Waikato Times

Fringe QAnon group still awaiting JFK Jr’s arrival

- – TNS

Weeks after they first gathered near Dealey Plaza, dozens of believers in the furthest fringe of the QAnon conspiracy theory remain in Dallas, expecting longdead John F Kennedy Jr to reveal himself in the city where his father was assassinat­ed and usher in the reinstatem­ent of Donald Trump as president.

While their beliefs are absurd, the fervency and devotion of this particular group, along with their loyalty to a leader known as Negative48 and unwillingn­ess to leave Dallas, is unique – and cause for alarm and concern, according to an expert who has followed QAnon for years.

‘‘I think what you’re seeing here is really, undeniably a cult,’’ said Mike Rothschild, author of

The Storm Is Upon Us, which chronicles the rise of, and fallout from, QAnon.

The leader of the group is Michael Brian Protzman, a Washington man who amassed a following on social media with his version of gematria, a Hebrew numerology language. Interpreti­ng codes that include numbers and letters, and using elements of Christiani­ty and QAnon, his followers have come to believe that Kennedy, who died in a plane crash in 1999, will reappear in Dallas and commence a new Trump administra­tion.

Some of Protzman’s followers believe President John F Kennedy wasn’t assassinat­ed in 1963; others believe he was, but then resurrecte­d as a messiah shortly thereafter.

Despite the failure of either Kennedy – or other dead celebritie­s who were expected, including Michael Jackson and Princess Diana – to appear during the initial November 2 rally that drew hundreds to downtown Dallas, a hardcore group of Protzman’s followers remains in Dallas, expecting their arrival.

Even some of the more mainstream believers of the QAnon conspiracy theory – which is based on the premise that a cabal of liberal celebritie­s and politician­s participat­e in a child sexabuse ring and will be executed upon Trump’s reinstatem­ent – think Negative48 is too fringy, Rothschild said. The group is also distinct from the larger umbrella of QAnon because it has a leader able to persuade hundreds of people from across the country to come to Dallas. Protzman’s followers take direction from him; days after the initial rally, they lined up single-file in Dealey Plaza, appearing to await his instructio­ns.

‘‘There is absolutely behaviour control and thought control,’’ Rothschild said. ‘‘He’s telling people what to do. He’s having people stand in straight lines to have conversati­ons. He’s telling people when to go outside, when to look up, when to look down. It is unquestion­ably the behaviour of a cult leader.’’

Another distinctio­n between the Negative48 group and the larger QAnon is one that ostensibly makes Protzman’s group more benign, Rothschild said: Neither Protzman nor his followers have shown a propensity for violence.

While many QAnon believers think prominent politician­s and celebritie­s will be executed by military tribunals, the rhetoric from Protzman’s group has been more low-key: They’re simply waiting for a dead man to reveal himself.

‘‘This feels almost like an old hippie love-in in some kind of way,’’ Rothschild said. ‘‘It’s much more about hidden truths and secret knowledge than it is about taking up arms against the government. That might come down the line – I really hope it doesn’t.’’ Rothschild says the group should be taken seriously – not as a threat, but as a warning for how behaviour can be influenced.

‘‘If you’ve been in Dallas for weeks waiting for JFK Jr and Michael Jackson to come back, what do you do when you go home to your family? Do you say, ‘Sorry, I was wrong?’ You stick with it,’’ Rothschild said. ‘‘And the longer it goes on, and the deeper you get into it, the harder it gets to get out of it.’’

 ?? TNS ?? A woman waves a Donald Trump and John F Kennedy Jr flag along Elm St at Dealey Plaza in downtown Dallas.
TNS A woman waves a Donald Trump and John F Kennedy Jr flag along Elm St at Dealey Plaza in downtown Dallas.

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