The Daily - A Conspiracy Theory Is Proved Wrong
Episode Date: January 29, 2021This episode contains strong language. Inauguration Day was supposed to bring vindication for adherents of the pro-Trump conspiracy theory QAnon.Instead, they watched as Joe Biden took the oath as th...e 46th president of the United States.What happens to a conspiracy theory and its followers when they are proved wrong?Guest: Kevin Roose, a technology columnist for The New York Times. For an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. You can read the latest edition here.Background reading: As Mr. Biden took office and Mr. Trump landed in Florida, with no mass arrests in sight, some QAnon believers struggled to harmonize the falsehoods with the inauguration on their TVs.Valerie Gilbert posts dozens of times a day in support of QAnon. Her story hints at how hard it will be to bring people like her back to reality.What is QAnon? Here is an explainer on the “big tent conspiracy theory.”For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In the days leading up to Joe Biden's inauguration on January 20th, as my colleagues in Washington
were getting ready to go cover the inauguration, I was checking in with the followers of QAnon.
Boom, what's up guys? Welcome to another show. We're here on Monday morning, January 18th.
Only a couple of days left until Inauguration Day or whatever the heck might actually happen
on that day. Basically, people who believe in this QAnon conspiracy theory had locked into that date,
January 20th.
We're all waiting in anxious anticipation to see what this week might bring, aren't we?
Which they saw as kind of the final deadline, the true culmination of all these beliefs
and predictions they've been talking about for the last three years. I don't know. I feel in my gut that something is going to happen and we go from there.
They were promised that Joe Biden would not actually be inaugurated that day.
Trump can call martial law even up to five minutes before Biden's inauguration if he has to
wait that long. Donald Trump would declare martial law and reveal all of these shocking and terrible
government secrets and that Trump himself would get inaugurated for a second term.
The shot heard around the road is going to be
when they arrest Biden right there on stage.
While Joe Biden would get arrested.
Either they're going to arrest him on stage, he's going to come out and say that the election was fraudulent,
or something's going to happen
and they're not going to be able to do the inauguration.
And the thing I was trying to figure out is, like,
when that doesn't happen, when Joe Biden is inaugurated,
in contradiction of all of these prophecies that QAnon had believed,
like, what would the millions of people
who have been expecting this to happen do?
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, my colleague Kevin Roos on what happens to a conspiracy theory and its followers when it's proven wrong. I mean, even if we don't get our way,
we're going to get our way one way or another after that.
It's Friday, January 29th.
Kevin, why is January 20th such a make-or-break moment for believers in the QAnon conspiracy theory?
QAnon, at its core,ling conspiracy theory about this global cabal of satanic pedophiles who run the world. No basis, in fact. It's totally made up.
But it got started in 2017 when Q, this anonymous message board poster who claimed to be a high-level government insider started posting these cryptic
clues on a message board about what was going to happen. Basically, unspooling this theory about
how Donald Trump was secretly working to take down this cabal and that there would be this day
in the future, this moment of reckoning called the storm or the great awakening, when Trump would reveal his plan, expose the deep
state cabal, and bring its members to justice. And Kevin, does anyone know, I don't know if this is
measurable, how many people believe in this clearly false conspiracy of Q and his prophecies?
Well, it's hard to say exactly. I mean,
they don't keep an official membership directory, but it's almost certainly in the millions. I mean,
Facebook, Twitter, these other companies that have taken action against QAnon accounts have
taken down pages and groups with millions of members between them. So this is not like a
small fringe movement anymore. And what's
interesting is that it's continued to grow really rapidly, even though from the start,
lots of the predictions that Q was making weren't coming true. Like the very first Q post in 2017
predicted that Hillary Clinton was about to be arrested. And that didn't happen, obviously.
And how do these people rationalize that?
Well, mostly they tell themselves, you know, we must have misinterpreted the clue.
Maybe the clue wasn't wrong.
Maybe we just weren't smart enough or savvy enough to understand what date Q really meant.
Hmm.
It's on us, not Q.
Exactly.
date Q really meant.
