MyPillow Guy Mike Lindell Says He "Probably" Inspired Trump's August Restoration Notion

Lindell's theory that Trump will be returned to office centers on the pillow magnate's claims that, together with a team of lawyers and well-intentioned "white hat" hackers, he has amassed incontrovertible proof of election fraud to present to the Supreme Court. Once that evidence is unveiled, in Lindell's telling, the stunned justices will rule 9-0 to return Trump to the presidency.

But Lindell may need to update his deadline. He originally came to the August date after deciding that the Supreme Court would overturn the election in either April or May, with the summer then devoted to hatching a government-wide consensus that Trump should retake the presidency in August.

  • Wojackhorseman2 [he/him]
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    4 years ago

    No not necessarily. Floored was def too strong a word lol, but I really thought rapture beliefs and other Christian stuff like that were more widespread (at least another 10% on those scores) given how much it’s talked about being “part of being American” and how big mega churches are.

    • MarxNAngels [none/use name]
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      4 years ago

      frankly i'm pretty skeptical about those numbers being so high -- like, you'd see way different approaches to savings or investment if people really, truly thought the rapture was nigh. that isn't to say people don't want to signal to pollsters about a deep christian conviction, or that there isn't a very real cultural divide (though that could already be inferred), but i'm not buying 40pct.

      here's another pew poll, suggesting the rapture-heads are about half as many: https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2009/04/21/the-second-coming-of-jesus/; you're gonna keep getting different, incoherent responses, all due to the prompt framing.

      • Wojackhorseman2 [he/him]
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        4 years ago

        Idk 🤷‍♂️. Thing about religious stuff is people usually believe in it when it’s under attack or whatever but they don’t generally want to put in the work of living it daily or have it effect stuff that they want to do. They’re happy to judge others for not complying tho. At least that’s my anecdotal observation from growing up around it.

        So I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of people believed it but just assumed it’d take care of itself. Like you’re not meant to change your behavior or anything. if gods gonna take you, you’re good.

        We know climate change is happening and we can barely get people to react to that

        But yeah usually these kinds of polls fluctuate wildly according ti methodology and stuff

        • MarxNAngels [none/use name]
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          4 years ago

          sure ya that all makes sense. don't have much else to add, but thanks for your post, and funny user name.

      • TillieNeuen [she/her]
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        4 years ago

        The 23% who said yes to "Can peoples and nations affect when Christ returns?" are the ones you need to watch.