Watt uses the name "gr8mom" to send messages to the families of shooting victims.
She told the author that she was proud of her actions.
The book " Sandy Hook: An American Tragedy and the Battle for Truth" features Watt's full interview with the author.
"Prove to the world you've lost your son," Kelley Watt wrote to the father of Noah, who was killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.
Watt considers false flag operations to push gun control legislation through the US government despite the fact that no significant legislation has been passed in response to mass shooting incidents.
Her research involves sending harassing messages to surviving family members of people who have died in mass shootings, including the attack at Sandy Hook Elementary school.
She said that she had a strong sense that it wasn't happening. "Too many of those parents make me feel bad."
Watt told the author of "Sandy Hook: An American Tragedy and the Battle for Truth" that she was proud of what she had done and continued to do.
She said she spent hours trying to prove her claims. Some of her theories include that the photos of the shooter's bedroom were too barren to have a teenager living in it, and that the parents who lost a child didn't cry enough.
Watt's theories are in line with the ones pushed by Alex Jones, who was found liable in at least four defamation cases for spreading lies that the Sandy Hook shooting was a lie.
Watt spent a lot of time trying to prove that no company was hired to clean the school crime scene. After being presented with the name of the business and police report, he was silent before casting further doubts on the evidence.
Watt did not see the document. Where are the receipt?
Conspiracy theorists are often driven by their feelings of superiority and specialness in order to move the goalposts of their arguments.
Madison said she doesn't have much chance of changing her mother's mind. The dissolution of Watt's marriage was a result of the conspiracy-mongering. Her daughter says the stakes of acknowledging that she is wrong are too high.
There's a lot of narcissism in the idea that 'everyone's got it wrong and we're in this group of people that know'. Madison said that her mother's more extreme theories would explode her own personality.
Her entire identity has been built on this for a long time. She's put a lot of money into it.
You can read the original article.