Bin Laden has remained a staunch Trump supporter despite the results of the November election, the failure of Trump’s longshot litigation to tarnish Biden’s victory, and the storming of the U.S. Capitol by a Trump-supporting mob on January 6.

She has maintained a steady stream of far-right propaganda and QAnon-linked conspiracy theory talking points on Telegram, the encrypted message app on which an increasing number of far-right figures rely after being de-platformed by social media organizations like Twitter and Facebook.

This week, bin Laden has been promising her 2,400 Telegram followers that the QAnon much-vaunted day of reckoning—when Trump will declare martial law and begin arrests and executions of members of the devil-worshipping pedophile cabals that secretly run the country—is still on its way, despite the former president’s removal from office.

“Never underestimate Donald J. Trump,” bin Laden wrote. “Remember. We are all watching a movie. So much noise. We won on November 8, 2016. Whatever they are trying to pull that is unconstitutional will be reversed.”

Bin Laden also shared a post by disgraced former general Michael Flynn, who was pardoned by Trump after being convicted of lying to the FBI. He has since become a prominent figure on the QAnon scene, even urging Trump to declare martial law to retain power after his election defeat.

“We must never stop researching, sharing, pushing info,” bin Laden wrote in response to Flynn’s appeal to “digital warriors” keeping Trumpism alive online. “Even if we have off days, are tired, need breaks etc., we come back to it,” bin Laden said. “We don’t give in however difficult they make it. Otherwise, they win.”

“Many of us are so shadow banned it’s so frustrating—not because of the likes or followers count—but because we should be able to effectively reach people,” Bin Laden wrote, in response to the removal of far right-wing figures from mainstream social media sites.

“They really are TYRANTS. I cannot wait for their day of reckoning,” she added. “It will come.” She ended her message with the QAnon slogan “WWG1WGA,” which stands for “Where We Go One We Go All.”

The unexpected combination of the bin Laden name and Noor’s passionate support for Trump’s nationalist agenda brought her to attention last year. She has since become more extreme, adopting QAnon and election conspiracy theories.

Noor bin Laden is the daughter of Yeslam bin Ladin, Osama’s half-brother. Her mother Carmen Dufour is a Swiss author, who divorced her husband in 1988 and moved to Switzerland. There she raised Noor and her two other daughters.

Noor’s family had no known links with Osama, who was killed by U.S. special forces in Pakistan in 2011. Noor Bin Laden is Swiss but has told The New York Post she is “an American at heart” and that she considers the U.S. her “second home.” She has previously said her family name “is antithetical to the values I hold.”