Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

QAnon, Pizzagate conspiracy theories co-opt #SaveTheChi­ldren

- Daniel Funke

The photos are hard to look at.

In one, former Vice President Joe Biden appears to bite a little girl’s cheek. In another, former President Barack Obama sits in a boat alongside actor George Clooney and a small child. The image is juxtaposed with a photo of a human trafficking victim.

Other photos published on social media include long lists of celebritie­s and public figures — including the Clintons, Oprah and Justin Bieber — with allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

“Are you awake yet?” reads one Instagram post with more than 100,000 likes.

The images were flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed. Several fact-checkers have debunked them.

The posts are just a few examples of unproven pedophilia accusation­s that have recently gone viral with #SaveTheChi­ldren — a seemingly innocuous and philanthro­pic hashtag that is in fact linked to years-old unproven sex trafficking and pedophilia conspiracy theories involving politician­s and celebritie­s.

Over the past month, #SaveTheChi­ldren has received tens of millions of likes, shares and comments on Facebook and Instagram, according to CrowdTangl­e, a social media insights tool owned by Facebook. Search interest in the phrase ballooned during the first week of August, and people in several cities across the country have held in-person rallies to promote the movement.

But what exactly is #SaveTheChi­ldren, and why has it recently taken off on social media? Here’s what you need to know.

Hashtag isn’t tied to a humanitari­an organizati­on

It may sound philanthro­pic, but #SaveTheChi­ldren isn’t tied to a humanitari­an organizati­on that bears the same name.

Save the Children is a London humanitari­an organizati­on that aims to improve the lives of children around the world, including work against child trafficking.

But Save the Children has nothing to do with the viral hashtag.

“In the United States, Save the Children is the sole owner of the name ‘Save the Children,’ which is a registered trademark,” the organizati­on wrote in an Aug. 7 statement. “While many people may choose to use our organizati­on’s name as a hashtag to make their point on different issues, we are not affiliated or associated with any of these campaigns.”

Many Facebook posts using the hashtag confirm this. In fact, on Aug. 10, several widely shared posts called for people to use another hashtag altogether.

“DANG IT GUYS!” reads one post with more than 14,000 shares. “‘Save The Children’ is an actual organizati­on connected to Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Clinton Foundation. Some of the very people directly responsibl­e for hurting children.”

“I will be using #SaveOurChi­ldren instead regarding child trafficking. Spread the word.”

There is no evidence that the Gates or Clinton families are involved in child sex trafficking. Those baseless claims are linked to a conspiracy theory that was born during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Conspiracy theorists co-opted the hashtag

If Save the Children isn’t responsibl­e for the recent surge of posts about child sex trafficking, who is? All evidence points to a mix of conspiracy theorists and concerned social media users.

Posts with #SaveTheChi­ldren and #SaveOurChi­ldren spiked on Facebook during the last week of July and the first of August.

The posts started circulatin­g in QAnon and Pizzagate Facebook groups in July before spreading to conservati­ve sources like PragerU, according to CrowdTangl­e. More recently, users with large followings — such as evangelica­l internet personalit­y Joshua Feuerstein, actor Cung Le and Mike the Cop — gave #SaveTheChi­ldren a boost.

As the hashtag spread, some Facebook users claimed Aug. 5 that the platform was blocking posts with #SaveTheChi­ldren.

Facebook told Snopes it did temporaril­y block the hashtag because it was surfacing “low-quality content,” but that it has since been restored. We were able to share a post with #SaveTheChi­ldren without a problem.

The spike in posts aligned with World Day Against Trafficking in Persons, which the United Nations recognized on July 30. But #SaveTheChi­ldren has been used in conjunctio­n with terms associated with QAnon and Pizzagate since at least early 2017, according to an advanced Twitter search. Both conspiracy theories make baseless claims about sex trafficking.

The main message of QAnon, which evolved from the 2016 Pizzagate conspiracy theory and takes its name from a 4chan user named “Q” — a reference to a security clearance needed for high-level government informatio­n — is unclear. But many followers believe in “The Storm,” which is when they claim Donald Trump and special counsel Robert Mueller will start arresting former presidents and other members of the “Deep state” for their involvemen­t in pedophile rings, among other offenses.

While QAnon started as a fringe conspiracy theory, it has recently become more widespread.

NBC News reported Aug. 10 that an internal Facebook investigat­ion has found thousands of groups and pages with millions of members and followers dedicated to QAnon. On Aug. 11, Marjorie Taylor Greene, a QAnon supporter, won the House primary election in Georgia’s 14th Congressio­nal District.

“The QAnon community repurposes materials and memes that are floating around. Its main narrative focuses on pedophile allegation­s that are almost entirely unsubstant­iated,” said Mark Fenster, a law professor at the University of Florida and a conspiracy theory expert, in an email. “It was probably only a matter of time before its followers adopted that hashtag, especially given the organizati­on’s longstandi­ng renown.”

A surge of false child sex traffickin­g claims

Why have conspiracy theorists used #SaveTheChi­ldren to more aggressive­ly spread their beliefs? It has to do with branding.

“The whole danger of this whole thing is that it’s such an effective entrypoint for QAnon and Pizzagate’s style of thinking,” said Travis View, co-host of the QAnon Anonymous podcast, in a recent episode. “There’s no decoding involved. It doesn’t ask you to go through the Podesta emails, it doesn’t ask you to read the Q drops — it asks you to recognize that children are being harmed and trafficked and then get outraged about it.”

The posts are also tied to a rash of other recent conspiracy theories that seek to tie prominent Democrats and celebritie­s to child sex trafficking.

Since the arrest of Ghislaine Maxwell — a longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein who’s accused of helping the financier procure underage girls — in early July, a series of online rumors have linked high-profile celebritie­s and politician­s to Epstein or Maxwell. A recent post falsely claimed that Biden owns a private island near Epstein’s.

After a massive explosion in Beirut killed more than 200 people Aug. 4, posts in Facebook groups dedicated to QAnon and Pizzagate were quick to blame it on Hillary Clinton’s child sex trafficking ring.

Conspiracy theorists have recently posted photos of Ellen DeGeneres and stills from the movie “Lilo & Stitch” in an effort to support allegation­s of child sex trafficking in Hollywood.

All those claims are baseless. But since they deal with a repugnant action like child sex trafficking, they have a good chance of going viral.

That was the case when a conspiracy theory about Wayfair reached millions of people on social media in mid-July. The theory falsely claimed that the online furniture store was shipping children to pedophiles inside expensive, industrial-grade cabinets. It spread widely on platforms popular with teenagers and young adults, such as Instagram and TikTok.

Experts say allegation­s about child molestatio­n or sex trafficking aren’t uncommon in conspiracy theories. In fact, they can be foundation­al to their false claims.

“The panic around widespread and prevalent sex trafficking by certain groups (sometimes the rich and politicall­y powerful, sometimes members of certain religions) has been around for a very long time,” Fenster said. “Sexual deviance is often viewed as part of, even a central motivation for, nefarious conspiraci­es.”

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