J6er Joseph Thomas
2.2K posts

J6er Joseph Thomas
@JosephThom40388
Pardoned J6 Political Hostage, Christian Minister, Husband, Father, Veteran, Nerd






QとEBSを関連付けて考えないで Q=宇宙 だけど EBS=カルトが創ったデマ #QとEBSは無関係 です #EBSを語る為に存在する無数のインフルエンサー は 一匹残らずカルト/DSが雇った工作員であり ヤツらの目的は 人々が真実に到達しないよう妨害すること 思考停止させる目的で トランプやQに期待し EBSをじっと待つような受け身の姿勢を Q/宇宙は望んでいません Q/宇宙はあくまで あなたが自分の頭で考え行動することを 願っているのです だって この暗く汚い世界は ひとりひとりが自分の頭で考え 他人がなんと言おうが自分は正しい道に進むべく 行動してこなかった結果でしょ? あなた自身が 積極的に情報拡散することで戦ってください 戦わなかった人 この世の仕組みを知りつつ黙っていた人は 決して良い結果を受け取れません #やったぶんだけ還ってくる Qが Qドロップの日本語翻訳者として唯一認め QResearchや8kunのオーナーらとも親交のある #EriQmapJapan と #QAJF を EBSをQと絡めて騙る フォロワー買いまくりのインフルエンサーらが 完全に無視している事実に 違和感を感じてください #辻褄を合わせて

🚨WARNING FOR AMERICANS🚨 - PART 2 ...THAT IS A PSYOP....? In 2016 and 2017, President Trump executed one of the earliest and most strategic moves of this war: he exposed the fake news media, the modern Mockingbird machine, and shattered the illusion that the so-called mainstream press was a neutral referee. He did not just attack bad headlines. He delegitimized one of the most important propaganda delivery systems the Deep State had ever built. That victory was foundational. It was one of the biggest wins Patriots ever had, because once people stopped trusting the old gatekeepers, the battlefield changed forever. But that is exactly where many people fell asleep. They thought the mission was complete because the faces on television were exposed. They thought defeating CNN narratives meant defeating the propaganda system itself. They saw the suit and tie, the corporate set, the polished anchor desk, and assumed that was the entire operation. It was not. The machine adapted. The branding changed. The delivery system evolved. Mockingbird did not die. It rebranded. It moved from studio desks to livestreams. From network logos to social media profiles. From corporate newsrooms to X Spaces, Telegram groups, Discord servers, Signal chats, Substack pages, podcasts, and influencer circles. The same operation that once spoke to you through anchors now speaks to you through “independent thinkers,” anonymous accounts, viral threads, alternative commentators, and self-appointed truth-tellers who learned how to dress like the resistance while serving the exact same function as the system they claim to oppose. They traded in the suits and ties for hoodies and cleavage. They traded in studio lights for ring lights. They traded in teleprompters for “authenticity.” They traded in network branding for "relatability." But the mission never changed. Control the narrative. Shape perception. Manipulate emotion. Redirect the audience. Neutralize real resistance. That is 5GW. And many still do not understand the most dangerous part: sometimes the Deep State does not even need to directly control a person once ego has taken over. At that point, the asset becomes self-sustaining. Pride, audience capture, money, attention, status, identity, tribal loyalty, the addiction to being seen as right, first, bold, or important...those things can build a prison stronger than any external coercion. Some people are no longer being manipulated by the machine. They have become the machine. Their ego now does the regime’s work for free. That is the next layer of the Matrix. Many people believe they “escaped” because they stopped watching mainstream media. They think being red-pilled means they are automatically immune to deception. But all they really did was walk into a more sophisticated cell. A cell designed specifically for people who think they are too awake to be manipulated. A prison built out of vanity, certainty, and emotional self-importance. The Matrix no longer needs chains when it can use your ego as solitary confinement. Read that again. The Matrix used your ego as solitary confinement. That is why facts alone are no longer enough in this phase of war. Information by itself will not save people who are emotionally invested in deception. In this level of unrestricted warfare, the battle is not just over what you know. It is over whether you can recognize when your need to be important has made you vulnerable to control. If your identity is wrapped up in a personality, a platform, a community, or a feeling, then you can be steered. If your ego cannot be challenged, then you can be weaponized. So how do you identify Mockingbird Media in the so-called alternative world? Look for the same signals you once saw in the mainstream. -Coordinated narratives disguised as spontaneous truth. -Emotional manipulation over disciplined analysis. -False urgency designed to override critical thinking. -Audience capture that punishes dissent and rewards conformity. -Authority without accountability. -Confidence without evidence. -Tribal loyalty replacing principle. -Personal brands elevated above country, truth, and mission. The playbook never changed. Only the logos changed. Only the appearance changed. Only the location changed. That is why so many people are losing a war they do not even realize they are still fighting. You cannot win in unrestricted warfare if your ego makes you believe you are above manipulation. You cannot win if you think the battle is about your favorite voice, your platform, your feelings, or your place in the movement. You cannot win if you fail to understand that every person in this war is expendable, including you and me. The mission is bigger than any one man, any one influencer, any one account, any one show, any one community. You have a role. You matter. You are important. But it is not about you. It never was. This is about God, country, truth, duty, and the survival of a nation under coordinated psychological, informational, and spiritual attack. The people who survive this phase will not be the loudest. They will not be the most viral. They will not be the most worshipped by an audience. They will be the ones disciplined enough to kill their ego before their ego kills the mission. One President. One Country. One Flag. One God. Semper Fi, -ALPHA H/T to Chase Hughes for a great clip @NCIUniversity


