There was talk of demons, witches, a Deep State target list, white replacement theory, unleashing the gates of hell and more, reports Zach D. Roberts.
The annual festival celebrating Trump, guns and a violent hateful version of Christianity happened once again in the forests of Greeley, Pennsylvania. The festival which has your standard funnel cakes, bbq, and raffles is sponsored by the Rod of Iron Ministries and Kahr Arms. Both are run by a separate son of the cult leader Reverend Sun Myung Moon – Pastor Sean Moon is the leader of the church and Justin Moon runs the guns.
Kahr Arms makes the Tommy Gun and the infamous Desert Eagle. The cash that they make from that goes to funding right wing radio, like hate-monger and Nazi-adjacent Sebastian Gorka.
The night before the festival officially opened, retired lieutenant general Michael Flynn, Trump’s disgraced former National Security Director, spoke after a viewing of his documentary about his struggles keeping a job in Washington DC. The film, FLYNN, claims to tell the truth about his many controversies. Oddly, the film, which is over two hours long, doesn’t go into January 6th and his potential involvement in the insurrection. It is very well produced and has the same vibe as 2000 Mules, it just plows through laying seeds of disinformation for its audience.
I watched 2000 Mules so you don't have to.
— John Scott-Railton (@jsrailton) November 4, 2022
As I told @cnn's @donie, the 'research' backing the claims is a joke.
And that's not even counting the devastatingly obvious errors…
Let me give you some examples 1/ pic.twitter.com/sOyyRvkSGw
After the film, the pardoned Flynn took the stage with his son Michael Flynn Jr. who spoke about Elon
Homan, who is usually quite aggressive in his speeches, was on a different level, claiming that the Democrats were in fact doing the great white replacement theory. Yes, the same conspiracy that several mass shooters, including the Buffalo mass shooter in 2022, were obsessed with. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center“the “great replacement” theory is inherently white supremacist. It depends on stoking fears that a non-white population, which the theory’s proponents characterize as “inferior,” will displace a white majority. It is also antisemitic.”
The show continued with conspiracy theorists like Mel K (pre-recorded) and Craig “Sawman” Sawyer who should have been speaking in front of a murder board with pins and yarn. The pastor claimed that the part of Pennsylvania we were in was a hotbed for Nazis and historically had witches covens.
“By the way, we’re in Pennsylvania, one of the most demonic states where there’s the most occult and witches covens of satanic cult groups, of any state in the continental United States, Ohio, Pennsylvania particularly heavy. So I guarantee someone here probably more than one or in a satanic cult group or witches.”