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QAnon Is More Important Than You Think - The Atlantic
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Atlantic
the Prophecies of Q
American conspiracy theories are enteringardanwoiaancw:phascibha
Story by Adrienne
ILLUSTRATIONS BY
JUNE 2020 ISSUE
I
SHADOWLAND
LaFrance
ARSH RAZIUDDIN
Like The Atlantic? Subscribe to The Atlantic Daily our free weekday email newsletter.
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Sign
This article is part of "Shadowland," a project about conspiracy
thinking in America.
If you were an adherent, no one would be able to tell. You would look like any
other American. You could be a mother, picking leftovers offyour toddler's plate.
You could be the young man in headphones across the street. You could be a
bookkeeper, a dentist, a grandmother king cupcakes in her kitchen. You may well
have an affiliation with an evangelical church. But you are hard to identify just
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from the way you look—which is good, because someday soon dark forces may try
to track you down. You understand this sounds crazy, but you don't care. You
know that a small group of manipulators, operating in the shadows, pull the
planet's strings. You know that they are powerful enough to abuse children
without fear of retribution. You know that the mainstream media are their
handmaidens, in partnership with Hillary Clinton and the secretive denizens of
the deep state. You know that only Donald Trump stands between you and a
damned and ravaged world. You see plague and pestilence sweeping the planet,
and understand that they are part of the plan. You know that a clash between
good and evil cannot be avoided, and you yearn for the Great Awakening that is
coming. And so you must be on guard at all times. You must shield your ears from
the scorn of the ignorant. You must find those who are like you. And you must be
prepared to fight.
You know all this because you believe in Q.
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THE ORIGINS OF QAnon are recent, but even so, separating myth from reality
can be hard. One place to begin is with Edgar Maddison Welch, a deeply
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religious father of two, who until Sunday, December 4, 2016, had lived an
unremarkable life in the small town of Salisbury, North Carolina. That
morning, Welch grabbed his cellphone, a box of shotgun shells, and three
loaded guns—a 9-mm AR-15 rifle, a six-shot .38-caliber Colt revolver, and a
shotgun—and hopped into his Toyota Prius. He drove 360 miles to a well-to-
do neighborhood in Northwest Washington, D.C.; parked his car; put the
revolver in a holster at his hip; held the AR-15 rifle across his chest; and
walked through the front door of a pizzeria called Comet Ping Pong.
Comet happens to be the place where, on a Sunday afternoon two years
earlier, my then-baby daughter tried her first-ever sip of water. Kids gather
there with their parents and teammates after soccer games on Saturdays, and
local bands perform on the weekends. In the back, children challenge their
grandparents to Ping-Pong matches as they wait for their pizzas to come out
of the big clay oven in the middle of the restaurant. Comet Ping Pong is a
beloved spot in Washington.
That day, people noticed Welch right away. An AR-15 rifle makes for a
conspicuous sash in most social settings, but especially at a place like Comet.
As parents, children, and employees rushed outside, many still chewing,
Welch began to move through the restaurant, at one point attempting to use
a butter knife to pry open a locked door, before giving up and firing several
rounds from his rifle into the lock. Behind the door was a small computer-
storage closet. This was not what he was expecting.
Welch had traveled to Washington because of a conspiracy theory known,
now famously, as Pizzagate, which claimed that Hillary Clinton was running
a child sex ring out of Comet Ping Pong. The idea originated in October
2016, when WikiLeaks made public a trove of emails stolen from the account
of John Podesta, a former White House chief of staff and then the chair of
Clinton's presidential campaign; Comet was mentioned repeatedly in
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exchanges Podesta had with the restaurant's owner, James Alefantis, and
others. The emails were mainly about fundraising events, but high-profile
pro—Donald Trump figures such as Mike Cernovich and Alex Jones began
advancing the claim—which originated in trollish corners of the internet
(such as 4chan) and then spread to more accessible precincts (Twitter,
YouTube)—that the emails were proof of ritualistic child abuse. Some
conspiracy theorists asserted that it was taking place in the basement at
Comet, where there is no basement. References in the emails to "pizza" and
•
(C"pasta"
"pasta"
were interpreted as code words for "girls" and "little boys."
Shortly after Trump's election, as Pizzagate roared across the internet, Welch
started binge-watching conspiracy-theory videos on YouTube. He tried to
recruit help from at least two people to carry out a vigilante raid, texting
them about his desire to sacrifice "the lives of a few for the lives of many" and
to fight "a corrupt system that kidnaps, tortures and rapes babies and children
in our own backyard." When Welch finally found himself inside the
restaurant and understood that Comet Ping Pong was just a pizza shop, he set
down his firearms, walked out the door, and surrendered to police, who had
by then secured the perimeter. "The intel on this wasn't 100 percent," Welch
told The New York Times after his arrest.
Welch seems to have sincerely believed that children were being held at
Comet Ping Pong. His family and friends wrote letters to the judge on his
behalf, describing him as a dedicated father, a devout Christian, and a man
who went out of his way to care for others. Welch had trained as a volunteer
firefighter. He had gone on an earthquake-response mission to Haiti with the
local Baptist Men's Association. A friend from his church wrote, "He exhibits
the actions of a person who strives to learn biblical truth and apply it." Welch
himself expressed what seemed like genuine remorse, saying in a handwritten
note submitted to the judge by his lawyers: "It was never my intention to
harm or frighten innocent lives, but I realize now just how foolish and
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reckless my decision was." He was sentenced to four years in prison.
Pizzagate seemed to fade. Some of its most visible proponents, such as lack
Posobiec, a conspiracy theorist who is now a correspondent for the pro-
Trump cable-news channel One America News Network, backed away. Facing
the specter of legal action by Alefantis, Alex Jones, who runs the conspiracy-
theory website Infowars and hosts an affiliated radio show, apologized for
promoting Pizzagate.
[Read:• The lasting trauma of Alex Jones's lies]
While Welch may have expressed regret, he gave no indication that he had
stopped believing the underlying Pizzagate message: that a cabal of powerful
elites was abusing children and getting away with it. Judging from a surge of
activity on the internet, many others had found ways to move beyond the
Comet Ping Pong episode and remain focused on what they saw as the larger
truth. If you paid attention to the right voices on the right websites, you
could see in real time how the core premises of Pizzagate were being recycled,
revised, and reinterpreted. The millions of people paying attention to sites
like 4chan and Reddit could continue to learn about that secretive and
untouchable cabal; about its malign actions and intentions; about its ties to
the left wing and specifically to Democrats and especially to Clinton; about
its bloodlust and its moral degeneracy. You could also—and this would prove
essential—read about a small but swelling band of underground American
patriots fighting back.
