Donald Trump is the QAnon president. And he's
proud of it
Richard
Wolffe
Under his leadership, and with his support, QAnon
candidates like Marjorie Taylor Greene in Georgia are on a fast track to
elected office
@richardwolffedc
Sat 17 Oct
2020 15.08 BSTLast modified on Sat 17 Oct 2020 15.45 BST
There is
something worse than Donald Trump’s takeover of the Republican party.
Yes, even
worse than a party that doesn’t take seriously a pandemic that has killed more
than 217,000 Americans. Worse than a party that doesn’t care about locking up
children in cages at the border or separating them permanently from their
parents. Worse than a party that celebrates a leader who was impeached for
abusing overseas military aid as a tool to smear his political opponent.
What could
be worse than Trump’s version of Republican politics? It’s the Trump-driven
conversion of the Grand Old Party into a cult of unhinged conspiracy wingnuts.
The QAnon
cult is a bizarre world where everything makes sense of nonsense: where Trump
is a savior of the nation’s children from a secret pedophile ring of satanic
Democrats and deep state officials, who will be overthrown in some great
awakening. And that’s the sane, simplified version of the story.
It should
be easier to condemn these fringe-heads than the white supremacists who form
such a loyal base for this white supremacist president. But it isn’t. Because
to the spiritual leader of the cult of Trump – Donald himself – there are no
fringe-heads who think he’s a savior. They are all just very fine people.
Those who
endured the Trump town hall on Thursday night witnessed the president of the
United States contort himself into a Q shape to avoid saying anything bad about
the wingnuts. If anything, he went out of his way to say the opposite.
When the
NBC anchor Savannah Guthrie asked Trump to disavow QAnon in its entirety, Trump
feigned ignorance before completely reversing himself.
“I know
nothing about QAnon,” he began.
When
Guthrie said she just told him about QAnon, Trump reconsidered his first
answer. “I know very little. You told me, but what you tell me doesn’t
necessarily make it fact. I hate to say that. I know nothing about it. I do
know they are very much against pedophilia. They fight it very hard. But I know
nothing about it.”
This answer
was about as hard to fathom as the secret messages of Q himself, whoever he may
be. Trump knows nothing, except for a little, which could be a lot, but he
doesn’t know anything.
At this
point, Trump tried to deflect the questions into a discussion about another of
his hallucinogenic dreams called antifa. But Guthrie, God bless her, quoted the
Republican senator Ben Sasse, who called QAnon “nuts”.
“He may be
right,” said Trump, reversing himself for the fourth time in less than two
minutes.
Just as
Guthrie was about to finish her QAnon questions, Trump changed his mind for the
fifth time, backing away from the possibility of nuttiness to embrace the
conspiracy all over again.
“What I do
hear about it is they are very strongly against pedophilia,” said the ignorant
president. “And I agree with that. I mean, I do agree with that. And I agree
with it very strongly.”
But surely
Trump did not agree with the satanic cult part of the QAnon fantasy?
“I have no
idea,” he said. “I know nothing about them.”
“And
neither do you, know that,” he added for good measure.
For a man
who knows nothing, Trump knows a lot about QAnon and its unknowable stories.
Like a terrified arsonist, he just wants to light the fuse and run away,
claiming his innocence as the matches fall from his pocket.
And so we
ended up with the topsy-turvy moment when the commander-in-chief decided to
defend his promotion of the QAnon fantasy that the elite Seal Team Six that
killed Osama bin Laden was somehow killed by Joe Biden to cover up the faked
death of one Osama bin Laden.
“I know
nothing about it,” said the lamest of strongmen leaders.
“That was a
retweet. That was an opinion of somebody. That was a retweet. I’ll put it out
there. People can decide for themselves. I don’t take a position.”
“I don’t
get that,” said an exasperated Guthrie. “You’re not like someone’s crazy uncle
who can just retweet whatever.”
Donald
Through the Looking Glass is the story of a small, inadequate boy who walks
into a fantasy world where he is the leader of a very large nation.
It’s a
world where everything is back to front: where the right is wrong, and the left
is fascist. Where presidents are kings, enemies are friends, and white lives
are the only ones that matter.
Trump is
leaving his party with a QAnon core that cannot be challenged
It’s a
world where he knows nothing about something unknowable that he happens to know
a lot about. And so do you – if you’re in the know.
This is the
legacy he bequeaths to Republicans even more than three supreme court justices,
who – in all likelihood – will be balanced by the addition of two additional
justices by President Biden.
Trump is
leaving his party with a QAnon core that cannot be challenged, just in case
they challenge the incumbents in the 2022 primaries of the paranormal.
We’re not
just talking about retweets. Back in August, one of the people introducing
Trump at a rally in Cincinnati recited one of QAnon’s rallying cries. Several
Q-nuts were photographed wearing Q-gear in the crowd.
That was
just the day after news broke about an FBI bulletin identifying QAnon as a
domestic terrorist threat.
It’s easy
to lose sight of the trees in the forest of Trump’s disinformation. After all,
the day after he embraced QAnon – about which he knows nothing – Trump claimed
that the Bidens are “an organized crime family”.
But under
his leadership, and with his support, QAnon candidates like Marjorie Taylor
Greene in Georgia are on a fast track to elected office.
The New
York Times reported that Trump campaign lawyers are working for Greene, who has
questioned whether the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon was real and whether George
Soros controls the world. This is a candidate that Trump has called “a future
Republican star”.
Long after
Trump is booted from the Oval Office, his brand of crazy will still linger in
the body of his party like the weird symptoms of a dormant pandemic. Every now
and again, the party’s toes will swell, or it will lose its sense of taste. The
fever may break for a short time, but this wingnut virus will just wait for its
next outbreak.


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