American extremists, opponents of vaccination and those who consider the coronavirus to be a massive deception, have decided to prepare together for the chaos that the US will face in the run-up to the election
According to The Guardian, leading supporters of anti-government and unscientific ideas held a major conference on Jekyll Island, Georgia. The place is remarkable for the fact that it was here that the US Federal Reserve, so popular among conspiracy therapists, was born.
The summit was attended by around 350 people. The main speaker was Stuart Rhodes, founder of Oath Keepers. This extreme right-wing armed group repeatedly spoke out against left-wing extremists from Black Lives Matter during the summer riots. Rhodes called the BLM a “communist front” and called on the conference participants to conduct a firearms exercise before the presidential election and mobilize forces across the country.
“You are your own self-defence,” he said. – In the next 30 days, you must organise yourself in your cities and districts.
Ever since Black Lives Matter started its campaign, the ranks of right-wing radicals have been growing, with experienced soldiers, former Marines and Special Forces fighters, Rhodes said. The extremists now intend to take control of the polls on November 3, “to make sure they are safe, especially in fluctuating states.
Among the speakers at the conference were those who called the Coronavirus pandemic a fraud fabricated by world elites as a ploy to enslave the American people. One such trick was Mickey Willis, who had previously claimed that the coronavirus was invented by major pharmaceutical companies and Bill Gates himself.
Kerry Rivera, a leading advocate of bleach as a cure for autism, also spoke to forum participants via video from Germany. She argued that the chlorine dioxide used in industrial textile production has no serious side effects.
“If people were to take chlorine dioxide from most diseases, they would need a few doctors and the pharmaceutical industry would go bankrupt”, – she said.
The situation was commented on by the writer Betsy Kwammen, who attended the conference. She called the situation an alarm bell, especially given the upcoming US presidential election.
“As a person learning how to manoeuvre radicals and conspiracy therapists, it is very unpleasant to see these different groups unite under a common banner of distrust of the coronavirus,” said Kwammen.