Pastels and pedophiles Inside the mind of QAnon

Mia Bloom, 1968-

Book - 2021

"In January 2021, thousands descended on the U.S. Capitol to aid President Donald Trump in combating a shadowy cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles. Two women died that day. They, like the millions of Americans who believe that a mysterious insider known as "Q" is exposing a vast deep-state conspiracy, were members of "pastel QAnon," a subgroup of mostly middle-class educated women that answered the call to "save the children." With Pastels and Pedophiles, Mia Bloom and Sophia Moskalenko explain why the rise of pastel QAnon should not surprise us: women have been manipulated to follow the baseless conspiracy. They track QAnon's unexpected leap from the darkest corners of the Internet to the filtered ...glow of yogi mama Instagram, fed by the COVID-19 pandemic that supercharged conspiracy theories and spurred a fresh wave of Q-inspired violence, and connect the dots for readers. Pastels and Pedophiles shows how a conspiracy theory with its roots in centuries-old anti-Semitic hate has adapted to encompass local grievances and has metastasized around the globe-appealing to a wide range of alienated people who feel that something is not quite right in the world around them. While QAnon claims to hate Hollywood, the book demonstrates how much of Q mythology is ripped from movie and television plot lines. Finally, Pastels and Pedophiles lays out what can be done about QAnon's corrosive effect on society to bring Q followers out of the rabbit hole back into the light"--

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Subjects
Published
Stanford, California : Redwood Press, an imprint of Stanford University Press 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Mia Bloom, 1968- (author)
Other Authors
Sophia Moskalenko (author)
Physical Description
ix, 243 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781503630291
  • Acknowledgments
  • 1. Loony Lies and Conspiracies: Making Sense of QAnon
  • 2. January 6, 2021: Capitol Hill, the Failed Insurrection
  • 3. Red-Pilling, Right-Wing Conspiracies, and Radicalization
  • 4. Life After Q
  • 5. Qontagion
  • 6. FaQs
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

