Derek Johnson (conspiracy theorist)
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Derek Johnson | |
---|---|
Born | Alabama, United States |
Occupation(s) | Conspiracy theorist, musician, author |
Known for | Promoting conspiracy theories about U.S. government and military |
Derek Johnson is an American conspiracy theorist, musician, and author known for promoting various unfounded claims about U.S. government operations, election fraud, and military control. He gained prominence in far-right circles following the 2020 United States presidential election.[1][2][3]
Background
[edit]Johnson is described as an Alabama-based U.S. Army veteran, singer-songwriter, and Billboard-charting country music artist.[4] He operates a website called "The Blueprint" at thedocuments.info, which he claims is "an online tool to help the public understand Military Laws and Orders".[4]
As of November 2023, Johnson had 143,000 followers on X (Twitter).[4]
Conspiracy theories and claims
[edit]Election fraud and "Two Presidents" theory
[edit]Johnson is a prominent promoter of the false claim that Donald Trump is still the President of the United States and Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces.[1][4] He has described Trump as a "military plant" and asserts that "some set of military laws and orders means that Trump is actually still commander in chief".[4]
Biden replacement theory
[edit]Johnson has promoted the baseless claim that President Joe Biden has been "executed and replaced".[4] He has shared side-by-side comparisons of photos of Joe Biden on social media, insinuating that Biden had been replaced.[4]
COVID-19 conspiracy theories
[edit]In a document entitled "Hindsight is 2020", Johnson claimed that the COVID-19 pandemic was a "nuclear option" orchestrated by political forces. He wrote, "The 'Nuclear Option' was Covid-19. What you have to understand is … it's just a word attached to flu statistics. The military actually took over in November 2016. That's when a lot of the arrests were made. Everything you've seen since then are actors in the best technology known to man."[4]
Johnson also claimed that the military receives a different set of COVID-19 vaccines than the general public.[4]
Other claims
[edit]Johnson has asserted that the January 6 insurrection was staged by the FBI.[4]
Public appearances and controversy
[edit]In November 2023, Johnson was invited to participate in an "author's week" event at the Monroe Public Library in Alabama. The invitation sparked controversy, with a former activities coordinator at the library expressing concern that giving Johnson a platform to share his views and sell merchandise crossed the line of free speech and could potentially harm the community through misinformation.[4]
Criticism and debunking
[edit]Johnson's claims have been widely criticized and debunked by fact-checkers, legal experts, and military officials.[1][2][3] His misinterpretation of legal documents, government operations, and military protocols has been noted by constitutional scholars and fact-checking organizations.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Alia, Klodiana (31 May 2023). "Fact Check: Title 10 And Executive Order 13912 Do NOT Mean Trump Is Still Commander-In-Chief". Lead Stories.
- ^ a b Alia, Klodiana (24 March 2023). "Fact Check: Trump Did NOT Receive 'Full-Grade Military, Constitutionally Regulated Inauguration Ceremony' On January 20, 2021". Lead Stories.
- ^ a b Dapcevich, Madison (2 September 2022). "Fact Check: Flight Radar App Does NOT Show Trump Is Still In Power And A Covert Military Operation Is Underway". Lead Stories.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Holmes, Jacob (9 November 2023). "Monroe library invites conspiracy theory author to authors week". Alabama Political Reporter.