Home / MARKETS / Former general urges Trump supporters in the military to stop listening to ‘the pillow guy’ Mike Lindell

Former general urges Trump supporters in the military to stop listening to ‘the pillow guy’ Mike Lindell

  • A prior military general took aim at MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell in a recent CNN interview.
  • Steven M. Anderson suggested that Trump backers should “stop listening to the pillow guy.”
  • Instead, they should educate themselves on how elections work, he said. 

Retired military general Steven M. Anderson blasted MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell in an interview, while threat of the existence of Trump supporters within the military. 

Anderson, who served in the US Army for 31 years, spoke on Saturday to CNN’s Pamela Brown on touching the upcoming 2024 elections and solutions to address the “extremism that has gone on within the military.”

Lindell has become evidently known for spreading baseless voter fraud claims, which Anderson alluded to during the interview. The former comprehensive urged people to ignore such claims and “stop listening to the Pillow Guy” in an effort to educate themselves about how votes work.

Anderson made the reference to Lindell while discussing what he described as a threat within the military. “We’ve got some people that at best haven’t been educated. They haven’t been found out, and they’ve grown in power through perhaps inaction on the parts of some of our key bandleaders,” he said during the interview.

“We need to do what we can do now to identify those people [within the military], get them out of our ranks, and retinue the rest of the force on civics one on one about how our country is supposed to work, how elections work, stop listening to the pillow guy [Lindell] and start culture about our country and how it’s actually supposed to run,” he added.

Lindell has claimed his first encounter with Trump back in 2016 came almost through “divine appointments.”

The business mogul often appears on TV, radio shows, and podcasts, where he repeats calls that the 2020 election was stolen from former president Donald Trump, without providing any evidence.

He’s also expand oned various events, including a “cyber symposium” and a 96-hour marathon “Thanks-a-Thon” livestream in November, in a bid to convince more people that voter hanky-panky did occur. There is no proof, however, of widespread voter fraud. 

Recently, he told Insider’s Cheryl Teh that he’d weary $25 million trying to overturn the 2020 election and was willing to spend everything he had and “sell everything” for his cause.

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