Trump’s rally in Ohio on Saturday night broke some new weird ground
, was nearly identical to a track named “Wwg1wga” — an abbreviation of the QAnon slogan “Where we go one, we go all.” The same song — which Trump aides told thewas called “Mirrors” — was also used in a recent Trump video his team produced and was played at the end of Trump’s recent rally in Pennsylvania, too., a Trump spokesman reiterated the claim that the track was just “a royalty-free song from a popular audio library platform.
Meanwhile, the finger-pointing gesture which spontaneously broke out among the crowd on Saturday night seems to have professional Trump-rally watchers and extremism analysts stumped, at least for now. Thereported that “scores of people in the crowd raised fingers in the air in an apparent reference to the ‘1’ in what they thought was the song’s title,” and that “It was the first time in the memory of some Trump aides that such a display had occurred at one of his rallies.
No one else had seen it before either, so there was a lot of head scratching afterward. It could have been a QAnon thing, or some kind of America First thing, or another demonstration of the
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