Anonymous ID: 104cd3 July 30, 2021, 4:58 p.m. No.14233283   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3288 >>3304 >>3334 >>3366 >>3385

https://hotair.com/headlines/2021/07/30/is-qanon-finished-n405583

 

https://hotair.com/headlines/2021/07/30/is-qanon-finished-n405583

 

''Is QAnon finished?''

 

DANIEL GULLOTTA Jul 30, 2021 6:20 PM ET

 

Due to QAnon’s broadness and changing dynamics—it is “fairly easy to understand” yet “slippery to pin down”—Rothschild remains unsure what to label it.

He is open to thinking of QAnon as a new religious movement.

And he notes that sociologists and scholars of religion are wary of the term “cult” due to its historical baggage: There have been many instances of people pejoratively labeling as a cult any religious tradition they don’t like, as when evangelical and atheist critics called Mormonism a cult.

In this nonjudgmental view now standard in the academy, one man’s cult is another man’s religion.

Even so, the word “cult” has remained an easy shorthand for much of the coverage of QAnon and undoubtedly such a provocative term (used in the book’s subtitle) will help drive more clicks and sell more books.

 

Though Rothschild touches upon QAnon’s religious elements, he doesn’t do a deep dive into its theological convictions.

Because of QAnon’s growing appeal among white evangelicals, I think it is best understood as a kind of para-Christianity—that is, something that “goes with” or “side by side” an evangelical Christian worldview.

For many believers, QAnon is not a significant alternative to their orthodoxy or orthopraxy, but a complicating add-on.

''If one already believes that the world is besieged by demonic forces, then fine-tuning that conviction into ideas concerning a secret cabal of cannibalistic Satan-worshiping pedophiles is not a great leap of faith, as we have already seen during previous Satanic panics. ''

QAnon might even be thought of as a kind of Trumpian gnosticism, with seemingly “ordinary” Christians indulging in unconventional extracurricular activities beyond the supervision of their clergy.

One can keep going to weekly Bible study and maintaining regular Sunday attendance while logging on each night to await the latest drops from Q and praying for the coming storm.

Anonymous ID: 104cd3 July 30, 2021, 5:09 p.m. No.14233363   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3406

Mike Rothschild is to be commended for this accessible introduction to a mystifying element in our current politics. Written with clear prose and a sympathetic though unflinching voice, The Storm Is Upon Us will give readers a strong sense of QAnon’s history, ideology, and attraction—as well as the threat it poses.

 

There are reasons to hope that QAnon will soon peter out, starting with the fact that Q has not been heard from since December 8 of last year. “I think the December 8 drop will be the last one,” Rothschild told a reporter. “The core prophecy of the Q movement is now Trump being restored to office, and Q offered up a picture of Trump as being incapable of losing—which doesn’t square well with the current situation.” Still, so long as significant numbers of Americans say they believe in the core claims of QAnon, there is a possibility of resurgence. And so long as its adherents feel certain that Donald Trump will be restored to a presidency that was stolen from him, QAnon remains a troubling and potentially dangerous element in our political life.

 

Daniel N. Gullotta

Daniel N. Gullotta is a Ph.D. candidate (ABD) in American religious history at Stanford University. He is also the host of the Age of Jackson Podcast. Substack: The Letters of Wyoming. Twitter: @danielgullotta.

 

https://thebulwark.com/is-qanon-finished/