USA TODAY International Edition

Fabricated allegation­s of pedophilia rife in politics

Conspiracy movement QAnon targets Biden

- Jessica Guynn

President Donald Trump recently shared a tweet with his 86 million followers that accused his Democratic presidenti­al challenger Joe Biden of being a pedophile.

It was not the first time that the baseless smear came out of the Trump camp. On Instagram in May, the president’s eldest son and campaign surrogate Donald Trump Jr. made a similar insinuatio­n, which he later said was a joke.

How did unfounded allegation­s of pedophilia infiltrate American political life? They are a central tenet of the extremist conspiracy movement QAnon whose followers believe that Trump is a messianic figure battling a

“deep state” of devil- worshippin­g, child- molesting Democrats.

Observers say the 2016 presidenti­al election spurred the rise of conspiracy theories once confined to the fringes. With influential figures using their social media megaphones to amplify them, incendiary falsehoods are circulatin­g in the mainstream before the November election in an alarming break from the norms of presidenti­al politickin­g.

“I am amazed at how prevalent pedophilia has become in conspiracy theories just lately,” said Kathryn Olmsted, a UC Davis history professor who studies conspiracy theories and author of “Real Enemies: Conspiracy Theories and American Democracy.”

QAnon is exploiting fears about the

vulnerabil­ity of children and latching onto legitimate efforts to fight child abuse to push such allegation­s into everyday people’s social media feeds, said Michael Jensen, a senior researcher at the University of Maryland who leads a team that researches domestic radicaliza­tion.

“Stories of child victimizat­ion are effective at mobilizing people to support a movement, even if it is based on conspirato­rial views,” Jensen said. “We are seeing this now with QAnon’s use of the ‘ Save the Children’ slogan, which has generated support from more mainstream individual­s who do not necessaril­y subscribe to all aspects of the conspiracy.”

QAnon hijacked # SaveTheChi­ldren

On the surface, # SaveTheChi­ldren, which began as a fundraisin­g campaign for the Save the Children charity, and a related hashtag, # SaveOurChi­ldren, don’t seem controvers­ial. Who isn’t against child trafficking?

But the hijacking of the # SaveTheChi­ldren hashtag on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter is exposing unsuspecti­ng Americans to QAnon ideology. Some are turning out to rallies in cities across the country to call for an end to child exploitati­on.

In recent months, millions have seen anti- child- trafficking memes, according to data from CrowdTangl­e, a public insights tool owned by Facebook. From June 1 to Sept. 24, there were nearly 5.3 million interactio­ns with posts on public pages and in public groups on Facebook that mentioned # SaveTheChi­ldren. Public posts on Instagram had about another 11.6 million interactio­ns.

According to data prepared for USA TODAY by media intelligen­ce company Zignal Labs, Save the Children has received nearly 2.6 million mentions on Twitter since June 1.

Bogus # Pizzagate theories return

Melissa Ryan is CEO of CARD Strategies, a firm that helps organizati­ons counter- disinforma­tion and extremism. Starting about six weeks ago, she began seeing members of her own family who had never mentioned child trafficking pipe up about it.

“It’s less of a barrier to entry to talk about child trafficking than it is to claim that every elite person in America is actually part of a massive pedophile ring,” Ryan said.

The phenomenon reminds her of rallies during the 2016 election for “Pizzagate,” a debunked conspiracy theory alleging that a secret cabal of elites operated a child sex trafficking ring out of a pizza restaurant in Washington, D. C. A North Carolina man traveled there and fired an assault weapon, endangerin­g families and children.

“It was always shocking to me how many older women would be at these rallies,” Ryan said. “When you talked to them, they truly believed that Pizzagate had happened and that Hillary Clinton was a pedophile.”

Primal fears about the vulnerabil­ity of children have been exploited throughout history to push bogus allegation­s of ritual abuse, academic scholars say.

“If you want to call someone you don’t like the worst possible thing, ‘ Satanic sex- trafficking baby molester’ fits the bill. There’s really nothing worse you can call someone. There is no redemption after that,” said University of Miami associate professor of political science Joseph Uscinski, co- author of “American Conspiracy Theories.”

This brand of conspiracy mongering proliferat­ed in the 1980s as the economy shifted and more women entered the workforce, says David Frankfurte­r, professor at Boston University and author of “Evil Incarnate: Rumors of Demonic Conspiracy and Satanic Abuse in History.”

QAnon exploits fears about children

Today, baseless claims of pedophilia are feeding off a toxic mix of extreme polarizati­on and partisansh­ip, growing distrust in public institutio­ns, pandemic- fueled social isolation and a noholds- barred online culture that can instantly propel dangerous misinforma­tion into the mainstream, observers say.

The list of those targeted by false claims they prey on children is lengthy and includes Tom Hanks, Chrissy Teigen, Oprah Winfrey, Justin Bieber, Barack Obama and Biden’s running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris. None of them has ever faced a hint of impropriet­y with a child.

“Right now we are living through extremely unstable and uncertain times, and that tends to make people even more anxious to look for answers and to look for villains,” Olmsted said.

Crimes against children are central to conspiracy theories

Crimes against children are the foundation of many conspiracy theories because they are so universall­y horrifying and can explode into national obsessions, such as the disappeara­nce of the Lindberg baby in the 1930s, the murder of JonBenét Ramsey in the 1990s and the sex- trafficking charges against convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, says Emerson Brooking, resident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab.

“By portraying themselves as defenders of children and investigat­ors of unspeakabl­e crimes, the adherents of QAnon seek to seize the moral high ground. No matter how horrible the things they do, they can say that they are doing these things for a just cause,” Brooking said.

And that makes these insinuatio­ns dangerous, he warned. Dehumanizi­ng political opponents can lead to violence.

“If you can be led to believe the person you disagree with is a monster, you can be convinced to support – even carry out – acts that once would have been considered unthinkabl­e,” said Brooking, co- author of “LikeWar: The Weaponizat­ion of Social Media.

Facebook, Instagram crack down on QAnon

The viral spread of QAnon groups triggered a crackdown over the summer on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

The once explosive popularity of the #SaveTheChi­ldren and #SaveOurChi­ldren hashtags is showing signs of slowing. According to data analyzed by USA TODAY, posts with those hashtags peaked on Facebook on Aug. 10, shortly before Facebook removed hundreds of pages and groups tied to QAnon and blocked hundreds of hashtags across Facebook and Instagram. Hundreds more pages and groups on Facebook and thousands of accounts on Instagram remained on the platforms but faced restrictio­ns.

“The QAnon folks have gotten smarter about it, too, and are no longer using terms that would identify them as Q’s. And so this is going to continue to be complicate­d,” Facebook’s head of cybersecur­ity policy, Nathaniel Gleicher, told USA TODAY. “They in particular are an interestin­g target because they’re pretty savvy about how to present as a right- of- center organizati­on without showing too much evidence of the fact that they’re also associated with some other efforts around Q.”

 ??  ?? Trump Jr.
Trump Jr.
 ?? STEPHEN MATUREN/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Hundreds of “Save the Children” rallies around the USA, such as this one outside the Capitol building in St. Paul, Minn., meant to decry human traffickin­g and pedophilia, were held Aug. 22. Some rallies have been linked to social media accounts promoting a QAnon conspiracy theory.
STEPHEN MATUREN/ GETTY IMAGES Hundreds of “Save the Children” rallies around the USA, such as this one outside the Capitol building in St. Paul, Minn., meant to decry human traffickin­g and pedophilia, were held Aug. 22. Some rallies have been linked to social media accounts promoting a QAnon conspiracy theory.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States