QAnon is a murky but widespread right-wing movement that began as a conspiracy theory about a supposed pedophile elite of liberals who kill children, harvest their adrenochrome, and maybe even eat them. It has also proved adept at incorporating other fringe beliefs, such as pandemic denialism and anti-vaccination. This book is one of the first studies of QAnon, and it shows signs of being hastily produced. Still, it is a useful, enlightening study tracing the convoluted origins and promoters of QAnon. An insidious aspect is the movement's "scavenger hunt" style of presentation, which draws people in and provides them with the continuous gratification of discovering secrets and belonging to a community. As the authors point out, this trait became particularly significant during pandemic quarantines, when many people turned to social media for companionship. Another revelation is the prominent role of women (known as pastels) in QAnon, unlike other right-wing groups, which are typically male dominated. Pastels and Pedophiles is a great book for anyone seeking a basic, reliable introduction to the phenomenon of QAnon. Summing Up: Recommended. With reservations. Undergraduates through faculty and general readers. --Ronald Harold Fritze, Athens State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An international security scholar teams up with a psychologist specializing in radicalization to explore the QAnon movement. QAnon, a congeries of conspiracy theories whose origins lie in a curious blend of popular culture, science fiction, and deep-rooted antisemitism, has swept up millions of people of varying ideologies and levels of education. Bloom and Moskalenko quote David Gilbert from Vice News: "There are highly educated people that fall into these movements, and it is dangerous and remiss to pigeonhole QAnon followers according to educational attainment or social status." Even so, write the authors, QAnon is a magnet for the mentally ill, particularly people suffering from PTSD, one manifestation of which is "the feeling of not belonging." Other forms of anomie and detachment are evident throughout the movement. An unusually large segment of members are women, who "have been at the forefront of white racist movements for the past 100 years." Such women have been responsible for numerous crimes, and those involved in QAnon were well represented in the attack on the Capitol of Jan. 6, 2021. Oddly, the authors note, there are connections between QAnon and the fuzzy New Age movement, which shares a mistrust of corporations, government, and the media and a view that all are dark forces bent on poisoning minds and bodies. With the canonical doctrine that Democrats are satanic pedophiles and that Donald Trump is the only person on the planet who can combat them (and their "Jewish space lasers"), we're on the dark side of the moon indeed. And it just gets weirder, but more urgent, with QAnon planks that paint Tom Hanks and Oprah Winfrey as agents of a movement meant to destroy the Constitution and enslave those who don't share their liberal views. The authors close with the note that the madness is contagious and that QAnon views have spread to dozens of other countries. A revealing--and disturbing--analysis of a dangerous threat to American democracy. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 LOONY LIES AND CONSPIRACIES Making Sense of QAnon Background and Context The screen is dark with eerie music playing in the background. The music reaches a crescendo, and a flaming Q appears as a deep voice reveals, "8 million children are missing!" According to the video, the children are being bred specifically for their blood and body parts, they are missing birth certificates so there is no way to trace them, and our (U.S.) government is doing nothing about it--in fact they are participating in the blood lust. The only person on the planet, who can save the children, is Donald John Trump. Welcome to the universe of QAnon. QAnon is a baseless conspiracy theory from the darkest underbelly of the Internet. Named after the Department of Energy's highest level of security clearance, a Q clearance is related to access to nuclear weapons' designs but not to other national security concerns. The conspiracy theory conceives that former President Trump is fighting a battle against a "deep-state" cabal of Democratic saboteurs who worship Satan and traffic children for sex or for their blood. QAnon burst onto the scene in October 2017 with predictions that the National Guard was about to arrest Hillary Clinton. On October 28, an anonymous user browsing the /pol/ section of 4chan, a notorious alt-right imageboard, saw a post that read, "Hillary Clinton will be arrested between 7:45 AM -- 8:30 AM EST on Monday -- the morning on Oct 30, 2017." This user would later adopt the name "Q Clearance Patriot" (shortened to "Q"). Q hinted that they were a military officer in former President Trump's inner circle; their writings--almost 5,000--gave birth to the QAnon conspiracy theory. This original Q post was on the 4chan site, which was launched in 2003. There have been several "chans," including 2chan, 4chan, and 8chan. Historically, the chans, which originated in Asia, were the purview of involuntary celibates (incels), anarchists, and nihilists before spreading to the United States. The 4chan site hosts discussion boards dedicated to different topics, from anime and manga to video games and porn. As QAnon evolved, it moved from 4chan to other social media platforms, and its messages spread to Facebook, Instagram, Parler, TikTok, and even to Nextdoor and Peloton. In a short four years, QAnon metastasized from a fringe movement on anonymous message boards into a cultlike movement, with millions of followers around the world--one that has captured the imagination and practically seized control of the Republican Party. More surprisingly, it has ensnared many women, causing incalculable damage to families and resulted in murders, kidnappings, and