institute: Social Engineering the Masses, “both the Tavistock network and the methods of brainwashing and psychological warfare are uncovered. It grew from a somewhat crude beginning at Wellington House into a sophisticated organization that was to shape the destiny of the entire planet, and in the process, change the paradigm of modern society. With connections to U.S. research institutes, think tanks, and the drug industry, Tavistock has a large reach, and attempts to show that the conspiracy is real, who is behind it, what its final long term objectives are, and how we the people can stop them.”

Could Liam Denis Tuohy be a paid informant of Tavistock to create Qanon in order to keep the truther movement from rising up? Some truthers seem to think so. While searching the internet archives, I found a blog by an author named Izreal Zeus, whom exposed 33 satanic clans, including major celebrities. Izreal writes about Craig, “He sort of exposed the Orsini family, [but] never named the real Orsinis which are Prince Domenico, Prince Ramondo, and Prince Lelio and then made up a fake person called Pepe Orsini.” Pepe the frog came to my mind. The famous Q meme with the Japanese phrase “KEK”. What if Pepe the frog is really Domenico laughing at us in Japanese for falling for this entire scheme? It’s been over 7 years since Trump came and left and not one executive order was passed helping Americans nor has any of the draconian spying laws like the Patriot Act been removed. We see clues that there is a white hat operation but the goal post keeps moving. Liam Denis Tuohy is called the Illuminati's Vicar of Prometheus according to truthers. Prometheus, in Greek religion is one of the Titans and the supreme trickster god of fire. Similar to the Bible’s interpretation of Satan. Prometheus' name means forethought, so he symbolizes thinking ahead and planning before taking action.

What if Liam Denis Tuohy went online to expose some evil, but not all of it? What if Tavistock was testing the waters before Trump became president in order to release Liam onto the scene as Q? He was on all of the popular free chat boards exposing some truths just like before, but quickly left then came back again. It sounds an awful like Q when he first arrived on 4chan and then later on 8chan. Rumors flew around that Q was infiltrated by the CIA and they took it over, but suddenly, he returned on Truth Social by inheriting the Q handle, which could have only been given by Truth Social’s administrators. Several people came forward over the years admitting they were Q and some were exposed by speculators. Ron Watkins, who owns and runs 8kun (formerly 8chan), basically admitted he posted as Q in the finale of a documentary on the phenomenon. It appeared to be an accident, or a winking "accident" to get credit for it.

Other rumors floated that the original Q whom posted on 4chan was the real Q and Ron Watkins copycatted later on his website for whatever reason. Anons, who have been following Q and decoding the messages have proved the original messages from 4chan are different than the messages on 8chan and Truth Social. A plausible explanation to this entire mystery could be that Liam Denis Tuohy, originally posted on 4chan, whether for reasons in favor of Tavistock or not, exposed some truths and then disappeared like he’s done before. Then Ron Watkins picked up the pieces. Ron was a huge Q follower and built a following himself of millions. He also ran election to the U.S. House to represent Arizona's 2nd Congressional District. Devin Nunes most likely picked up the idea to gain more Truth Social subscribers by creating the Q handle and posting whatever codes they stole from the original.

Try as I may, I could not find any evidence that links Liam Denis Tuohy to the Tavistock Institute other than he has a gym a few miles away. What I did find strange is the names he uses. Liam Tuohy was a famous Footballer which Liam could have stolen from, just as he did with the acclaimed boxer, or maybe he stole the name Liam Tuohy from the actor who starred on the hit movie Titanic, which conspiracy killed John Aster, Isador Strauss & Benjamin Guggenheim who were not in favor of the Federal Reserve Act? If it weren’t for their deaths, the Federal Reserve Act may not have passed legislation in 1913. Another interesting tidbit is 2Tuff Health & Fitness Ltd is just 3 minutes away from The Tavistock Institute. There is no doubt in my mind that Craig “2Tuff” Oxley is Liam Denis Tuohy who owns 2Tuff Health & Fitness Ltd. He also owned a company called Lemtree Limited which closed. Maybe Liam was paid by Tavistock to start Q on 4chan, received the funds under Lemtree Limited and then opened up his dream company 2Tuff Health & Fitness Ltd to be an ADHD fitness trainer. He had the skills to start a movement and he exposed just enough information to get the patriots to focus on research instead of fighting back.

Here is an interview video on youtube of Craig Oxley and a personal video of Liam Denis Tuohy describing his motivations. This is proof, I found the true Q who was hired by the Tavistock Institute to give the far right something to chew on while they divide and conquer.

sources

https://returnofzeus.blogspot.com/2020/03/prometheus.html
https://www.facebook.com/reel/2365342440339811
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqMjb208t9M&list=PL085744D428DE4679&index=1
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/19/technology/qanon-messages-authors.html
https://www.britannica.com/topic/QAnon
https://www.adl.org/resources/backgrounder/qanon

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