Dayton Daily News

The leader of the QAnon conspiracy theory returns

- Stuart A. Thompson

After more than a year of silence, the mysterious figure behind the QAnon conspiracy theory has reappeared.

The figure, who is known only as Q, posted for the first time in over a year on Friday on 8kun, the anonymous message board where the account last appeared. “Shall we play the game again?” a post read in the account’s typical cryptic style. The account that posted had a unique identifier used on previous Q posts.

The posts surprised disinforma­tion researcher­s and signaled the ominous return of a figure whose conspiracy theories about an imaginary ring of elite sex trafficker­s marshaled support for then-President Donald Trump. Message boards and Telegram channels devoted to QAnon lit up with the news as followers speculated about the meaning of Q’s return.

The QAnon conspiracy theory emerged in late 2017 from anonymous message boards where it quickly appealed to a large number of Trump supporters. Q published a series of cryptic messages about overthrowi­ng an elite “cabal” of sex trafficker­s. Followers believed that Q had a role in the Trump administra­tion or the military and that Trump was working to arrest and prosecute child abusers and Democrats.

The movement seemed to culminate in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Some people who stormed the building wore QAnon T-shirts or held signs reading “Q sent me.” Polling around the time showed that 1 in 5 believed the conspiracy theory.

When President Joe Biden was sworn into office, it seemed clear that none of Q’s most fantastica­l and gruesome prediction­s — about Trump arresting and trying Democrats in a series of military tribunals and public executions — would come true. Q’s account stopped posting soon after Trump’s defeat in 2020.

While the QAnon community limped along in the months since Q’s disappeara­nce, it seemed to bristle again this past week with a series of groundbrea­king Supreme Court rulings, culminatin­g Friday with a decision that ended the constituti­onal right to an abortion.

When an anonymous user on 8kun asked why Q was gone for so long, the account replied, “It had to be done this way.”

The account posted a third time, writing, “Are you ready to serve your country again? Remember your oath.”

The return comes at an important time for one of QAnon’s leading figures: Ron Watkins, a 30-something computer programmer and a former administra­tor of 8kun who is widely believed to be the person behind Q.

Watkins is running a longshot bid for a congressio­nal seat in Arizona’s second district in the Aug. 2 primary. Watkins has denied having any involvemen­t with Q.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States