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We salute him one and all song
We salute him one and all song













we salute him one and all song

Trump's use of the Van De Crommert song that many mistook for "Wwg1wga" is the second recent example his name has been associated with QAnon. Adherents of the conspiracy have since adopted other fraudulent claims, such as the widely disproven theory that the 2020 presidential election was rigged to favor President Joe Biden. QAnon is a right-wing conspiracy theory that began with such debunked beliefs as the existence of a top-secret child sex trafficking network run by senior members of the Democratic Party. Trump 'Deliberately Stoking' Violence, Courting QAnon, Professor Says.Queen Elizabeth II Conspiracy Theory Claims She Secretly Knighted Trump.

we salute him one and all song

'QAnon Whack Job' GOP Gubernatorial Candidate Down Big in Maryland: Poll.(The album's track listing contains several QAnon references.) "Mirrors," meanwhile, is listed on SoundCloud as having come out in June 2019. The album it is contained on, Silver Cloud 5, was released in 2020. "Wwg1wga" is also present on several large streaming services and credited to Feelgood. When De Crommert's song is played to the music-identifying service Shazam, the result given back is "Wwg1wga," which is credited to an artist who goes by Richard Feelgood. That "Mirrors" was mistaken for "Wwg1wga" is understandable. "I do not support Donald Trump, and I do not support or espouse the beliefs of QAnon," Van De Crommert said. He also emphasized he wasn't happy about his music being associated with QAnon. However, Van De Crommert wrote to Newsweek that he did not authorize the use of "Mirrors" for Trump. They did so because the song they heard sounded nearly identical to QAnon's unofficial theme song, "Wwg1wga," which stands for the QAnon slogan, "Where we go one, we go all." (Although the index finger salute is used by QAnon, some people have claimed its use is also a reference to the "America First" slogan.)Īides for Trump have denied to multiple media outlets that the song played last weekend was "Wwg1wga." Instead, they identified the tune that the former president used at the rally as a royalty-free track called "Mirrors," written by composer Will Van De Crommert. Many in the crowd raised a one-finger salute as a reference to the QAnon conspiracy theory. When Trump took to the stage, people in attendance felt they recognized his entrance music. Afterward, Trump received much attention for what many people have claimed was a QAnon element to his appearance. Former President Donald Trump on Saturday appeared at an Ohio rally for J.D.















We salute him one and all song