Anonymous ID: 0eb99a Aug. 10, 2018, 8:44 p.m. No.2549020   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9055 >>9124 >>9357 >>9459 >>9495 >>9512

The far right is struggling to contain Qanon after giving it life

Moderators of Reddit's raucous pro-Trump message board have banned Qanon posts, saying the theory is now an embarrassment to its community.

by Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny / Aug.10.2018 / 10:29 PM ET

 

The Qanon conspiracy theory that recently began to surface at President Donald Trump’s rallies has burst into the national consciousness, but some of the most conspiracy-friendly figures on the far right are pushing back against the theory — including the very ones that helped the theory gain prominence.

 

Qanon has become too much for some of the web’s most die-hard Trump supporters — the moderators of Reddit’s r/The_Donald, a message board of Trump supporters that boasts almost 640,000 members and is one of the most active communities on the entire website.

 

Two moderators of the community, who oversee the subreddit and its hundreds of posts per day, told NBC News that they have banned Qanon posts and automatically delete any new posts about the theory that they now view as an embarrassment to their community. The moderators declined to disclose their real names to NBC News out of concerns for their privacy.

 

The ban highlights just how powerful the Qanon theory has grown among those on the far right, even on the turf where Qanon found some of its earliest followers. Qanon followers have a significant overlap with r/The_Donald, according to a data analysis from Vox.

Those moderators are not alone. Far right figures have almost uniformly begun to disparage the theory. Rick Wiles, host of the Christian survivalist radio show "Trunews," recently called Qanon "a big lie," according to Right Wing Watch, which tracks far-right media. Wiles propagates other theories such as a coming civil war started by liberals.

 

Evangelical preacher Lance Wallanau, who recently called Rush Limbaugh a "secular prophet," said people need to be "a special kind of dumb" to believe the theory.

 

Other more mainstream Republican pundits have also spoken out publicly against Qanon, highlighting just how widespread the theory has become — and that they aren't happy with how it reflects on Trump supporters.

 

Infowars founder Alex Jones once promoted the theory, but then told his followers that it had been compromised.

 

"Stick a fork in the avatar of Qanon,” Jones declared in May, claiming to have spoken to the person behind the leaks that make up the theory. “It is now an overrun disinformation fount.”

 

Scott Adams, the creator of the Dilbert comic series and an outspoken Trump supporter, recently said the theory was making Trump supporters look like “a bunch of idiots.”

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https://www.nbcnews.com/news/amp/ncna899741