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The Mother Jones Podcast

QAnon Is Infecting Congress. How the Wild Conspiracy Theory Went Mainstream.

The Mother Jones Podcast

Mother Jones

Scoops, Investigations, News, Journalism, Elections, Politics

4.51.1K Ratings

🗓️ 2 September 2020

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

As recently as March, "QAnon" was still a mostly fringe phenomenon. The conspiracy theory, which posits that a vast Democrat-led pedophile racket operates at the heart of the U.S. government, was well known among President Donald Trump's hardcore MAGA base, but too hot for anyone in the mainstream to touch. But this summer, the world's darkest and most outlandish political conspiracy is gaining new adherents and influence among conservatives. That's what Mother Jones's Ali Breland reported this month, after a recent press briefing in which President Donald Trump gave an approving answer that the QAnon community has been eagerly awaiting: "I don’t know much about the movement other than I understand they like me very much," he said. "I’ve heard these are people who love our country."

Trump's not alone. The movement has demonstrated real and growing power. Michael Flynn, the former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency and Trump’s first national security adviser, boldly aligned himself with the conspiracy theory on July 4th, when he posted a video reciting a common QAnon motto; QAnon enthusiast Marjorie Taylor Greene just won the primary election for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District; several other Republicans running for Congress have shared QAnon hashtags and used its catchphrases. Followers have been able to launch harassment campaigns so big and vitriolic that several high-profile targets—Wayfair, Oprah Winfrey, and Chrissy Teigen—felt the need to publicly respond. Q’s followers have also mobilized to antagonize and harass a state senator in California in a vicious attempt to get him to drop legislation aimed at addressing LGBTQ inequality. QAnon’s damage is too big to ignore, and so we’re replaying a refreshed and updated version of our February 2020 episode featuring reporter Ali Breland, who takes you inside the conspiracy, traces its roots, and assesses its future.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is the Mother Jones Podcast. I'm Jamila King in Oakland. On today's show, the darkest and most outlandish political conspiracy theory of

0:17.6

recent history is going mainstream. Well I don't know much about the

0:21.8

movement other than I understand they like me very much and it's far right trump loving

0:26.4

adherents are gaining numbers Q is a patriot attention

0:30.9

These are people that love our country.

0:32.6

An influence.

0:33.8

The Q-An theory has been embraced by some House Republican candidates.

0:37.9

So today we're going to revisit and refresh parts of an episode.

0:41.5

We brought you initially back in February.

0:44.1

What is Q-Anon?

0:45.6

Who are its followers?

0:47.4

What can it mean for the election?

0:49.2

That's all coming up.

0:50.2

Stick around. In late February of 2020, we ran an episode about Q&on.

1:00.0

I know this was the before times but in that

1:06.0

episode we talked to Ollie Breland, a mother Jones reporter covering tech and

1:10.9

disinformation. Ollie has been covering QAnon for a while now and talk to QAnon's supporters at two Maggare rallies,

1:19.0

one in Minneapolis in October of 2019,

1:22.0

and the other in Hershey, Pennsylvania in December of 2019.

1:27.4

In that episode, we asked one central question.

1:31.2

Has the QAnon movement peaked?

1:33.0

Based on your reporting, is the QAnon movement on the decline?

...

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