Chattanooga Times Free Press

HOW THE QANON CONSPIRACY SEDUCES NORMAL PEOPLE

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QAnon is such a weird theory that it’s tempting to think humanity is getting dumber. But it’s better seen as a highly sophistica­ted way of manipulati­ng people. QAnon may one day be considered a masterpiec­e of propaganda.

This cult-like belief revolves around a conspiracy theory in which prominent Democrats and Hollywood celebritie­s are systematic­ally victimizin­g children to extract something called adrenochro­me from their blood. They consume this substance, so the story goes, as both a youth elixir and a recreation­al drug.

People may believe the theory, or parts of it, are true, even if they don’t know that it’s called QAnon. In a December 2020 NPR/Ipsos poll, 17% of Americans said that they thought it was true that “a group of Satan-worshippin­g elites who run a child sex ring are trying to control our politics and media,” and another 37% said they weren’t sure.

Why would anyone believe this, let alone so many people?

One reason is that believers discover the details of this conspiracy theory for themselves by solving puzzles and finding clues called “drops.” Game designer Reed Berkowitz says he quickly recognized QAnon as a kind of a game known as an alternate reality game. These are fictional stories that send people out into the real world to gather clues. On the way, players encounter others who are engaged in the same hunt.

Berkowitz doesn’t just think QAnon is like a game — he thinks it is a game, though he says it was intended to fool people into thinking it’s real. When people get find drops, they are mean to look like valuable, high-level leaks.

The drops are designed to make people feel a sense of discovery, something believers find highly rewarding. In a piece he wrote for Medium, Berkowitz argues that when people think they’ve found an idea themselves, they become attached to it. And they get pleasure from it.

When I talked to him by phone, he said alternate reality games use something called rabbit holes to send people in search of clues. The games can lead to phone calls and real meetings between players. Reality and fantasy blend, but the players recognize they are taking part in a game.

QAnon, he says, looks like something created with a purpose in mind. “I absolutely think that somebody is designing it and promoting it,” he says. The purpose is propaganda. The game leads people to distrust mainstream media, politician­s and medicine, including COVID-19 vaccinatio­n campaigns. It also leads them to antisemiti­c and racist beliefs. Players may or may not believe the literal truth of the blood-draining story, but they tend to be bonded by ideology and feelings of distrust.

The community reinforces those ties, says Berkowitz. The game is designed to reward people with social credit when they figure out the “correct” answer, which is the answer the QAnon designer or designers had planned all along.

Simon DeDeo, a social scientist at Carnegie Mellon University, says people too easily dismiss believers in conspiracy theories as stupid. And that makes it hard to understand why these explanatio­ns draw people in.

Facebook, Reddit, YouTube and Twitter are the perfect soil for this sort of thing to bloom, bringing together users seduced by the lure of discovery. If people are engaged in QAnon, social media gives them more, until people are storming the U.S. Capitol.

Now that social media is becoming many people’s only social outlet, we can expect more conspiracy theories to spread.

There is no new normal without real-world social interactio­ns. There’s only a new abnormal.

 ??  ?? Faye Flam
Faye Flam

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