‘Cheering section’ for violence: the attacks that
show 4chan is still a threat
The Washington DC shooting was the most recent to spawn
out of the extremist culture of unregulated ‘chan’ message boards
The extremist online forum 4chan gave birth to QAnon,
the far-right conspiracy theory that Donald Trump is combating a cabal of
leftist pedophiles.
Justin Ling
Sun 1 May
2022 10.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/may/01/4chan-extremist-online-forum-raymond-spencer
When police
in Washington DC burst into a fifth-floor apartment building on 22 April in
search of a man who allegedly had shot four people at random, they found
Raymond Spencer dead by his own hand, a cache of guns and ammunition, and a
poster with an ironic white supremacist meme.
The poster
invoking the meme, popular on the extremist online forum 4chan, was a stark
reminder that this attack blamed on Spencer, 23, was only the most recent mass
casualty attack to spawn out of the ugly extremist culture of unregulated
internet message boards such as 4chan.
That
particular forum gave birth to QAnon, the far-right conspiracy theory that
Donald Trump is combating a cabal of leftist pedophiles, before it moved on to
its even-more-extreme cousin 8chan. QAnon has been particularly effective in
crafting the lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from Trump,
inspiring the Capitol riot on 6 January 2021. A bipartisan Senate committee
connected seven deaths to the attack.
Alek
Minassian, 25, posted an update on Facebook with a direct reference to 4chan
and its extreme misogynistic community of so-called incels, short for
involuntary celibates, before launching a deadly vehicle ramming rampage in
Toronto in 2018. And after New Zealand police arrested Brenton Tarrant, who
shot and killed 51 worshippers in mosques in Christchurch, he cited 4chan and
8chan as direct influences.
Seemingly
by sheer luck, Spencer’s recent attack in Washington was less costly in terms
of lives. But it was still a stark reminder of how many online extremists and
the movements with which they sympathize can trace their origins to either
4chan or 8chan, said Oren Segal, vice-president of the Anti-Defamation League’s
Center on Extremism.
“The chans
– 4chan, 8chan, etc – are some of the most vile places on the internet,” Segal
told the Guardian. The trolling, humor, appeals to violence: it “seeps outside
the confines of the message boards,” he added.
Spencer’s
case has chilling aspects. He fired 200 rounds from a makeshift sniper’s nest,
injuring a man, two women, and a 12-year-old girl. He had an additional 800
rounds stashed.
Just two
minutes after the shooting began, someone under the username “Raymond Spencer”
logged onto the normally-anonymous 4chan and started a new thread titled “shool
[sic] shooting”. The newly published message contained a link – to a 30-second
video of images captured from the digital scope of Spencer’s rifle. The clip
streamed images and sounds of the barrage of bullets which slammed into cars
and shattered windows at an adjacent school while also maiming four strangers.
Police
escort people down a tree-lined street with guns drawn and aimed at a point
above and behind them.
Someone under the username ‘Raymond Spencer’ began
posting to 4chan just two minutes after shooting began in Washington
Even as
police stormed the apartment building where Spencer hid, with officers
maneuvering past a surveillance camera that he had set up in the hallway and
was monitoring, Spencer continued to post to the message board.
“They’re in
the wrong part of the building right now searching,” he posted at one point. A
few minutes later: “Waiting for police to catch up with me.”
As he
waited, Spencer logged on to Wikipedia to edit the entry for Edmund Burke
School, which he had just opened fire on.
“A basedman
shot at the school on April 22, 2022,” the edit read, using a message board
term derived from the word “based,” which is 4chan slang for somebody who
agrees to the board’s warped worldview. “The suspect is still at large.”
Police
believe Spencer shot himself to death as officers breached his apartment.
Like those
who have carried out other domestic terror attacks that rocked the US, Canada
and New Zealand in recent years, Spencer situated his mass shooting in a tangle
of ironic memes and 4chan in-jokes.
On a poster
hanging in the apartment where Spencer died was a cartoon of a Black man with
an enlarged head. It’s a deeply ironic reference to Nation of Islam theology –
which holds that a Black scientist named Yakub created the white race more than
6,000 years ago. 4chan co-opted the concept more recently, caricaturing it
along the way, to justify its own white supremacist philosophy.
Anti-extremist
groups such as the Southern Poverty Law Center have warned for years that 4chan
and 8chan would continue inspiring domestic terror attacks. Cassie Miller, a
researcher at the center, analyzed a self-selected survey of users to a white
supremacist webforum. She found nearly 25% reported that they considered
themselves radicalized – or, in their terms, “redpilled” – by the culture of
4chan and 8chan.
It was tied
for the single most-reported pathway to radicalization.
While the
far-right online ecosystem has grown significantly since then, the edgy humor
and racist politics of ‘chan’ culture continue to prove influential, especially
among younger users.
The chans
“normalize the kinds of narratives and grievances that are dangerous”, Segal
said. They form a sort of “cheering section” for violence.
Even
8chan’s founder, Frederick Brennan, has blamed the site for a rise in mass
shootings and unsuccessfully called for it to be shut down.
Brennan
quit the site in 2016, leaving management to its new owners: Jim Watkins and
his son Ron. The pair, who have since been identified as the likely puppet
masters behind QAnon, have rejected more active moderation and have leveraged
the site’s extreme free speech ethos for their own political ends – Ron Watkins
is currently running in a Republican congressional primary in Arizona.
There are
few good solutions on how to address the radicalizing influence of these
forums, Segal said. Owners like Watkins have been unwilling to crack down on
hate speech; whenever one web hosting company has removed them, another has
stepped up; and law enforcement is simply ill-suited to monitor and investigate
the deluge of hate on the platforms.
It will
take a “whole-of-society approach”, Segal said. “Everything that normalizes
hateful ideology … needs to be addressed.”

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