Anonymous ID: beda2d Feb. 18, 2024, 6:24 a.m. No.20434921   šŸ—„ļø.is šŸ”—kun

>>20434670

>https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2024/02/justin-mohn-video-qanon-conspiracy-right-wing-extremists.html

 

 

 

The Pennsylvania man accused of decapitating his father undoubtedly spent time in dark places on the internet. That became abundantly clear when news broke that the man, 32-year-old Justin Mohn, had been arrested after holding up a severed head in a YouTube video and calling for the execution of federal government employees, starting with his own father. In his ramblings, Mohn called on ā€œpatriots and militia membersā€ to win their country back from ā€œthe globalist, communist takeover of America.ā€

 

Itā€™s hard to get to the point of making manifestos on YouTube (let alone broadcasting lethal violence online) without some exposure to certain extreme digital spaces. So itā€™s easy to see how certain right-wing tabloids jumped to some conclusions in their coverage of this disturbing crime. ā€œQAnon Believer Accused of Beheading Federal Worker Dad Smirks in New Mugshot,ā€ a New York Post headline stated. The U.S. version of the Mirror similarly proclaimed him to be a QAnon adherent, as did the Daily Mail.

 

The problem is that thereā€™s no evidence Mohn had any connection to QAnon. No reporters have dug up any mention in Mohnā€™s digital footprint of the groupā€™s trademarks, like ā€œthe stormā€ (Donald Trumpā€™s supposed great coming triumph over a vast pedophilic cabal) or Democrats committing child sacrifices. He used violent right-wing rhetoric, yes. But we canā€™t ascribe his beliefs to QAnon.

 

It might sound pedantic to split hairs about the conspiracy theories that drive extremists like Mohn to do despicable things. But as several experts in the world of online extremism told me, making that distinction is important beyond just understanding Mohnā€™s crime. Itā€™s crucial to grasping and confronting the more expansive problem of political and social extremism in American society today.

 

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To put it another way, itā€™s tempting to believe that right-wing conspiracy theorists donā€™t deserve our nuance, that their wackiness shouldnā€™t demand that we spend any of our precious time on this earth reading up on adrenochrome or frazzledrip. But experts say that labeling everything that reeks of right-wing brain rot as QAnon-affiliated risks obscuring just how much extreme right-wing rhetoric is now coming from much more mainstream sourcesā€”including politicians themselves.

 

QAnon ā€œis perceived as a collection of outrageous bullshit beliefs backed by nonsense,ā€ said Al Jones, the pseudonym for the founder of the Q Origins project, which examines QAnon culture from its earliest days to now. ā€œPeople see these as fundamentally silly and unserious beliefs and worldviews. They see a Q believer as a yokel or uninformed idiot.ā€

 

If you mark any kind of right-wing violence that stems from conspiratorial belief as ā€œQAnon,ā€ Jones said, you risk misunderstanding mainstream right-wing rhetoric as fringe.

Anonymous ID: beda2d Feb. 18, 2024, 6:41 a.m. No.20434981   šŸ—„ļø.is šŸ”—kun   >>5000 >>5004 >>5019 >>5021

The main accomplishment of QAnon was it got ā€˜the elites are sacrificing childrenā€™ codified as a big, mainstream idea on the conspiratorial right,ā€ Jones said. ā€œThatā€™s firmly in there now.ā€ But there hasnā€™t been a Q drop (the cryptic messages from the eponymous Q) in well over a year. And nowā€”years into a Biden presidency in which the promises of the coming ā€œstormā€ of mass arrests of Trumpā€™s enemies failed to materializeā€”QAnon has been bleeding followers. ā€œThe movement has lost a lot of steam,ā€ Jones said.

 

Strangely, itā€™s QAnonā€™s very success that may have made it less relevant. The ideas Q promoted in the movementā€™s heydayā€”of the powerful deep state, of the stolen election, of rampant child traffickingā€”have themselves become standard Republican beliefs, even if the more bizarre details havenā€™t succeeded beyond the core QAnon community.

 

ā€œIn some ways, the Q people got everyone on their team and didnā€™t need the trappings of QAnon anymore,ā€ Mike Rothschild, a conspiracy theory expert and the author of Jewish Space Lasers, wrote in an email.

 

As the movement itself lost power, followers defected, and others were drawn to other channels for their disaffection. Michael Senters, a Ph.D. student at Virginia Tech who researches the language and rhetoric of the far right online, argued that just as much as QAnon, anyone seeking to fight online extremism needs to monitor communities formed around anti-vaccine activism, Christian nationalism, and incel-style misogyny, among other issues.