All of this, taken together, defined a worldview that would soon have a name:
QAnon, derived from a mysterious figure, "Q," posting anonymously on
4chan. QAnon does not possess a physical location, but it has an
infrastructure, a literature, a growing body of adherents, and a great deal of
merchandising. It also displays other key qualities that Pizzagate lacked. In
the face of inconvenient facts, it has the ambiguity and adaptability to sustain
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a movement of this kind over time. For QAnon, every contradiction can be
explained away; no form of argument can prevail against it.
CONSPIRACY THEORIES ARE a constant in American history, and it is tempting
to dismiss them as inconsequential. But as the 21st century has progressed,
such a dismissal has begun to require willful blindness. I was a city-hall
reporter for a local investigative-news site called Honolulu Civil Beat in 2011
when Donald Trump was laying the groundwork for a presidential run by
publicly_questioning whether Barack Obama had been born in Hawaii, as all
facts and documents showed. Trump maintained that Obama had really been
born in Africa, and therefore wasn't a natural-born American—making him
ineligible for the highest office. I remember the debate in our Honolulu
newsroom: Should we even cover this "birther" madness? As it turned out,
the allegations, based entirely on lies, captivated enough people to give
Trump a launching pad.
Nine years later, as reports of a fearsome new virus suddenly emerged, and
with Trump now president, a series of ideas began burbling in the QAnon
community: that the coronavirus might not be real; that if it was, it had been
created by the "deep state,: the star chamber of government officials and
other elite figures who secretly run the world; that the hysteria surrounding
the pandemic was part of a plot to hurt Trump's reelection chances; and that
media elites were cheering the death toll. Some of these ideas would make
their way onto Fox News and into the president's public utterances. As of late
last year, according to The New York Times, Trump had retweeted accounts
often focused on conspiracy theories, including those of QAnon on at least
145 occasions.
[Read: The coronavirus conspiracy boom]
The power of the internet was understood early on, but the full nature of that
power—its ability to shatter any semblance of shared reality, undermining
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civil society and democratic governance in the process—was not. The internet
also enabled unknown individuals to reach masses of people, at a scale
Marshall McLuhan never dreamed of. The warping of shared reality leads a
man with an AR-15 rifle to invade a pizza shop. It brings online forums into
being where people colorfully imagine the assassination of a former secretary
of state. It offers the promise of a Great Awakening, in which the elites will be
routed and the truth will be revealed. It causes chat sites to come alive with
commentary speculating that the coronavirus pandemic may be the moment
QAnon has been waiting for. None of this could have been imagined as
recently as the turn of the century.
QAnon is emblematic of modern America's susceptibility to conspiracy
theories, and its enthusiasm for them. But it is also already much more than a
loose collection of conspiracy-minded chat-room inhabitants. It is a
movement united in mass rejection of reason, objectivity, and other
Enlightenment values. And we are likely closer to the beginning of its story
than the end. The group harnesses paranoia to fervent hope and a deep sense
of belonging. The way it breathes life into an ancient preoccupation with end-
times is also radically new. To look at QAnon is to see not just a conspiracy
theory but the birth of a new religion.
Many people were reluctant to speak with me about QAnon as I reported this
story. The movement's adherents have sometimes proved willing to take
matters into their own hands. Last year, the FBI classified QAnon as a
domestic-terror threat in an internal memo. The memo took note of a
California man arrested in 2018 with bomb-making materials. According to
the FBI, he had planned to attack the Illinois capitol to "make Americans
aware of Pizzagate' and the New World Order (NWO) who were dismantling
society." The memo also took note of a QAnon follower in Nevada who was
arrested in 2018 after blocking traffic on the Hoover Dam in an armored
truck. The man, heavily armed, was demanding the release of the inspector
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general's report on Hillary Clinton's emails. The FBI memo warned that
conspiracy theories stoke the threat of extremist violence, especially when
individuals "claiming to act as `researchers' or `investigators' single out people,
businesses, or groups which they falsely accuse of being involved in the
imagined scheme."
(Read: Instagram is full of conspiracy theories and extremism ]
QAnon adherents are feared for ferociously attacking skeptics online and for
inciting physical violence. On a now-defunct Reddit board dedicated to
clAnna, commenters took delight in describing Clinton's potential fate. One
person wrote: "I'm surprised no one has assassinated her yet honestly."
Another: "The buzzards rip her rotting corpse to shreds." A third: "I want to
see her blood pouring down the gutters!"
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Illustration: Arsh Raziuddin; animation: Vishakha Darbha
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When I spoke with Clinton recently about QAnon, she said, "I just get under
their skin unlike anybody else ... If I didn't have Secret Service protection
going through my mail, finding weird stuff, tracking the threats against me—
which are still very high—I would be worried." She has come to realize that
the invented reality in which conspiracy theorists place her is not some
bizarre parallel universe but actually one that shapes our own. Referring to
internet trolling operations, Clinton said, "I don't think until relatively
recently most people understood how well organized they were, and how
many different components of their strategy they have put in place."
II. REVELATION
ON OCTOBER 28) 2017, the anonymous user now widely referred to as "Q"
appeared for the first time on 4chan, a so-called image board that is known
for its grotesque memes, sickening photographs, and brutal teardown culture.
Q predicted the imminent arrest of Hillary Clinton and a violent uprising
nationwide, posting this:
HRC extradition already in motion effective yesterday with
several countries in case of cross border run. Passport approved
to be flagged effective 10/30 @ 12:01am. Expect massive riots
organized in defiance and others fleeing the US to occur. US M's
will conduct the operation while NG activated. Proof check:
Locate a NG member and ask if activated for duty 10/30 across
most major cities.
And then this:
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Mockingbird HRC detained, not arrested (yet). Where is Huma?
Follow Huma. This has nothing to do w/ Russia (yet). Why does
Potus surround himself w/ generals? What is military
intelligence? Why go around the 3 letter agencies? What
Supreme Court case allows for the use of MI v Congressional
assembled and approved agencies? Who has ultimate authority
over our branches of military w/o approval conditions unless 90+
in wartime conditions? What is the military code? Where is AW
being held? Why? POTUS will not go on tv to address nation.
