Friday, November 22, 2024

conspiracy resource

Conspiracy News & Views from all angles, up-to-the-minute and uncensored

QAnon

A Moms for Liberty chapter leader campaigned for school board on a QAnon-affiliated podcast

A Moms for Liberty chapter leader in North Carolina recently used a podcast affiliated with the dangerous QAnon conspiracy theory to promote the right-wing ”parental rights” group and her school board campaign, while also suggesting that she has been a viewer of the show.

On June 7, Natosha Tew, who founded and now serves as the legislation chair of Moms for Liberty’s New Hanover County, North Carolina, chapter, appeared on the podcast RedPill78. Host Zak Paine is a supporter of the QAnon conspiracy theory and a host on a QAnon-affiliated Rumble channel. Paine has also claimed that he was outside the Capitol building on January 6.

The Southern Poverty Law Center previously reported that Tew has promoted antigovernment extremism on social media, such as the Three Percenter militia movement. Additionally, according to the Wilmington Star-News, Tew’s behavior at a 2022 New Hanover County school board meeting was so disruptive that a law enforcement officer had to escort her out of the building. 

Tew appeared to wear a campaign pin during her appearance on RedPill78, while a caption across the bottom of the screen promoted her as a “candidate for New Hanover School Board” and showed the link for her campaign site. At the onset of the interview, Tew suggested to Paine that she had watched the show during the pandemic. After discussing her views and background, Tew urged viewers to “visit my website” and to “go and look up your local Moms for Liberty chapter,” claiming, “This movement can’t happen … without everyday people like me and like Zak and like you.” She also asked viewers to donate to her campaign if they “have extra cash and you want to throw it my way.” Additionally, Tew gave out her Moms for Liberty chapter’s email to viewers.

***
This article has been archived by Conspiracy Resource for your research. The original version from Media Matters for America can be found here.