In 2017, President Trump made a cryptic remark at a gathering of military officials, describing it as 'the calm before the storm' - then refused to explain himself to puzzled journalists. But on internet message boards, a mysterious poster called 'Q Clearance Patriot' began an elaboration all of their own.
Q's wild yarn hinted at a vast conspiracy that satisfied the deepest desires of MAGA-America. None of Q's predictions came to pass. But did that stop people from clinging to every word, expanding Q's mythology, and promoting it ever more widely? No.
Conspiracy culture expert Mike Rothschild is uniquely equipped to explain QAnon, from the cults that first fed into it, to its embrace by Trump and the right-wing media. With families torn apart and with the Capitol under attack, he argues that mocking the madness of QAnon will get us nowhere. Instead, he argues that QAnon tells us everything we need to know about global fear after Trump-and that we need to understand it now, because it's not going away.
Over the years, I've looked at many theories about some of the most famous and infamous happenings in our world. There seems to be a theory trying to disprove everything; from whether the world is actually circular, to the Twin Tower 911 attacks. It's been fascinating, and I can truly understand how some people can believe what appear to be credible arguments, and evidence to disprove what the world has been told.
The QAnon movement does not concentrate on just one thing though, and the way that they create links to things and tell their followers the 'truth' behind quite innocent Tweets and online articles is fascinating. We could just disregard them as crazies, but these people are dangerous, and wide reaching.
I will be reading this again, most certainly going back to certain chapters when I spot yet another post in a discussion that I think is connected.
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