POTUS must isolate himself to prevent negative optics. POTUS
knew removing criminal rogue elements as a first step was
essential to free and pass legislation. Who has access to
everything classified? Do you believe HRC, Soros, Obama etc
have more power than Trump? Fantasy. Whoever controls the
office of the Presidency controls this great land. They never
believed for a moment they (Democrats and Republicans) would
lose control. This is not a R v D battle. Why did Soros donate all
his money recently? Why would he place all his funds in a RC?
Mockingbird 10.30.17 God bless fellow Patriots.
Clinton was not arrested on October 30, but that didn't deter Q, who
continued posting ominous predictions and cryptic riddles—with prompts
like "Find the reflection inside the castle"—often written in the form of
tantalizing fragments and rhetorical questions. Q made it clear that he
wanted people to believe he was an intelligence officer or military official with
Q clearance, a level of access to classified information that includes nuclear-
weapons design and other highly sensitive material. (I'm using he because
many Q followers do, though Q remains anonymous—hence "QAnon.") Q's
tone is conspiratorial to the point of cliché: "I've said too much," and "Follow
the money," and "Some things must remain classified to the very end."
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The destruction of the global cabal is
imminent, Qprophesies. One of his
favorite rallying cries is "Enjoy the
shown —a reference to a coming
apocalypse.
What might have languished as a lonely screed on a single image board
instead incited fervor. Its profile was enhanced, according to Brandy
Zadroznv and Ben Collins of NBC Ntws, by several conspiracy theorists
whose promotion of Q in turn helped build up their own online profiles. By
now, nearly three years since Q's original messages appeared, there have been
thousands of what his followers call "Q drops"—messages posted to image
boards by Q. He uses a password-protected "tripcode," a series of letters and
numbers visible to other image-board users to signal the continuity of his
identity over time. (Q's tripcode has changed on occasion, prompting flurries
of speculation.) As Q has moved from one image board to the next—from
4chan to 8chan to 8kun, seeking a safe harbor—QAnon adherents have only
become more devoted. If the internet is one big rabbit hole containing
infinitely recursive rabbit holes, QAnon has somehow found its way down all
of them, gulping up lesser conspiracy theories as it goes.
[From the September 2017 issue: How America lost its mind]
In its broadest contours, the QAnon belief system looks something like this:
Q is an intelligence or military insider with proof that corrupt world leaders
are secretly torturing children all over the world; the malefactors are
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embedded in the deep state; Donald Trump is working tirelessly to thwart
them. ("These people need to ALL be ELIMINATED," Q wrote in one post.)
The eventual destruction of the global cabal is imminent, Q prophesies, but
can be accomplished only with the support of patriots who search for
meaning in Q's clues. To believe Q requires rejecting mainstream institutions,
ignoring government officials, battling apostates, and despising the press. One
of Q's favorite rallying cries is "You are the news now." Another is "Enjoy the
show," a phrase that his disciples regard as a reference to a coming apocalypse:
When the world as we know it comes to an end, everyone's a spectator.
People who have taken Q to heart like to say they've been paying attention
from the very beginning, the way someone might brag about having listened
to Radiohead before The Bends. A promise of foreknowledge is part of Q's
appeal, as is the feeling of being part of a secret community, which is
reinforced through the use of acronyms and ritual phrases such as "Nothing
can stop what is coming" and "Trust the plan."
One phrase that serves as a special touchstone among QAnon adherents is
"the calm before the storm." Q first used it a few days after his initial post,
and it arrived with a specific history. On the evening of October 5, 2017
not long before Q first made himself known on 4chan—President Trump
stood beside the first lady in a loose semicircle with 20 or so senior military
leaders and their spouses for a photo in the State Dining Room at the White
House. Reporters had been invited to watch as Trump's guests posed and
smiled. Trump couldn't seem to stop talking. "You guys know what this
=presents?" he asked at one point, tracing an incomplete circle in the air with
his right index finger. "Tell us, sir," one onlooker replied. The president's
response was self-satisfied, bordering on a drawl: "Maybe it's the calm before
the storm."
"What's the storm?" one of the journalists asked.
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"Could be the calm—the calm before the storm," Trump said again. His
repetition seemed to be for dramatic effect. The whir of camera shutters grew
louder.
The reporters became insistent: "What storm, Mr. President?"
A curt response from Trump: "You'll find out."
Those 37 seconds of presidential ambiguity made headlines right away—
relations with Iran had been tense in recent days—but they would also
become foundational lore for eventual followers of Q. The president's circular
hand gesture is of particular interest to them. You may think he was
motioning to the semicircle gathered around him, they say, but he was really
drawing the letter Q in the air. Was Trump playing the role of John the
Baptist, proclaiming what was to come? Was he himself the anointed one?
[Read: Covfgft and the real meaning_of a Trump typo turned meme]
It's impossible to know the number of QAnon adherents with any precision,
but the ranks are growing. At least 35 current or former congressional
candidates have embraced Q, according to an online tally by the progressive
nonprofit Media Matters for America. Those candidates have either directly
praised QAnon in public or approvingly referenced QAnon slogans. (One
Republican candidate for Congress, Matthew Lusk of Florida, includes
QAnon under the "issues" section of his campaign website, posing the
question: "Who is Q?") QAnon has by now made its way onto every major
social and commercial platform and any number of fringe sites. Tracy Din, a
QAnon evangelist, known online by the name TracyBeanz, has 185,000
followers on Twitter and more than 100,000 YouTube subscribers. She helped
lift QAnon from obscurity, facilitating its transition to mainstream social
media. (A publicist described Diaz as "really private" and declined requests
for an interview.) On TikTok, videos with the hashtag #QAnon have garnered
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millions of views. There are too many QAnon Facebook groups, plenty of
them ghost towns, to do a proper count, but the most active ones publish
thousands of items each day. (In 2018, Reddit banned QAnon gw_ups from
its_platform for inciting violence.)
