There was no "speedy mobilization" of the ADOS movement. Yvette Carnell had been active on Twitter and YouTube since 2011 or so, I think, and she was critical of the inaction of the Obama Administration, and Antonio Moore became active in 2017, discussing various issues about the effect of Trump's economic policies and wealth calcification, lineage, the racial wealth gap and how reparations was the only viable solution, and people began regularly discussing ADOS. It was Kamala Harris' decision to launch her candidacy on MLK Day that became a lightning rod for ADOS followers, since it was a direct affirmation of the lineage discussion we'd been having, and how non-ADOS people will cloak themselves in ADOS history and culture and while pursuing an agenda that benefitted others and/or policies that were decidedly anti-ADOS. So when Kamala Harris was being criticized, mainstream black politicos were saying that it was driven by "Russian bots" rather than addressing the real socioeconomic issues that ADOS was discussing (you'll see the same dumb shit in this thread actually). That inflamed us even more and it's why ADOS has become more active and aggressive.