Hmm. It's on us, not Q.
Exactly.
So these QAnon prophecies, they come and go and the goalposts get moved and the explanations get reformulated. But one of the big setbacks for QAnon happens in November of last year,
when, to their great surprise, Donald Trump loses the election.
QAnon believers had been told that Trump would win re-election in a landslide. And so
they were confused, but they still had an out because there was still this theory,
this unfounded theory that the election had been stolen. And that, you know, when the truth about election
fraud and other various conspiracy theories came out, they would be vindicated and Trump
would indeed become a two-term president.
Hmm.
So even this, the greatest setback to date, is somehow rationalized, incorporated into
the Q belief system
as something that can be explained.
Right.
But all of this is sort of made more confusing and complicated
by the fact that after the election,
Q, this anonymous message board account that posts these cryptic clues,
basically disappears.
There are a couple posts since the election, but Q used to post, you know, 10, 20 times a day.
And now these posts, these sort of clues that help people in the movement understand what's
happening, they're basically gone. Q just disappears, stops posting, doesn't really address the election at
all. And so that creates a power vacuum in the QAnon community.
And what is the reaction among followers?
Well, some of them think that this is, you know, part of the plan that Q has sort of
gone incommunicado because things are heating up or, you know, part of the plan that Q has sort of gone incommunicado because things are
heating up or, you know, there are various ways to sort of explain why Q has disappeared. But what
ends up happening is that instead of drawing their guidance from Q, people in this movement start
looking to these kind of influencers in the movement, these people who sort of aren't Q or who they don't
believe are Q, but who sort of speak with authority about what's happening in this progression toward
the storm or the great awakening. And so where do these new influencers guide QAnon followers?
Well, they start to point people to another date, January 6th, the day Congress is supposed to certify the results of the election.
And how do Q supporters start to think about that date? What's supposed to happen?
So QAnon believers spend weeks leading up to January 6th convincing themselves and each other that Joe Biden is not going to be certified as the winner of the election by Congress.
not going to be certified as the winner of the election by Congress, that maybe Mike Pence will step in and block it, or maybe patriots will take to the streets themselves and sort of convince
Congress not to certify the election results, that all of this is going to somehow end in a reversal
of what's been happening and that Donald Trump will actually be declared the winner.
Trump will actually be declared the winner. Well, one slice of that, of course, does materialize. People do storm the Capitol, including, as we now know, QAnon supporters, but they fail.
And of course, Joe Biden's victory is certified. So how do QAnon supporters absorb that news?
do QAnon supporters absorb that news? Well, the reaction among QAnon believers to January 6th was kind of mixed and confused. Like there were believers who said like, yeah, this was us.
We did this. But there were also people who said, no, this wasn't us.
All right. Can you hear me? Yeah.
Great. So yeah, catch me up a little bit. I mean, when we last talked. And I heard some of that kind of mixed feeling about the riots when I called up a source of mine, this woman I had been talking to for more than a year who believes in QAnon.
She lives on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.
She's a middle-aged white woman, went to Harvard.
Her name is Valerie Gilbert.
And I called her after the riots and sort of asked her what she thought had happened. Like, what were you thinking as you were watching them?
Like, what was going through your mind? I don't believe those were Q people. I don't know one
violent Q person. I don't know one Q person who advocates violence. I mean, there were, you know,
people, you know, on the ground who I follow, you know, who I've been following for a long time,
who were there posting. I mean, I can I can give you some names, but there were, you know, there were people posting
things like, this is the storm.
Yes.
And so, look, maybe some of the more, I can't say who is or who isn't.
I'm not following all of them.
But overall, you know, I don't, while I want to see justice served and treachery to the United States government exposed,
I don't know who's who and who can definitively say that.
There is a lot of spy versus spy going on and infiltration.
She said maybe it's Antifa, maybe it's not, but she said that it didn't shake her faith.