Adherents are ever looking out for signs from on high, plumbing for portents
when guidance from Q himself is absent. The coronavirus, for instance—
what does it signify? In several of the big Facebook groups, people erupted in
a frenzy of speculation, circulating a theory that Trump's decision to wear a
yellow tie to a White House briefing about the virus was a sign that the
outbreak wasn't real: "He is telling us there is no virus threat because it is the
exact same color as the maritime flag that represents the vessel has no infected
people on board," someone wrote in a post that was widely shared and
remixed across social media. Three days before the World Health
Organization officially declared the coronavirus a pandemic, Trump was
retweeting a QAnon-themed meme. "Who knows what this means, but it
sounds good to me!" the president wrote on March 8, sharingi
Photoshopped image of himself /tying a violin overlaid with the words
"Nothing can stop what is coming."
[From the March 2020 issue: The billion-dollar disinformation campaign to
reelect the president]
On March 9, Q himself issued a triptych of ominous posts that seemed
definitive: The coronavirus is real, but welcome, and followers should not be
afraid. The first post shared Trump's tweet from the night before and
repeated, "Nothing Can Stop What Is Coming." The second said: "The Great
Awakening is Worldwide." The third was simple: "GOD WINS."
A month later, on April 8, Q went on a posting spree, dropping nine posts
over the span of six hours and touching on several of his favorite topics—
God, Pizzagate, and the wickedness of the elites. "They will stop at nothing to
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regain power," he wrote in one scathing post that alleged a coordinated
propaganda effort by Democrats, Hollywood, and the media. Another
accused Democrats of promoting "mass hysteria" about the coronavirus for
political gain: "What is the primary benefit to keep public in mass-hysteria re:
COVID-19? Think voting. Are you awake yet? Q." And he shared these verses
from Ephesians: "Finally, be strong in the Lord and in the strength of His
might. Put on the full armor of God so that you will be able to stand firm
against the schemes of the devil."
Anthony Fauci, the longtime director of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, has become an object of scorn among QAnon supporters
who don't like the bad news he delivers or the way he has contradicted Trump
publicly. In one March press conference, Trump referred to the State
Department as the "Deep State Department,_" and Fauci could be seen over
the president's shoulder, suppressing a laugh and covering his face. By then,
QAnon had already declared Fauci irredeemably compromised, because
WikiLeaks had unearthed a pair of emails he sent praising Hillary Clinton in
2012 and 2013. Sentiment about Fauci among QAnon supporters on social-
media platforms ranges from "Fauci is a Deep State puppet" to "FAUCI is a
BLACKHAT!!!"—the term QAnon uses for people who support the evil cabal
that Q warns about. One person, using the hashtags #DeepStateCabal and
#Qanon, tweeted this: "Watch Fauci's hand signals and body language at the
press conferences. What is he communicating?" Another shared an image of
Fauci standing in a lab with Barack Obama, with the caption "Obama and
`Dr.' Fauci in the lab creating coronovirus [sic]. #DeepstateDoctor." The
Justice Department recently approved heightened security measures for Fauci
because of the mounting volume of threats against him.
[Read:• If someone shares the Plandemic' video how should you respond?]
In the final days before Congress passed a $2 trillion economic-relief package
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in late March, Democrats insisted on provisions that would make it easier for
people to vote by mail, prompting Q himself to weigh in with dismay: "These
people are sick! Nothing can stop what is coming. Nothing."
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Illustration: Arsh Raziuddin; Ira Wyman / Getty; Evan El-Amin / Shutterstock; animation: Vishakha Darbha
III. BELIEVERS
ON A BONE-COLD THURSDAY in early January, a crowd was swelling in
downtown Toledo, Ohio. By lunchtime, seven hours before the start of
Trump's first campaign rally of the new mar, the line to get into the
Huntington Center had already snaked around two city blocks. The air was
electric with possibility, and the whole scene possessed a Jimmy Buffett—
meets—Michigan Militia atmosphere: lots of white people, a good deal of
vaping, red-white-and-blue everything. Down the street, someone had affixed
a two-story banner across the top of a burned-out brick building. It read:
PRESIDENT TRUMP, WELCOME TO TOLEDO, OHIO: WHO IS Q ... MILITARY
INTELLIGENCE? Q+? ("Q+" is QAnon shorthand for Trump himself.) Vendors
at the event were selling Q buttons and T-shirts. QAnon merchandise comes
in a great variety; online, you can buy Great Awakening coffee ($14.99) and
QAnon bracelets with tiny silver pizza charms ($20.17).
I worked my way toward the back of the line, making small talk and asking
who, if anyone, knew anything about QAnon. One woman's eyes lit up, and
in a single fluid motion she unzipped and removed her jacket, then did a little
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jump so that her back was to me. I could see a Q made out of duct tape,
which she'd pressed onto her red T-shirt. Her name was Lorrie Shock, and the
first thing she wanted me to know was this: "We're not a domestic-terror
group."
Shock was born in Ohio and never left, "a lifer," as she put it. She had worked
at a Bridgestone factory, making car parts, for most of her adult life. "Real
hot and dirty work, but good money," she told me. "I got three kids through
school." Today, in what she calls her preretirement job, she cares for adults
with special needs, spending her days in a tender routine of playing games
with them and helping them in and out of a swimming pool. Shock came to
the Trump rally with her friend Pat Harger, who had retired after 32 years at
Whirlpool. Harger's wife runs a catering business, which is what had kept her
from attending the rally that day. Harger and Shock are old friends. "Since
the fourth grade," Harger told me, "and we're 57 years old."
Now that Shock's girls are grown and she's not working a factory job, she has
more time for herself. That used to mean reading novels in the evening—she
doesn't own a television—but now it means researching Q, who first came to
her notice when someone she knew mentioned him on Facebook in 2017:
"What caught my attention was `research.' Do your own research. Don't take
anything for granted. I don't care who says it, even President Trump. Do your
own research, make up your own mind."
[Read:• Trump needs conspiracy theories]
The QAnon universe is sprawling and deep, with layer upon layer of context,
acronyms, characters, and shorthand to learn. The "castle" is the White
House. "Crumbs" are clues. CBTS stands for "calm before the storm," and
WWG1WGA stands for "Where we go one, we go all," which has become an
expression of solidarity among Q followers. (Both of these phrases, oddly, are
used in the trailer for the 1996 Ridley Scott film White Squall—watch it on
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YouTithe, and you'll see that the comments section is flooded with pro-Q
sentiment.) There is also a "Q clock," which refers to a calendar some factions
of Q supporters use to try to decode supposed clues based on time stamps of
Q drops and Trump tweets.