intense partisanship in U.S. politics, as you will read in this book. There were 97 QAnon-supporting candidates in the 2020 primaries, of which 22 Republicans and 2 Independents were victorious and ran in the November 2020 elections. In 2021 a freshman senator from Georgia was removed from her committee assignments; a second freshman senator from Colorado is being investigated for aiding and abetting a failed coup. And, instead of shunning the baseless conspiracy, the Republican Party appears to have embraced it. Statistics show a steady climb in the percentage of QAnon believers in the United States from 5 percent in 2019 to 10 percent in 2020 to 17 percent in February 2021. An NPR/Ipsos poll revealed 17 percent of Americans believe a group of Satan-worshipping, child-enslaving elites want to control the world. Equally disturbing is that another 37 percent aren't sure whether the allegations are completely false. David Gilbert from Vice News explained that: QAnon followers come from all walks of life--they are liberals, conservatives, PhDs, lawyers, doctors. There are highly educated people that fall into these movements and it is dangerous and remiss to pigeon-hole QAnon followers ac- cording to educational attainment or social status. Marc-André Argentino, a PhD candidate from Montreal who studies the conspiracy, criticized the Democratic National Committee when they launched a $500,000 ad campaign in February 2021 that offered the GOP a choice between being "the party of QAnon or appealing to college educated voters." Argentino insisted that QAnon comprises people of all educational levels, and he railed on Twitter: "Can we stop saying these are uneducated people, that they are crazy and wear tinfoil hats?" The increasing number of people who believe in QAnon and the range of socioeconomic and educational strata to which it appeals mean that it is highly likely someone in your family or among your friends believes that QAnon is real. What is QAnon? Why do ordinarily sane people believe something so outrageous? How did we get here? And can we fix the problem? This book seeks to answer all of these questions. We examine the possible identity of Q, trace the origins of QAnon to long- entrenched anti-Semitic tropes, explore why women have been especially vulnerable to QAnon, and explain psychologically how Q has managed to take root in the U.S. body politic. What Is QAnon? By now, you have probably seen and heard about QAnon: a baseless conspiracy theory that claims there is a secret cabal of devil-worshipping Democrats and elites that feed off the blood of children. Like its predecessor Pizzagate (discussed in Chapter 2), which was another social media rumor alleging that Hillary Clinton was operating a child-trafficking scheme from Comet Ping Pong pizzeria, QAnon began on the chans in a series of forum posts. Its origins are hotly debated: Did it start as a puzzle, or a joke, or even as the basis for a live-action role-playing (LARP) game? The nature of QAnon and the complexity of the posts changed as it moved through different areas of the Inter- net before ending up on the Facebook feed of your family and coworkers. The core conspiracy claim of QAnon is that there is a "deep state," and the only person who is capable of fighting it and preventing a dystopian future (like the one depicted in film The Purge ) is Donald Trump. Who Is Q? No one really knows definitively who Q is. Theories vary widely, according to Vice News and HBO documentaries tracking down the identity of Q. Some say that it is Edward Snowden, retired U.S. Army Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, or even Alex Jones. The HBO documentary Q: Into the Storm settled on Ron Watkins, the son of Jim Watkins--known by his computer alias "CodeMonkeyZ." Q began posting in October 2017, feigning that they were a high-level intelligence operative with a Q-level security clearance. Based on months of research by Vice News, there appeared to be several possibilities for Q's identity, four of which we present below. As researchers have sought to identify who Q is and debate the likely identities, it is equally plausible that whoever was posting as Q might have changed a few times--a literary ruse used in shows like Gossip Girl or Bridgerton . Terrorism expert Clint Watts has likened Q to the fictional character "Dread Pirate Roberts" in the film The Princess Bride . In the film there is no ONE pirate named Roberts, but the name is passed down every few years to someone else. Westley explains this baton passing to Buttercup: Roberts had grown so rich, he wanted to retire . . . he told me his secret. "I am not the Dread Pirate Roberts, . . . my name is Ryan; I inherited the ship from the previous Dread Pirate Roberts. . . . He was not the real Dread Pirate Roberts either. His name was Cummerbund. The real Roberts has been retired fifteen years and living like a king in Patagonia." It was the name that mattered. It is also possible that the original Q began posting for the LOLs or "lolz"--as they call "shit posting"--by adding vague Nostradamus-like predictions. This is what most people without much experience with 4chan might have misunderstood: that much of the content was meant to be sarcastic or not serious. At the outset it was not clear whether Q was real or a fictional game. But its gamelike characteristics were precisely what appealed to the 4chan audience and kept them engaged. Vice News investigated and observed: Part of the QAnon appeal lies in its game-like quality. Followers wait for clues left by "Q" on a message board. When the clues appear, believers dissect the riddle-like posts along- side Trump's speeches and tweets and news articles in an effort to validate the main narrative that Trump is winning a war against evil. So let's begin with the first person claiming to be Q. Excerpted from Pastels and Pedophiles: Inside the Mind of QAnon by Mia Bloom, Sophia Moskalenko All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.