Confronting the Threat of QAnon – The New York Times

Posted: June 30, 2021 at 2:35 pm

PASTELS AND PEDOPHILES Inside the Mind of QAnonBy Mia Bloom and Sophie Moskalenko

A cult. A singularity. An amorphous blob. These are just a few ways researchers have described QAnon, the baseless conspiracy theory that has morphed into a movement so robust that two acolytes now hold seats in Congress and dozens if not hundreds more participated in the Jan. 6 insurrection. While frustrating for people in the business of using words to convey precise meaning, the fact that QAnon defies easy definition is exactly what makes it so powerful.

A recent poll found that 15 percent of Americans believe there is a cabal of liberal elites who worship Satan and traffic children for sex and blood. This is QAnons core tenet, but the movement contains multitudes. Adherents believe Donald J. Trump is battling the cabal, which, depending on whom you ask, may or may not comprise members of a reptilian alien race disguised as humans. Many followers also embrace conspiracy theories about Covid-19, Black Lives Matter, vaccines and the death of John F. Kennedy Jr. Skepticism and bigotry unite these disparate theories; authority, expertise and otherness are always suspect.

In Pastels and Pedophiles, Mia Bloom and Sophie Moskalenko, both experts on extremist radicalism, offer their own description of this bizarre new feature of American life. We consider QAnon to be like a sticky ball, rolling down a hill, they write. It picks up other conspiracies and their supporters along the way growing ever larger over time. Believers can cherry-pick ideas to suit their needs.

Bloom and Moskalenko seek to understand why people believe QAnons outlandish notions in defiance of all knowledge and reason. Pastels and Pedophiles is at its strongest when it drills down on this front, showing that QAnon offers people a false sense of agency and community in an uncertain world. Believers collectively analyze crumbs of cryptic information. The outcome of this deciphering is preordained, but thats not the point: When they reach conclusions, followers feel smart, superior and united. Particularly for people who are lonely or disenchanted with their lives, the emotional benefit of believing in QAnon is arguably more important than the dogma itself. The same goes for people introduced to QAnon through the hashtag #SavetheChildren, which the movement co-opted in 2020. New supporters were told that spreading a message about the threat of pedophilia made them righteous crusaders.

Where Pastels and Pedophiles stumbles is on matters of race and gender. The authors dance around the intersections of QAnon and white supremacy, never tackling them in earnest. They note that most QAnon believers arrested for storming the Capitol came from battleground states, but they dont discuss how racial identity may have informed the participants psychological distress over changing culture and eroding social norms. (The Jan. 6 insurrectionists were overwhelmingly white.) Meanwhile, the authors paint a terrifying picture of how suburban white women have pulled QAnon from the internets shadowy corners into pastel-hued Instagram squares but their description of what motivates QAmoms is underdeveloped. They suggest some combination of innate altruism and motherly instincts, along with a desire to make social activism easy: Women who did not feel comfortable with political topics like Black Lives Matter could engage with strangers online without triggering uncomfortable exchanges. Who would object to saving the children? But for many women, the children in question arent literal they are a symbol, a disembodied idea of innocence and goodness. The book leaves dangling threads about white womens self-interest masquerading as selflessness; the weaponization of their comfort; and what QAmoms notion of innocence and goodness might really mean.

Pastels and Pedophiles is a primer on one of the knottiest subjects of our time, and it will surely be helpful to uninitiated readers. But the sticky ball whose roll is shaking America has complex engineering. Only with a complete blueprint can we hope to combat it.

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Confronting the Threat of QAnon - The New York Times

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