Marjorie Taylor Greene brings the John Birch Society and its conspiracy nonsense back to the foreground, reminding us how the Koch brothers kept the GOP, now GQP always strange.
Before she was elected to the House of Representatives as a member from Georgia, Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Trumpy, QAnon-friendly, conspiracy-toting, gun-lovin’, mass-shooting-denying, assassination-promoting lightning-rod Republican, was a top official of the Family America Project, a right-wing outfit. In that capacity, she served as one of a handful of moderators of the group’s Facebook page, which has provided a forum for death threats against Democrats, bigoted attacks on the Obamas and others, and assorted conspiracy theories. The group has also championed the John Birch Society, a far-right conspiracist outfit that claimed throughout the Cold War that globalist and communist treason had penetrated the highest levels of US government.
www.motherjones.com/...
in other news:
The Q document, a hypothetical common source for the gospels of Matthew and Luke, (the Q Gospel, the Sayings Gospel Q, the Secret of Q, the Synoptic Sayings Source, the Q Manuscript, and (in the 19th century) )
en.wikipedia.org/...
Like his presidency, all strange things must come to an end, and the Trump helipad was never meant to be a permanent fixture at Mar-a-Lago, much like Trump himself. Antifa has no air assault troops.
A helicopter pad that was built at Mar-a-Lago, former President Trump's club in Florida, for use during his presidency will soon be demolished.
A permit was pulled Tuesday to tear down the helipad, according to the Palm Beach Daily News.
It is unclear how long it will take for the helipad to be removed, but Pyramid Builders of Palm Beach will be removing the helipad for $15,000.
The removal has nothing to do with recent events and controversy surrounding Trump’s presidency. Representatives for the club wanted a permit to remove the helipad, and there were never any plans to keep the helipad once Trump was no longer president, Town Manager Kirk Blouin said, according to the Palm Beach Daily News.
“It seems to have been more controversial in media reports than it is in actual practice,” Blouin said. “They never made a request to keep it.”
thehill.com/...