


The outrage is bizarre, given Ivanka isn’t even the first member of her family to receive or promote the vaccine. This content is not available due to your privacy preferences. Related: Trump pushes Americans to get COVID-19 vaccine
ART OF RALLY IF EVERYTHING SEEMS UNDER CONTROL CODE
The same person previously alleged that the vaccine was somehow related to or code for “the Great Awakening,” during which QAnon followers believe former President Donald Trump would carry out mass arrests and save America from a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles. A flu shot? Hcq ? Was she involved with Kushner? Is that really even her?” QAnon influencer GhostEzra wrote on Telegram, according to Newsweek.

Did she actually get the shot? If she did, was it a B-12 shot. “Ivanka posted she got the ‘shot,’ not the COVID-19 vaccine. In her post, Ivanka captioned a photo of herself wearing a white T-shirt while a nurse injects the vaccine into her arm, “Today, I got the shot!!! I hope that you do too! Thank you Nurse Torres!!!” That’s when conspiracy theorists, particularly from QAnon, entered the chat. Naturally, her supporters had thoughts - and conspiracy theories - on this. In any case, Ivanka broke her silence on Wednesday with some photos of herself getting a COVID-19 vaccine. Or, maybe, she’s just standing in solidarity with her dad, who’s still banned from all social media. Maybe she’s about to attempt a rebrand, or maybe she’s trying to lay low after calling the January 6 insurrectionists “American patriots” on Twitter. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)įor months, Ivanka Trump has stayed pretty quiet online. Trump, a day after the release of a bombshell recording in which he pressures Georgia officials to overturn his November 3 election loss in the southern state, is to hold a rally in the northwest city of Dalton in support of Republican incumbent senators Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue. – President Donald Trump, still seeking ways to reverse his election defeat, and President-elect Joe Biden converge on Georgia on Monday for dueling rallies on the eve of runoff votes that will decide control of the US Senate. Senior advisor to the President Ivanka Trump listens during a rally in support of Republican incumbent senators Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue ahead of Senate runoff in Dalton, Georgia on January 4, 2021.