Does it bother you that Q has sort of vanished? I mean, I think he's posted
once, three times since the election. It doesn't bother me. The whole thing with Q was to inspire
thought. And it did that. It sparked a movement. In QAnon, there's this saying. And the bottom
line is, you know, trust the plan. Trust the plan. And that's sort of what
they tell each other after these setbacks. They say, you know, trust the plan. I'm not one of the
planners. I'm not in Team Q. I don't know. There's a plan. And maybe we don't understand what it is
yet or when it's going to happen. But there is a plan and it's going to happen. So don't lose faith.
And that's basically where she had landed. So I get the fact that this is a cliff and it's going to happen. So don't lose faith. And that's basically where she had landed.
So I get the fact that this is a cliffhanger. And there are so many days, you know, when you look at the cue signs and things line up on the cue clock and you're waiting for a bang and nothing
fucking happens. And you're like, okay, you know what? I don't know. I don't know. But I think,
you know, the wheels of justice grind slowly. And I think what we are going to see when it's all systems go, whenever the hell that is, is revelation, declassification of some pretty horrible stuff that people are going to be surprised by. I mean, it's not all that dissimilar from how some people in religious
communities feel about the second coming or the apocalypse. I mean, there have been lots of groups
that have predicted things that have not come to pass, and they don't lose faith after it. They
just reformulate the belief and keep going.
what if you're wrong what if biden is inaugurated on the 20th what if trump fades into public life what if q never comes back like what if this whole thing was fake I don't anticipate that.
But if that comes to pass, then I will deal with that.
And that's how I roll, you know.
Like what would dealing with it look like?
I'm not going to waste energy even postulating that.
We can talk about that if it comes to pass.
When we come back about January 20th as you experienced it.
Yes, I have two monitors in my home office, and one of them...
I was tuned to a live stream on YouTube of Joe Biden being inaugurated.
And on the other one...
What's going on on the internet buzz, guys? You got some links to send over?
Come on now, let's do some research. Let's see what's going on behind the scenes.
I had arranged all these like QAnon chat rooms and telegram groups and Facebook groups and
basically trying to sort of have one reality on one screen and the other reality on the other
screen. And today on the West Front of the Capitol, it's the inauguration of the 46th.
Hey, just wait for mainstream media to get really confused like they don't know how to cover this.
That's when you know it's gone off script.
Now this marks the 59th time in our nation's history that this transfer of power has happened.
I really hope and pray that he signs over everything to the military.
I want the military in complete control.
Right, literally split screen realities of the world.
Right.
And tell me what you see.
So, the day starts off very hopeful for these QAnon believers.
Yeah, you kind of just got to look at all the things Trump's put into play, and it's kind of lining itself out, you know.
It's finding itself out, you know.
They're looking for symbols, like Trump gives his sort of going away speech, and they see that he has 17 flags behind him.
He's got something up his sleeve.
17 is sort of like a magic number in QAnon, because Q is the 17th letter of the alphabet.
He's giving us hints right here. So they say like, oh, he's sending a signal that this is the day that Trump is going to
declare martial law and invoke the Insurrection Act and announce the mass arrest of all these
elite pedophiles.
It would be hilarious if Trump did the emergency broadcasting in the middle of the inauguration.
That would be hilarious.
As inaugurations started, politicians walk in, take their seats.
These people that they believe are members of this global cabal of criminals,
Hillary Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, they're all in one place.
I got the popcorn ready.
I'm optimistic.
It's almost like it's the moment of truth.
So as you're watching this, you're seeing people continue to speculate, like, any second now, this is going to happen, this is going to happen.
Any second now.
This is going to happen.
Any second now.
One person on a QAnon message board writes,
the next 48 hours will be like the entire Revolutionary War and the fall of Berlin compressed into two days.
I have called off work so I can witness history in the making.
What a time to be alive.
And then as noon approached,
and Joe Biden was getting ready to actually take the oath of office and get sworn in as the president, they started to get a little nervous.
What's your heart say, guys?
My heart wants faith.
My head says we're screwed.
Listen to your heart.
I think we all want to cry.
Sick to my stomach.
Very sick to my stomach.
Chin up.
Hold the line.
It ain't over yet.
