Hey, Wendy Bell's got a NEW crazie for her Über-credulous, adoring public!
And Salon wrote about teh crazie a few days ago:
A new conspiracy is spreading in right-wing circles online, claiming that a spate of suicides within the police corps who responded to the Jan. 6 insurrection appear "suspicious," and may be part of a murky liberal plot with goals that remain unclear.
And then:
Former Trump lawyer and current Newsmax contributor Jenna Ellis became the most prominent booster of the conspiracy Wednesday, tweeting out to her nearly 900,000 followers: "Anyone else find these suicides really suspicious?"
There's that word: suspicious. Note that there's absolutely no evidence for anything suspicious. Just the word.
On Tuesday, Wendy Bell was already settled into teh crazie. This happened right after she mocked Harry Dunn, an African-American police officer, for being traumatized by a mini-Trump mob hurling racial epithets at him.
Here's Wendy Bell white lady, doubting and mocking the experience of an African-American police offer:
Anyway, 54 minutes she said about the four suicides:
Why would four men all kill themselves? Because somebody called them "the N-word" malledgedly?
Or because they know something that is much bigger than January 6.
And are these four the last ones?
Isn't it all very suspicious?
No facts. Just a hint of a conspiracy.
And Wendy? Officer Dunn has not committed suicide (obviously) and the four who have have not left any stories of being racially taunted at the rally.
Can't you even get those facts right in your otherwise fact-free conspiracy theory?
Remember when you were an award winning journalist?
You're not anymore.