At the height of her devotion, Shock was spending four to six hours a day
reading and rereading Q drops, scouring documents online, taking notes.
Now, she says, she spends closer to an hour or two a day. "When I first
started, everybody thought I was crazy," Shock said. That included her
daughters, who are "very liberal Hillary and Bernie supporters," Shock said.
"I still love them. They think I'm crazy, but that's all right."
Harger, too, once thought Shock had lost it. "I was doubting her," he told
me. "I would send her texts saying, Lorrie."
"He was like, `What the hell?" Shock said, laughing. "So my comment to
him would be `Do your own research."
"And I did," Harger said. "And it's like, Wow."
Taking a page from Trump's playbook, Q frequently rails against legitimate
sources of information as fake. Shock and Harger rely on information they
encounter on Facebook rather than news outlets run by journalists. They
don't read the local paper or watch any of the major television networks. "You
can't watch the news," Shock said. "Your news channel ain't gonna tell us
shit." Harger says he likes One America News Network. Not so long ago, he
used to watch CNN, and couldn't get enough of Wolf Blitzer. "We were glued
to that; we always have been," he said. "Until this man, Trump, really opened
our eyes to what's happening. And Q. Q is telling us beforehand the stuff
that's going to happen." I asked Harger and Shock for examples of predictions
that had come true. They could not provide specifics and instead encouraged
me to do the research myself. When I asked them how they explained the
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events Q had predicted that never happened, such as Clinton's arrest, they
said that deception is part of Q's plan. Shock added, "I think there were more
things that were predicted that did happen." Her tone was gentle rather than
indignant.
"I feel God led me to Q. I really feel like
God pushed me in this direction."
Harger wanted me to know that he'd voted for Obama the first time around.
He grew up in a family of Democrats. His dad was a union guy. But that was
before Trump appeared and convinced Harger that he shouldn't trust the
institutions he always thought he could. Shock nodded alongside him. "The
reason I feel like I can trust Trump more is, he's not part of the
establishment," she said. At one point, Harger told me I should look into
what happened to John F. Kennedy Jr.—who died in 1999, when his airplane
crashed into the Atlantic Ocean off Martha's Vineyard—suggesting that
Hillary Clinton had had him assassinated. (Alternatively, a contingent of
QAnon believers say that JFK Jr. faked his death and that he's a behind-the-
tip scenes Trumpsugporter and possibly even Q himself. Some anticipate his
dramatic public return so that he can serve as Trump's running mate in
69 2020.) When I asked Harger whether there's any evidence to support the
a assassination claim, he flipped my question around: "Is there any evidence
not to?"
[Peter Beinart: Trump's fisy world got him into this]
Reading Shock's Facebook page is an exercise in contradictions, a toggling
between banality and hostility. There she is in a yellow kayak in her profile
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photo, bright-red hair spilling out of a ski hat, a giant smile on her face.
There are the photos of her daughters, and of a granddaughter with Shirley
Temple curls. Yet Q is never far away. On Christmas Eve, Shock shared one
post that seemed to come straight out of the QAnon universe but also pulled
in an older, classic conspiracy: "X marks the spot over Roswell NM. X17
Fifth Force Particle. X + Q Coincidence?" That same day, she shared a
separate post suggesting that Michelle Obama is secretly a man. Someone
responded with skepticism: "I am still not convinced. She shows and acts evil,
but a man?" Shock's reply: "Research it." There was a post claiming that
Representative Adam Schiff had raped the body of a dead boy at the Chateau
Marmont, in Los Angeles—Harger shows up here, with a "huh??" in the
comments—and a warning that George Soros was going after Christian
evangelicals. In other posts, Shock playfully taunted "libs" and her "Trump-
hating friends," and also shared a video of her daughter singing Christmas
carols.
In Toledo, I asked Shock if she had any theories about Q's identity. She
answered immediately: "I think it's Trump." I asked if she thinks Trump even
knows how to use 4chan. The message board is notoriously confusing for the
uninitiated, nothing like Facebook and other social platforms designed to
make it easy to publish quickly and often. "I think he knows way more than
what we think," she said. But she also wanted me to know that her obsession
with Q wasn't about Trump. This had been something she was reluctant to
speak about at first. Now, she said, "I feel God led me to Q. I really feel like
God pushed me in this direction. I feel like if it was deceitful, in my spirit,
God would be telling me, 'Enough's enough.' But I don't feel that. I pray
about it. I've said, `Father, should I be wasting my time on this?' ... And I
don't feel that feeling of I should stop."
Arthur Jones, the director of the documentary film Feels Good Man, which
tells the story of how internet memes infiltrated politics in the 2016
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presidential election, told me that QAnon reminds him of his childhood
growing up in an evangelical-Christian family in the Ozarks. He said that
many people he knew then, and many people he meets now in the most
devout parts of the country, are deeply interested in the Book of Revelation,
and in trying to unpack "all of its pretty-hard-to-decipher prophecies." Jones
went on: "I think the same kind of person would all of a sudden start pulling
at the threads of Q and start feeling like everything is starting to fall into
place and make sense. If you are an evangelical and you look at Donald
Trump on face value, he lies, he steals, he cheats, he's been married multiple
times, he's clearly a sinner. But you are trying to find a way that he is
somehow part of God's plan."
You can't always tell what kind of Q follower you're encountering. Anyone
using a Q hashtag could be a true believer, like Shock, or simply someone
cruising a site and playing along for a vicarious thrill. Surely there are people
who know that Q is a fantasy but participate because there's an element of
QAnon that converges with a live-action role-playing game. In the sprawling
constellation of Q supporters, Shock and Harger seem prototypical. They
happened upon Q and something clicked. The fable plugged neatly into their
existing worldview.
W. PROFESSIONALS
Q MAY BE ANONYMOUS, but leaders of the QAnon movement have emerged in
public and built their own large audiences. David Hayes is better known by
his online handle: PrayingMedic. In his YouTube videos, he exudes the even-
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keeled authoritarian energy of a middle-school principal. PrayingMedic is one
of the best-known QAnon evangelists on the planet. He has more than
300,000 Twitter followers and a similar number of YouTube subscribers.
