If there is a unifying theme for the conference in Nashville, it is the idea of Devolution, the standard reference is the Devolution series on substack written by a guy named John from North Dakota who goes under the name Patel Patriot. The Patel part is in honor Kash Patel, who is considered a key figure in the theories of most Devolutionist theorists. John is one of the headliners at Threadfest 2022. The other headliner is Patrick, who created the Reading Epic Threads Youtube channel in 2017, and which I started following soon after that, and even posted about here on my blog.
One of the key aspects of Devolution theory is that there may exist, and likely does exist, depending on whom you ask, a form of Government in Exile in the United States that was established by Trump through executive orders in the last weeks of his Presidency, and which is in operation at the moment. It doesn't mean that Trump is still President. Everyone agrees his isn't because his legal term expired at noon on January 20, 2017. It means instead that Trump, having declared that an Act of War had occurred against the United States that compromised certain critical functions of the government and especially our elections system, legally invoked procedures dating in part back to the Eisenhower Administration that allowed for the government to be "devolved" in its authority outside the capital (due to nuclear attack) but especially to certain key agencies and designated officials who were to keep the government going until it could be reconstituted.
The theory depends on Trump having caught the election stealers red handed on Election night of 2018, but then used that information without busting them to set them up for the mother of all sting operations during the 2020 Election. The election traffic of the theft was observed in real time through video surveillance and cyber surveillance by the U.S. military, and was an indisputable Act of War against the United States, supported by internal traitors, which including members of the media who were both explicitly complicit and also many dupes.
The theory also depends on a vision of who Donald Trump is that differs drastically from the one in mainstream media, and also in the mind of much of the "normie" public, who sees a persona called "The Donald", which is a theatrical role that Trump created for himself in the 1970s, as a way to manipulate the media to give him unlimited attention, all the while being able to use it as a cover to penetrate the elite without contaminated by their vices. Trump's superpower is in part his ability to let people slander him in his character and simply go forward without a bruise to his ego. His entire adult life has a reality theater project. In secret he is a straight arrow with an iron will of masculinity to resist the vices that were constantly offered him. He could penetrate the realms of power because his persona fooled the public and the elite into believing he was already a basket case.
What I just described is probably the attitude of most people who will be at Threadfest in Nashville. We are aware that we are currently in the minority, even among Normie Republicans. Most of us are in no hurry to convince the masses. We believe that God willing, Trump will do that, in time. This will be the hardest lump to swallow of all, for many normies, that they were so wrong about who Trump is. We understand it is hard. The Narrative War is brutal. Once people lock into a belief about the heroes and villains of a story, then like it to remain consistent. Heroes can be overthrown, but villains are always villains to the end, redeemed perhaps only in their dying breath in which they regret their entire lives, but damned nevertheless. Arguably it is the nature of the human psyche that demands this consistency, for anthropological and evolutionary reasons.
By the way, did you know the tv show Hee Haw was filmed in downtown Nashville, and then moved to Opryland, where we are going to be meeting for our conference? Just something I learned. If you're going to do Nashville, you gotta learn to do it right.
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