Experts say QAnon supporters, frustrated by Trump’s unfulfilled ideals of martial law and taking power to “save the world,” may switch to white nationalism and other extremist beliefs. Many QAnon followers express their anger and frustration, which he writes could lead to other “causes”. Defender.
Before Joe Biden became the 46th President of the United States, Dave Hayes, who influenced the QAnon movement, released a photo of black clouds gathering on the American chapter. “What a beautiful black sky,” he wrote in a letter to his 92,000 followers.
The news was clear to those familiar with the identity of the QAnon movement: the “storm” that counts when Donald Trump and his loyal allies in the military declare martial law and hang political opponents at the Guantanamo Bay prison. According to them, January 20, 2021 does not mark the end of Trump’s presidency, but the beginning of a “great awakening.”
Instead, Trump flew to Florida, where Biden took office under clear blue skies. Now, QAnon followers are left to figure out how to make progress in a world that has repeatedly been proven to be far removed from their feverish fantasies and fascist predictions.
But while some appear to be awake to reality, others seem to be turning their anger away for other reasons, raising concerns among experts that the movement is ready for even more radical intensification.
“My main concern at the moment is the Q to JQ movement,” said Brian Friedberg, a senior researcher at the Shorenstein Center in Harvard.
“The biggest risk is that people who are frustrated with QAnon will go to these channels, where they will be recruited by white nationalists or other extremists,” said Travis View, co-editor of QAnon Anonymous Podcast. .
“In the QAnon world, they already believed that George Soros and Rothschild controlled the world. It is not difficult to go from” there is a global group “to” there is a Jewish conspiracy, “he says.
Unstoppable “storm”
Conspiracy theorists and members of the QAnon movement lost their “functional substance” on Wednesday after Joe Biden officially became president of the United States.
An hour after Joe Biden became president of the United States, QAnon conspirators began to feel a strong sense of futility, as revealed in discussions about their social media groups.
“What are we waiting for now?”, Asked one of them on the telegram network.
“Is anyone else in position?”, Said another.
“So Q is a big lie and a size operation, I thought was stupid for the last 3 years to follow?” According to Insider, another QAnon member was surprised.
In another panel discussion, the topic was the same: “Boys and girls, I think I’m losing my mind. Is this really happening? Was it part of the plan?”
However, QAnon followers are accustomed to dealing with unfulfilled predictions. The conspiracy theory began in October 2017 with an Internet user posing as a government user of Channel 4 Sachin’s information that Hillary Clinton was about to be arrested and her passport marked, and that the government was preparing for “mass riots.”
None of the countless other arrests, classifications, executions, resignations or revelations that anonymous users known as Q have made to believers in recent times have happened like this. Three years. But the movement grew in size and influence, becoming a significant force in the Republican Party and a motivating factor for the many insurgents who attacked US Capitol on January 6.
The QAnon movement may become even more intense
QAnon’s description has always been fundamentally anti-Semitic, but many of QAnon’s most important influencers have avoided overt anti-Semitism.
Brian Friedberg expects some QAnon followers to follow a path of “esoteric to neoconservative” rather than embracing white nationalism. This opposition to the movement focuses on raising American militarism and opposition to patriotism and communism. However, others will be very close to “organized anti-Semitism”.
“There are still things I hate,” Friedberg said. Trump’s cause is certainly true, but the hatred of the “deep state”, the Communists, the Liberals, the Antifa – all of these are still there. This exclusionary attitude, which was unjustified when Trump was president, is now justified, ”the researcher concludes.
Author: Robert Kiss