We'll know after 12 o'clock.
If he gets in there, we'll see what happens then.
People just sort of trying to tell themselves that there was still time. Something could still happen.
Preserve, protect and defend.
And then as soon as Joe Biden took the oath of office.
So help you God?
So help me God.
Congratulations, Mr. President.
And was officially the president.
And Donald Trump was officially no longer the president.
The mood really shifted.
I don't know what to believe anymore.
I feel like we've all been played.
Think of all the people that we follow and trust that, you know, have told us about Q and explained the drops.
That's really the heartbreaking part.
They were getting despondent. People were saying,
we've been played like fools. It's over.
I'm tired of this.
Everything that we read, we're chasing dreams.
I'm exhausted.
Bore out. T tired of chasing hopes and dreams
and realizing that none of them are coming true.
So.
Granted, this wasn't everyone.
There were still some people who said, you know,
I still trust the plan.
You know, I'm, I'm still holding out,
but a lot of people were getting very disillusioned.
On behalf of the moderation team.
They were leaving the group chats.
Keep faith. Stay strong.
We're working on some stuff in the back channel.
Some of the big QAnon message boards
had so many people sort of posting about their doubts
and their disillusionment
that they started banning these people who they called doomers.
So you weren't allowed to post anything negative about QAnon.
But that couldn't contain this feeling that a lot of them were having
that they had been lied to and betrayed and that actually there wasn't a plan.
Mm-hmm.
and betrayed, and that actually there wasn't a plan.
Mm-hmm.
So this theory that always seems to get reinvented,
justified, explained, rationalized,
all of a sudden there are people who are suddenly acknowledging,
we can't defend this.
This is not real.
Yeah, the scales fell from their eyes.
And then, you know, later that afternoon, a couple hours after inauguration, this guy, Ron Watkins, who used to run the site that Q posted on, some people have suspected that he actually posted as Q himself.
He posts this message to his Telegram channel. He writes,
we gave it our all. Now we need to keep our chins up and go back to our lives as best we are able.
As we enter into the next administration, please remember all the friends and happy
memories we made together over the past few years. That does not sound like a believer.
That sounds like somebody admitting it was all wrong.
Yeah, it was very weird.
It was kind of like the real Q
was the friends we made along the way.
It had a very last day of summer camp feel to it.
This was one of the biggest,
most prominent figures in the QAnon movement.
And he's basically saying, sorry, better luck next time.
What is the reaction to Watkins' post?
There's a lot of anger.
People are furious.
Like, I think it's important to understand that, like, this is not a small part of these people's lives.
to understand that this is not a small part of these people's lives. This is not like, you know,
I had a fantasy football team that I really hoped was going to win the game and they didn't win the game. People have lost years of their lives to this movement. And as I was watching these QAnon
believers kind of turn on the influencers in their movements, I was thinking about my conversations
with Valerie Gilbert.
I don't want to talk to people that think I'm crazy, you know, and I don't have a support
network in the way that some people do. You know, I am my support network. So I've come to the point
who basically had told me that her belief in QAnon and other conspiracy theories had cost her a lot of her
closest, longest relationships.
Has anyone ever, anyone from your sort of old life ever tried to,
I don't know, sit down and talk with you about their worries about like,
from your old life?
Yeah, my sister, my sister.
And that's one of the reasons we're not talking right now.
It's, It's been
just not easy.
When was the last time you saw her?
I saw her
last summer,
2019, and it was right
after that that Q
clicked for me,
and, you know, they were
looking at what I was posting on Facebook, and
I post a lot, as you know, and then my sister said, you know, clearly they were looking at what I was posting on Facebook, and I post a lot, as you know.
And then my sister said, you know, I'm worried about you.
And I was like, oh, that's it.
No, no, no, no.
If that's all you got out of what I'm posting is your concern for me, then there's no conversation.
Because what I'm doing, I feel really great about it.
I feel really great about my online community.
If I asked your sister, like, in general, what she thinks of your relationship, what do you think she would say?
She's very hurt.
She's very hurt by the fact that I pull back.