Hayes, a former paramedic, lives in a terra-cotta-roofed subdivision in
Gilbert, Arizona, with his wife, Denise, an artist whom he met on the dating
site Christian Mingle in 2007. Both describe themselves as former atheists
who came to their faith in God, and to each other, late in life, after previous
marriages. Hayes has been following Q since the beginning, or close to it. "Q
Anon is pretty darn interesting," he wrote on his Facebook page on December
12, 2017, six weeks after Q's first post on 4chan. That same day, he wrote
about a sudden calling he felt:
My dreams have suggested that God wants me to keep my
attention focused on politics and current events. After some
prayer, I've decided to do a regular news and current events show
on Periscope. I'm trying to do one broadcast a day. (The videos
are also being posted to my Youtube channel.) That is all.
Hayes is a superstar in the Q universe. His video "Q for Beginners Part 1" has
been viewed more than 1 million times. "Some of the people who follow Q
would consider themselves to be conspiracy theorists," Hayes says in the
video. "I do not consider myself to be a conspiracy theorist. I consider myself
to be a Q researcher. I don't have anything against people who like to follow
conspiracies. That's their thing. It's not my thing."
[Read:• The reason conspiracy videos work so well on You Tube]
Hayes has developed a following in part because of his sheer ubiquity but also
because he skillfully wears the mantle of a skeptic-1ln not one of those crazies.
Hayes is not a QAnon hobbyist, though. He's a professional. There are
income streams to be tapped, modest but expanding. On Amazon, Hayes's
book Calm Before the Storm, the first in what he says could easily be a 10-
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book series of "Q Chronicles," sells for $15.29. Hayes writes in the
introduction that he and Denise have devoted their attention full-time to
QAnon since 2017. "Denise and I have been blessed by those who have
helped support us while we set aside our usual work to research Q's
messages," he wrote. He has published several other books, which offer a
glimpse into an earlier life. The titles include Hearing God's Voice Made
Simple, Deflating Your Adversary in the Court of Heaven, and American Sniper:
Lessons in Spiritual Warfare. Hayes registered Praying Medic as a religious
nonprofit in Washington State in 2018.
Hayes tells his followers that he thinks Q is an open-source intelligence
Qperation, made possible by the internet and designed by patriots fighting
corruption inside the intelligence community. His interpretation of Q is
ultimately religious in nature, and centers on the idea of a Great Awakening.
"I believe The Great Awakening has a double application," Hayes wrote in a
bldg post in November 2012.
It speaks of an intellectual awakening—the awareness by the
public to the truth that we've been enslaved in a corrupt political
system. But the exposure of the unimaginable depravity of the
elites will lead to an increased awareness of our own depravity.
Self-awareness of sin is fertile ground for spiritual revival. I
believe the long-prophesied spiritual awakening lies on the other
side of the storm.
Q followers agree that a Great Awakening lies ahead, and will bring salvation.
They differ in their personal preoccupations with respect to the here and now.
Some in the QAnon world are highly focused on what they perceive as
degeneracy in the mainstream media, a perception fueled in equal measure by
Q and by Trump. Others obsess over the intelligence community and the
notion of a deep state. An active subsection of Q followers probes the Jeffrey
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Epstein case. There are those who claim knowledge of a 16-year plan by
Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama to destroy the United States by means of
mass drought, weaponized disease, food shortages, and nuclear war. During
the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election,
some Q followers promoted the idea that Trump was secretly working with
Robert Mueller, and that the special counsel's report would both exonerate
Trump and lead to mass arrests of members of the corrupt cabal. (The
eventual Mueller report, released in April 2019, neither exonerated Trump
nor led to mass arrests.)
These divergent byways are elemental to QAnon's staying power—this is a
very welcoming belief system, warm in its tolerance for contradiction—and
are also what makes it possible for a practical man like Hayes to play the role
that he does. QAnon is complex and confusing. People from all over the
internet seek guidance from someone who seems levelheaded. (Hayes was
quick to respond to my emails but declined requests for an interview. He
complained to me that journalists refuse to see QAnon for what it really is,
and therefore cannot be trusted.)
The most prominent QAnon figures have a presence beyond the biggest
social-media platforms and image boards. The Q universe encompasses
numerous blogs, proprietary websites, and types of chat software, as well as
alternative social-media platforms such as Gab, the site known for anti-
Semitism and white nationalism, where many people banned from Twitter
have congregated. Vloggers and bloggers promote their Patreon accounts,
where people can pay them in monthly sums. There's also money to be made
from ads on YouTube. That seems to be the primary focus for Hayes, whose
videos have been viewed more than 33 million times altogether. His "Q for
Beginners" video includes ads from companies such as the vacation-rental site
Vrbo and from The Epoch Times, an international pro-Trump newspaper. Q
evangelists have taken a "publish everywhere" approach that is half outreach,
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half redundancy. If one platform cracks down on QAnon, as Reddit did, they
won't have to start from scratch somewhere else. Already embroiled in the
battle between good and evil, QAnon has involved itself in another battle—
between the notion of an open web for the people and a gated internet
controlled by a powerful few.
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Illustration: Arsh Raziuddin; animation: Vishakha Darbha
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V. WHO IS Q?
ANY NEW BELIEF SYSTEM runs into opposition. In December 2018, Matt
Patten, a veteran SWAT-team sergeant in the Broward County Sheriff's Office,
in Florida, was photographed with Vice President Mike Pence on an airport
tarmac. Patten wore a patch on his tactical vest that bore the letter Q. The
photograph was tweeted by the vice president's office and then went viral in
the QAnon community. The tweet was quickly taken down. Patten was
demoted. When I knocked on his door on a gloomy day in August, no one
answered. But as I turned to leave, I noticed two large bumper stickers on the
white mailbox out front. One said TRUMP, and the other said #QANON:
PATRIOTS FIGHT.
Late last summer, Q himself lost his platform. He had migrated from 4chan
(fearing that the site had been "infiltrated") to the image board 8chan, and
then 8chan went dark. Three days before I stood on Patten's doorstep, 22
people had been killed in a mass shooting at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, and
police revealed that the alleged killer had posted a ►manifesto on 8chan just
before carrying out the attack. The episode had eerie similarities to two other
shootings. Four months earlier, in April 2019, the suspected shooter in a
murderous rampage at a synagogue in Poway, California, had posted an anti-
Semitic letter on 8chan. Weeks before that, the man who killed 51
worshippers at two New Zealand mosques had posted a white-supremacist
manifesto on 8chan.
