The Morning Call

Why QAnon is a significan­t national security threat

- By Jason Blazakis Jason Blazakis is a professor of practice at the Middlebury Institute’s Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterter­rorism and a senior research fellow at the Soufan Center. This piece originally ran in the Los Angeles Times.

It would be a mistake to believe that the election of Joseph R. Biden as president will silence the QAnon movement. Adherents of the conspiracy theory made former President Donald Trump into a quasi-religious figure, and when he lost the November election it forced them to confront a reality that challenged the essence of their belief system.

So they did what cults often do — and bent their narrative.

Instead of admitting defeat, some QAnon followers are promoting a new convoluted conspiracy theory with the outcome they desire: Trump will once again be sworn in as president of the United States on March 4.

The most radical QAnon believers exhibit traits that have manifested among dangerous cults and doomsday groups — a willingnes­s to dismiss their own individual­ity for a perceived greater good. These disciples often shun their families and friends in favor of QAnon fantasies. They identify with a calling to participat­e in a movement and share a belief that they are improving society, or themselves, in a new way.

Members of the QAnon movement seem to truly believe they are fighting a secret cabal of elites who are engaged in the exploitati­on of children. Believers often wear clothes adorned with the letter “Q” and use slogans such as “Where we go one, we go all” as mantras to illustrate their commitment to a belief system.

Despite repeated prediction­s associated with the QAnon movement proving to be false — such as the arrival of an apocalypti­c storm that would destroy the “deep state” during Trump’s presidency — the conspiracy theory continues to captivate followers by morphing its messaging to remain relevant.

For more than a decade, I had observed that phenomenon as a federal government official charged with sanctionin­g groups and individual­s as

“terrorists.” By examining classified and unclassifi­ed research, I came to know the vicissitud­es of ethno-nationalis­t separatist­s, religiousl­y motivated extremists, left- and right-wing radicals and cults.

The followers of Q — an anonymous figure thought to be an individual or a group of people — more than fit the pattern. The QAnon movement has successful­ly blended elements of religious and cult-like practices to harden QAnon individual belief systems of its

most ardent supporters. Because of this, I remain highly concerned that the QAnon movement constitute­s a significan­t national security threat.

In 2017, Q began anonymousl­y posting conspiracy theories. The first one purported to explain that Hillary Clinton was about to be arrested and her passport had been flagged in case she tried to flee the U.S. It was relatively straightfo­rward and wrong.

Future posts, known as Q-drops, were inchoate. Q’s followers, some

of whom attracted large social media followings, would feverishly try to decrypt Q’s riddles. Over time, the posts and decryption­s began to take on more religious and violent overtones. And, ominously, they began to attract more followers.

Most cults have easily identifiab­le leadership figures who push members to the edifice of a belief system, but Q remains ethereal even while delivering messages to the faithful for four years. Trump’s outsized presence brought him a messianic-like following within the movement.

Together, Q and Trump are an ample substitute for a clear cult-like figure. According to the most zealous of believers, if Trump or Q say something, it must be true — or eventually will be.

And if someone cannot see the so-called truth, they aren’t looking hard enough. A refrain among QAnon adherents I track online is “dig deeper.” The phrase is often uttered by seemingly hardcore believers and is directed at those who begin to question the conspiracy theory or say they cannot see it.

In 2020, amid a global pandemic and a contentiou­s U.S. presidenti­al race, the QAnon conspiracy theory took on even more sinister overtones. The language of QAnon began to parallel that of previous cult leaders who had encouraged followers to take another step forward toward full indoctrina­tion — a step that could result in self-harm or staging an attack.

The QAnon community brandishes religious imagery and repurposes theories to fit new truths. Q’s theory about an impending storm where global elites are vanquished is a recurring end-times scenario in many religions, including Christiani­ty. The predicted storm is still coming, they now say, when Trump retakes power on March 4.

Like the cults that came before them, the followers of QAnon see great purpose in what they do — they believe they are saving God’s children.

When March 4 comes and goes, and President Biden remains firmly in power, the threat of violence by QAnon conspiraci­sts will persist. They’ll simply shift their narrative, hatch new plots and repurpose old ones — and endure as a potentiall­y deadly menace.

 ?? STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY ?? A person wears a QAnon sweatshirt during a pro-Trump rally Oct. 3 in the borough of Staten Island in New York City.
STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY A person wears a QAnon sweatshirt during a pro-Trump rally Oct. 3 in the borough of Staten Island in New York City.

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