Love is in the air now that conspiracy theorists have created their own dating sites.

They say there’s something for everyone, but what about the conspiracy theorists in aluminum hats?If you like QAnon or think the Earth is flat or if you think Ted Cruz’s father is the zodiac killer, does that make it harder to date?If so, then you’re in luck: According to Vice, conspiracy theory dating sites began to look at a moment, as Kellyanne Conway would say, of “alternative facts. “

Unfortunately, so far, dating sites of this type are in Europe. One, from Germany, is called schwurbeltreff. de, whose call is a nod to a German term derogatory to conspiracy theorists who talk about gibberish. Launched last month, it already has 1,5,000 users. And how are you doing at schwubeltreff?

Along with popular dating profile biographical questions about size, hobbies, and favorite movies, new users of the site are asked to list conspiracy theories they consider genuine, such as coronavirus, QAnon, the New World Order, or prepper ideology, and reveal how how many coronavirus vaccines have been taken. New users are also asked to describe where they get their data about existing events and how they think the world will be replaced in the next 20 years.

The site’s author is Michael Bründel, a prominent German conspiracy theorist who, of course, is a major player in the country’s anti-blockade scene. Here are some other things you should know about it:

Introducing himself as “Captain Future,” dressed in a yellow cap and branded mask, Bründel has been a member of the so-called “Freedom Marches” since the beginning of the pandemic.

The site’s homepage shows Bründel dressed in an aluminum foil hat connected to a network of electric sparks to a woman dressed in a foil hat, whose computer is decorated with stickers depicting a UFO, a call to “Free Julian Assange” and a photo of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center.

The pandemic plays a key role in the scene of conspiracy theorists, whether at schwubeltreff and some other similar Swiss service, which in particular serves anti-vaxxers. Another German site introduced in 2015, and naturally they took a hard look at the pandemic; An Instagram post on the platform’s page reportedly read: “So far, Jews will not be served here. “Now: “The unvaccinated are not wanted. “

For now, however, all American conspiracy theorists will have to make do with the conservative dating app The Right Stuff, which hasn’t attracted a group of progressive Yukster pranksters who make fake accounts.

(Vice-Performance)

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