After El Paso, 8chan's owner, Jim Watkins, was ordered to testify before the
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House Committee on Homeland Security. Watkins had bought the site four
years earlier from its founder, Fredrick Brennan, now 26, who eventually cut
all ties to 8chan. "Regrettably, this is at least the third act of white
supremacist extremist violence linked to your website this year," wrote
lI epresentatives Bennie Thompson, a Democrat from Mississigin, and Mike
&gm- , a Republican from Alabama, when they summoned Watkins to
Capitol Hill. "Americans deserve to know what, if anything, you, as the
owner and operator, are doing to address the proliferation of extremist
content on 8chan."
8chan had already lost crucial services, which had forced it to shut down. The
CEO of Cloudflare, which had helped protect the site from cyberattacks,
explained his decision to drop 8chan in an open letter after the El Paso
shooting: "The rationale is simple: They have proven themselves to be lawless
and that lawlessness has caused multiple tragic deaths." Watkins promised to
keep the site off the internet until after his congressional appearance. He is a
former U.S. Army helicopter repairman who got into the business of websites
while he was still in the military. Among other things, in 1997, he launched a
successful porn site called Asian Bikini Bar. On his YouTube channel, where
he posts under the username Watkins Xerxes, he frequently sings hymns,
reads verses from the Bible, praises Trump, and touches on themes underlying
QAnon—warning against the deep state and reminding his audience
members that they are now "the actual reporting mechanism of the news." He
also shows off his fountain-pen collection and practices yoga. When he
arrived on Capitol Hill, in September 2019, Watkins wore a bulbous silver Q
pinned to his collar. His testimony was behind closed doors. In November,
8chan flickered back to life as 8kun. It was sporadically accessible, limping
along through a series of cyberattacks. It received assistance from a Russian
hosting service that is typically associated with spreading malware. When Q
reappeared on 8kun, he used the same tripcode that he had used on 8chan.
He posted other hints meant to verify the continuity of his identity, including
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an image of a notebook and a pen that had appeared in earlier posts.
[Renee DiResta: The conspiracies are coming from inside the house]
Fredrick Brennan's theory is that Jim and his son Ron, who is the site's
administrator, knew 8kun needed Q to attract users. "I definitely, definitely,
100 percent believe that Q either knows Jim or Ron Watkins, or was hired by
Jim or Ron Watkins," Brennan told me. Jim and Ron have both denied
knowing Q's identity. "I don't know who Q is," Ron told me in a direct
message on Twitter. Jim told an interviewer on One America News Network
in September 2019: "I don't know who QAnon is. Really, we run an
anonymous website." Both insist that they care about maintaining 8kun only
because it is a platform for unfettered free speech. "8kun is like a piece of
paper, and the users decide what is written on it," Ron told me. "There are
many different topics and users from many different backgrounds." But their
interest in Q is well documented. In February, Jim started a super PAC called
Disarm the Deep State, which echoes Q's messages and which is running paid
ads on 8kun.
Brennan has long been feuding with the Watkinses. Jim is siting Brennan for
libel in the Philippines, where they both lived until recently, and Brennan is
actively fighting Jim's attempts to become a naturalized citizen there. "They
kept Q alive," Brennan told me. "We wouldn't be talking about this right now
if Q didn't go on the new 8kun. The entire reason we're talking about this is
they're directly related to Q. And, you know, I worry constantly that there is
going to be, as early as November 2020, some kind of shooting or something
related to Q if Trump loses. Or parents killing their children to save them
from the hell-world that is to come because the deep state has won. These are
real possibilities. I just feel like what they have done is totally irresponsible to
keep Q going."
The story of Q is premised on the need for Q to remain anonymous. It's why
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Q originally picked 4chan, one of the last places built for anonymity on the
social web. "I've often related Q to previous figures like John Titor or Satoshi
Nakamoto," Brennan told me, referring to two legends of internet anonymity.
Satoshi Nakamoto is the name used by the unknown creator of bitcoin. John
Titor is the name used on several message boards in 2000 and 2001 by
someone claiming to be a military time traveler from the year 2036.
QAnon adherents see Q's anonymity as proof of Q's credibility—despite their
deep mistrust of unnamed sources in the media. Every faction of QAnon has
its own hunches, alliances, and interpersonal dramas related to the question
of Q's identity. The theories fit into three broad groups. In the first group are
theories that assume Q is a single individual who has been posting all alone
this entire time. This is where you'll find the people who say that Trump
himself is Q, or even that PrayingMedic is Q. (This category also includes the
possibility, raised by people outside of QAnon, that Q is a lone Trump
supporter who started posting as a form of fan fiction, not realizing it would
take off; and the idea that Q began posting in order to parody Trump and his
supporters, not anticipating that people would take him seriously.) The
second group of theories holds that the original Q posted continuously for a
while, but then something changed. This second category includes Brennan's
idea that the Watkinses are now paying Q, or are paying someone to carry on
as Q, or are even acting as Q themselves. The third group of theories holds
that Q is a collective, with a small number of people sharing access to the
account. This third category includes the notion that Q is a new kind of
open-source military-intelligence agency.
[Read: I was a teenage conspiracy theorist]
Many QAnon adherents see significance in Trump tweets containing words
that begin with the letter Q. Recent world events have rewarded them amply.
"I am a great friend and admirer of the Queen & the United Kingdom,"
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Trump began one tweet on March 72. The day before, he had tweeted. rhN: "I
am giving consideration to a QUARANTINE." The Q crowd seized on both
tweets, arguing that if you ignore most of the letters in the messages, you'll
find a confession from Trump: "I am ... Q."
VI REASON VERSUS FAITH
IN A MIAMI COFFEE SHOP last year, I met with a man who has gotten a flurry
of attention in recent years for his research on conspiracy theories—a
political-science professor at the University of Miami named Joseph Uscinski.
I have known Uscinski for years, and his views are nuanced, deeply informed,
and far from anything you would consider knee-jerk partisanship. Many
people assume, he told me, that a propensity for conspiracy thinking is
predictable along ideological lines. That's wrong, he explained. It's better to
think of conspiracy thinking as independent of party politics. It's a particular
form of mind-wiring. And it's generally characterized by acceptance of the
following propositions: Our lives are controlled by plots hatched in secret
places. Although we ostensibly live in a democracy, a small group of people
run everything, but we don't know who they are. When big events occur—
pandemics, recessions, wars, terrorist attacks—it is because that secretive
group is working against the rest of us.