Most Americans know the image. December 25, 1776. A frozen river. A desperate general. George Washington standing at the bow of a Durham boat crossing the Delaware into the teeth of a nor'easter, staking the survival of the Revolution on a night assault against Hessian forces at Trenton. It is one of the most iconic moments in military history, and it happened on Christmas. But history has paid far less attention to Easter. For Washington, Easter was not merely a date on a church calendar. It was a living theological framework that shaped how he understood suffering, perseverance, and ultimate victory, both spiritual and national. To study Washington at Easter is to see a dimension of the man that the popular mythology often obscures: a commander who believed that death was not the final word, and who applied that belief not just to his personal faith, but to the cause of American liberty itself. During the Constitutional Convention of 1787, Philadelphia was the center of the American world. Delegates from thirteen states gathered to reconstruct a government that many feared was already failing. The pressure was immense, the disagreements sharp, and the outcome far from certain. In the middle of that crucible, George Washington attended Easter services at Christ Church on Second Street in Philadelphia, one of the most historic Anglican congregations in America. He was not performing piety for the crowd. Washington was known for genuine, private religious observance, often arriving early, sitting quietly, and staying after services. Christ Church was where he worshipped when in Philadelphia, and Easter drew him there with particular gravity. Christ Church itself carried weight. It was the spiritual home of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. Benjamin Franklin had a pew there. So did John Penn and Robert Morris. When Washington knelt in that building during Holy Week, he was surrounded not only by the faithful but by the architects of a new nation, men who were themselves wrestling with questions of sacrifice, providence, and what comes after collapse. The symbolism was not lost on Washington. A nation attempting to resurrect itself from the failures of the Articles of Confederation was meeting in the same city, during the same season, in which the Christian world commemorated a resurrection from death. Washington was a man attentive to providence, and he read these convergences seriously. Washington's private correspondence is where his theology becomes most visible. Unlike Jefferson, who was a skeptic, or Franklin, who was a deist of convenience, Washington wrote with the vocabulary of a man who believed that divine providence was actively involved in human affairs and that the American experiment was one of its primary projects. In letters to close friends and fellow officers, Washington returned repeatedly to themes of death, endurance, and renewal. He did not always invoke Easter by name, but the resurrection framework runs unmistakably through his language. He spoke of the American cause as something that could not ultimately be extinguished, that suffering was preparation for a greater emergence, and that providence would not permit the light of liberty to be permanently snuffed out. To the Marquis de Lafayette, his most trusted foreign ally and something of a surrogate son, Washington wrote with the confidence of a man who had walked through enough catastrophe to believe that survival itself was providential. The winters at Valley Forge, the defeats at Brandywine and Germantown, the near-collapse of the Continental Army, Washington processed all of it through a lens that insisted the low point was not the conclusion. That is an Easter sensibility. It is the conviction that Friday's darkness does not define Sunday's outcome. Washington was a tactician of the physical battlefield, but he was also attentive to the spiritual and psychological dimensions of leadership. He understood that men who believed their cause was righteous and providentially protected would fight differently than men who believed they were simply gambling on odds. His General Orders frequently referenced God, providence, and divine favor. Washington genuinely believed that the morale and spiritual posture of his army affected its performance. He ordered chaplains into the field, required observance of the Sabbath in camp when possible, and issued stern orders against profanity and conduct unbecoming of men who claimed to fight for a righteous cause. Easter, in that context, was a reminder. The message of resurrection told his men and told Washington himself that the worst had already been survived by someone greater, and that endurance in the darkness was the prerequisite for emergence into the light. He was not fighting a merely political revolution. In his own understanding, he was participating in a providential drama with stakes that transcended any single battle or any single life. There is a through-line in American history that runs from the Exodus typology the Founders invoked at the nation's birth, straight through to the resurrection theology that shaped how men like Washington endured the Revolution's darkest seasons. These were not coincidental framings. They were deliberate, deeply held convictions about how God moves in history and what it means for a people to be delivered from bondage into liberty. Easter 1789 fell on April 12th, just eighteen days before Washington's inauguration as the first President of the United States on April 30th. Clergy across the country drew the parallel explicitly. The season of resurrection and the birth of constitutional government arrived in the same breath. Washington was inaugurated in a nation still vibrating from Easter sermons about new beginnings, second chances, and the power of divine providence to raise what the world had counted dead. He understood what that moment meant. He carried into the presidency the same spiritual seriousness he had carried through the war, the belief that America was not an accident of history, but an act of providence. That liberty was not a political convenience but a sacred inheritance. That the cost of preserving it was worth bearing because something greater than any individual life or generation was at stake. In an era when faith and civic life are increasingly treated as separate compartments, Washington's Easter offers a different model. He did not check his theology at the door of the war room or the convention hall. He carried it with him, let it shape his endurance, and allowed it to give meaning to suffering that might otherwise have been unbearable. He knelt at Christ Church not because it was expected of a commander-in-chief, but because he believed it was true. He wrote about resurrection themes not to inspire his troops rhetorically, but because he personally believed that providence did not abandon its purposes midway through the story. America was born in a season of sacrifice and emerged into a season of new life. That is not an accident of the calendar. It is, if Washington's own framework is taken seriously, a signature of the God he believed was writing the story. This Easter, that story is worth remembering. "The hand of Providence has been so conspicuous in all this, that he must be worse than an infidel that lacks faith, and more than wicked, that has not gratitude enough to acknowledge his obligations." — George Washington, 1778 May your Easter be filled with the same conviction that carried a general through impossible winters and delivered a nation into its destiny.



Trump preaches the Good News!

J6: POLICE OFFICERS "PERJURED" THEMSELVES, NOT THE OATH KEEPERS "There is many on the list that have perjured themselves and the court lets them get away." @CondemnedUSA dives in to the truth behind the oath keepers and "devastating testimony."



