Newsweek International

Can Science Stop QAnon?

THE FIRST THREE “NODES” OF the conspiracy-theory network known as QAnon arose in 2018 in the persons of founders Tracy Diaz, Paul Furber and Coleman Rogers.

They had figured out how to profit from promoting the posts of “Q,” a mysterious figure claiming to have inside information on a mass arrest, undertaken with the blessing of President Trump, that nabbed Hillary Clinton and others for running a pedophile ring. They interpreted, analyzed and amplified Q’s cryptic ramblings of a massive Satanic child-sex-trafficking, blood-drinking cult run by prominent Democrats, among other dubious stories, on YouTube, Reddit, Facebook, Instagram, 8chan and other social media outlets. Over several years, they racked up hundreds of millions of “follows,” “likes” and “shares”—each connection extending their reach outward, like spokes in a wheel, to new followers, each of whom became another node in the network.

QAnon is now a firmly entrenched and quickly growing force of disruption in the American information landscape. President Trump, perhaps QAnon’s most influential promoter, had as of August retweeted or mentioned 129 different Twitter accounts associated with QAnon, according to non-profit research group Media Matters for America. QAnon distributes conspiracy theories and other forms of disinformation and foments violence. In the “Pizzagate” episode in 2016, a man burst into Cosmic Pizza in Washington, D.C., firing an AR-15 assault rifle, to rescue child sex-slaves (only to find people eating pizza). QAnon believers have committed at least two murders and a child kidnapping, set one California wildfire ablaze, blocked a bridge by the Hoover Dam, occupied a cement plant in Tucson, Arizona, and plotted to assassinate Joe Biden. One man now facing charges for plotting the kidnapping of Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer posted QAnon conspiracy theories on his Facebook page.

The tech industry’s efforts to contain QAnon have failed to slow its spread. The FBI declared QAnon a terrorist organization in May 2019, even while Facebook remained one of the network’s principal enablers. The company’s own internal investigation, the results of which were leaked in August, had identified more than three million members and followers on its platform, though the true number might be substantially higher. Yet it took until October 6 for Facebook to ban all QAnon groups and pages,as well as

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