Would it be okay if I tried to contact your sister?
I would really rather not.
Okay.
And it's an awkward relationship.
Okay.
And...
So are there other people that I might call and just say, what's your relationship with
Valerie like and anyone that you have known for a while?
First of all, I don't...
I am not talking to anyone right now, and that is my choice.
So when I, you know, if there was someone that I felt,
there's no one that comes to mind.
And when I, you know, so, no.
She'd cut off ties with her friends.
She'd been estranged from family members.
Like, QAnon had really become not just a thing that she believed,
it had become her entire social life.
I guess I felt unseen with certain people and with Q community,
you know, it's, it, it is moving to me.
Yeah.
So anyway, it feels right.
And I, um, you know, in terms of finding myself alone right now and, and wanting it that way,
it's, um, it's okay.
It's all okay.
And like I say, if friends who are different from me didn't patronize me or scream at me and say I'm worried about you, that is the most fucking patronizing thing you can say. Well, isn't somebody worrying about you, isn't that loving? I mean, that doesn't sound painful to me.
No, not when I then tell her I have never felt better in my life. Not when I'm actually happy.
If I was complaining, that's one thing.
No, I think that's horrible.
I really do.
I'm worried about you.
That is patronizing.
You know, what if I said that to you?
I'm worried about you.
You work for the New York Times.
That's none of my business.
You like it.
It's your job.
I mean, I'm guessing.
I don't know.
But do you know what I'm saying?
We are in different worlds.
And so what happens to people like Valerie? Where do they go from here?
It's a really vulnerable, uncertain moment for believers in QAnon. And I think some of them are doing what they always do. They're pushing the date back. They're moving the goalposts. But a lot of them
are just sort of floating. They don't know what or who to believe. And there are groups that are
preying on that uncertainty. It's important to remember that QAnon has been in many ways a very
destructive and dangerous movement. There have been real acts of violence. There was a mob at
the Capitol that was driven in some way by QAnon believers. And now some other extremist groups,
white supremacist groups, far-right militias, have started trying to capitalize on this moment of confusion by recruiting QAnon believers into their movements and attaching them to their causes.
Really?
So, Kevin, is Q over in a certain sense?
Is it on a path that is no longer sustainable given what just happened?
I think the original form of QAnon, this conspiracy theory centered on the posts of
this anonymous person on the internet that was all about Donald Trump defeating the deep state,
I think that part may be close to over. But I think what QAnon represents,
this kind of alternate reality of conspiracy theories and lies, this sort of group of
millions of Americans who don't trust official explanations, who want secret knowledge, who are
sort of creating their own truth out of fragments of stuff they read and see on the internet.
I think that's not going away anytime soon.
Have you talked to Valerie since the inauguration?
Can you hear me?
Yes.
How are you?
I'm okay.
I have.
And I asked her, like, how she felt now that her prediction about the inauguration had proven false.
You know, I don't have an end date.
The sands keep shifting. had proven false.
She's still very much a believer.
In her mind, the fact that Joe Biden is the president doesn't change anything.
His presidency will not stand.
It's a stolen crown.
And I am still 100% positive that that will be proved.
The faith is really unshakable in the fact that this is
not only a political plan and a military one, but a divine
one, that there is something, there is something bigger than all of us going on here. And if you
think about the term, the great awakening. Thank you, Kevin. We appreciate it. Thank you for having me.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
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Two cases of the more contagious mutation have been found in South Carolina.
Neither involved people who had recently traveled to South Africa,
suggesting that the variant has been spreading for some time within the United States. And on Thursday, General Motors said that it would phase
out gas and diesel-powered cars and trucks by 2035, a historic change that will pressure rival automakers to do the same. GM says that it will only sell vehicles
that produce zero tailpipe emissions. The move will have a major impact on the oil and gas industry,
which relies heavily on gas-powered cars.
Today's episode was produced by Luke Vander Ploeg and Austin Mitchell.
It was edited by Elise Spiegel and Paige Cowett and engineered by Chris Wood.
Special thanks to Stuart Thompson.
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