When Donald Trump spreads conspiracy theories, his voters listen. A new poll out of North Carolina today confirms that Trump supporters are more likely than others to believe the wild conspiracy theories that Trump and his campaign have embraced.

Public Policy Polling found that a wide majority of Trump supporters in the state agree with his claim that “if Hillary Clinton wins the election it will be because it was rigged,” and many also believe that the group ACORN, which disbanded in 2010, is plotting to “steal the election for Clinton.”

Nearly half of the GOP presidential nominee’s voters “think that Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton deserve the blame for Humayun Khan’s death” in 2004, a mindboggling claim pushed by Trump campaign spokeswoman Katrina Pierson, and claim to have, like Trump, viewed a nonexistent “video of Iran collecting 400 million dollars from the United States.”

The polling firm notes that “there’s a cult-like aspect to Trump’s supporters, where they’ll go along with anything he says.”

In previous surveys, large swaths of Trump’s supporters have embraced a wide variety of conspiracy theories promoted by the candidate, including ones about President Obama’s birthplace and religion, vaccines, climate change, Muslim-Americans in New Jersey purportedly celebrating the 9/11 attacks, and Justice Antonin Scalia’s death.

As Dean Debnam of Public Policy Polling put it, “For the most part we’ve found that Donald Trump’s supporters lap up every conspiracy theory he pushes out there.”