QAnon isn't a far-right conspiracy, the way it's often described, Uscinski went
on, despite its obviously pro-Trump narrative. And that's because Trump isn't
a typical far-right politician. Q appeals to people with the greatest attraction
to conspiracy thinking of any kind, and that appeal crosses ideological lines.
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QAnon carries on a tradition of
apocalyptic thinking that has spanned
thousands of years. It offers a polemic to
empower those who feel adrift
Many of the people most prone to believing conspiracy theories see
themselves as victim-warriors fighting against corrupt and powerful forces.
They share a hatred of mainstream elites. That helps explain why cycles of
populism and conspiracy thinking seem to rise and fall together. Conspiracy
thinking is at once a cause and a consequence of what Richard Hofstadter in
1964 famously described as "the paranoid style" in American politics. But do
not make the mistake of thinking that conspiracy theories are scribbled only
in the marginalia of American history. They color every major news event: the
assassination of John F. Kennedy, the moon landing, 9/11. They have helped
sustain consequential eruptions, such as McCarthyism in the 1950s and anti-
Semitism at any moment you choose. But QAnon is different. It may be
propelled by paranoia and populism, but it is also propelled by religious faith.
The language of evangelical Christianity has come to define the Q movement.
QAnon marries an appetite for the conspiratorial with positive beliefs about a
radically different and better future, one that is preordained.
[Read.• The paranoid style in American entertainment]
That was part of the reason Uscinski's mother, Shelly, 62, was attracted to
QAnon. Shelly, who lives in New Hampshire, was tooling around on
YouTube a couple of years ago, looking for how-to videos—she can't
remember for what, exactly, maybe a tutorial on how to get her car windows
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sparkling-clean—and the algorithm served up QAnon. She remembers a
feeling of magnetic attraction. "Like, Wow, what is this?" she recalled when I
spoke with her by phone. "For me, it was revealing some things that maybe I
was hoping would come to pass." She sensed that Q knew her anxieties—as if
someone was taking her train of thought and "actually verbalizing it." Shelly's
frustrations are broad, and directed primarily at the institutions she sees as
broken. She's fed up with the education system, the financial system, the
media. "Even our churches are out of whack," she said. One of the things that
resonated most with her about Q was his disgust with "the fake news." She
gets her information mostly from Fox News, Twitter, and the New Hampshire
Union Leader. "In my lifetime, I guess, things have gotten progressively
worse," Shelly said. She added a little later: "Q gives us hope. And it's a good
thing, to be hopeful."
Shelly likes that Q occasionally quotes from scripture, and she likes that he
encourages people to pray. In the end, she said, QAnon is about something so
much bigger than Trump or anyone else. "There are QAnon followers out
there," Shelly said, "who suggest that what we're going through now, in this
crazy political realm we're in now, with all of the things that are happening
worldwide, is very biblical, and that this is Armageddon."
I asked her if she thinks the end of the world is upon us. "It wouldn't surprise
me," she said.
[Read:• The normalization of conspiracy culture J
Joseph Uscinski is disturbed by his mother's belief in QAnon. He's not
comfortable talking about it. And Shelly doesn't quite appreciate the irony of
the family's situation, because she doesn't believe QAnon is a form of
conspiracy thinking in the first place. At one point in our conversation, when
I referred to QAnon as a conspiracy theory, she quickly interrupted: "It's not
a theory. It's the foretelling of things to come." She laughed hard when I
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asked if she had ever tried to get Joseph to believe in QAnon. The answer was
an unequivocal no: "I'm his mom, so I love him."
WI. APOCALYPSE
WATCHKEEPERS FOR THE End of Days can easily find signs of impending doom
—in comets and earthquakes, in wars and pandemics. It has always been this
way. In 1831, a Baptist preacher in rural New York named William Miller
began to publicly share his prediction that the Second Coming of Jesus was
imminent. Eventually he settled on a date: October 22, 1844. When the sun
came up on October 23, his followers, known as the Millerites, were crushed.
The episode would come to be known as the Great Disappointment. But they
did not give up. The Millerites became the Adventists, who in turn became
the Seventh-day Adventists, who now have a worldwide membership of more
than 20 million. "These people in the QAnon community—I feel like they
are as deeply delusional, as deeply invested in their beliefs, as the Millerites
were," Travis View, one of the hosts of Lpodcast called QAnon Anonymous,
which subjects QAnon to acerbic analysis, told me. "That makes me pretty
confident that this is not something that is going to go away with the end of
the Trump presidency."
QAnon carries on a tradition of apocalyptic thinking that has spanned
thousands of years. It offers a polemic to empower those who feel adrift. In
his classic 1957 book, The Pursuit of the Millennium, the historian Norman
Cohn examined the emergence of apocalyptic thinking over many centuries.
He found one common condition: This way of thinking consistently emerged
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in regions where rapid social and economic change was taking place—and at
periods of time when displays of spectacular wealth were highly visible but
unavailable to most people. This was true in Europe during the Crusades in
the 11th century, and during the Black Death in the 14th century, and in the
Rhine Valley in the 16th century, and in William Miller's New York in the
19th century. It is true in America in the 21st century.
The Seventh-day Adventists and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints are thriving religious movements indigenous to America. Do not be
surprised if QAnon becomes another. It already has more adherents by far
than either of those two denominations had in the first decades of their
existence. People are expressing their faith through devoted study of Q drops
as installments of a foundational text, through the development of Q-
worshipping groups, and through sweeping expressions of gratitude for what
Q has brought to their lives. Does it matter that we do not know who Q is?
The divine is always a mystery. Does it matter that basic aspects of Q's
teachings cannot be confirmed? The basic tenets of Christianity cannot be
confirmed. Among the people of QAnon, faith remains absolute. True
believers describe a feeling of rebirth, an irreversible arousal to existential
knowledge. They are certain that a Great Awakening is coming. They'll wait as
long as they must for deliverance.
Trust the plan. Enjoy the show. Nothing can stop what is coming.
This article appears in the June 2020 print edition with the headline "Nothing Can Stop
What Is Coming."
Related Video
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