JUSTIN LING
08.12.2022 12:00 PM
https://www.wired.co.uk/article/twitter-files-qanon-conspiracy-theories
Elon Musk’s Twitter Files Are a Feast for
Conspiracy Theorists
From QAnon influencers to @catturd, the very online
right sees exactly what they want to see in the CEO’s orchestrated disclosure.
When
journalist Matt Taibbi kicked off a 36-tweet thread on Twitter last week,
dropping leaked emails from the former C-suite of the social media company now
owned by Elon Musk, conspiracy theorists rejoiced. And then Musk responded.
Those
leaked emails, which detail how Twitter suppressed a New York Post story about
the copied contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop, have been heralded as a watershed
moment by Donald Trump’s most ardent fans. They see the so-called Twitter Files
as crucial validation: proof of a previously intangible plot to suppress
conservative voices online and elect Joe Biden.
As that
theory percolated, it identified an enemy in one of Twitter’s top lawyers. On
Tuesday, Musk abruptly fired him. It points to an emerging pattern at Twitter
HQ: Play to the crowd.
The Twitter
Files, promoted ahead of time by Musk himself, are being hyped as a critical
missing piece in all manner of conspiracy theories—from QAnon to debunked
claims of electoral fraud, to President Joe Biden’s supposed corrupt practices
in Ukraine. In the process, it is ginning up exactly the kind of Twitter
traffic that Musk has craved.
Foreign
intelligence officials identified the laptop as possible Russian interference,
and major news outlets, unable to corroborate its contents, held off on the
story. Twitter went a step further, temporarily forbidding its users from
sharing the Post story, even in their DMs.
Fans of
Trump suspected there was more to Twitter’s actions. They believed the FBI and
the Democratic National Committee, which they believed colluded to rig the 2016
election with allegations of the Trump campaign’s alleged ties to Russia, were
meddling in the 2020 vote as well: the Deep State in action.
In the
years since, that paranoia has only grown. Trump took to calling Hunter Biden’s
computer the “laptop from hell”—a quip that would later become the title of a
book from a Post columnist. The book described the story as one of “the
greatest coverups in media history” and promised to uncover the “coordinated
censorship operation by Big Tech, the media establishment, and former
intelligence operatives.” (While the book castigates Twitter for suppressing
the story, including suspending the Post’s account, it acknowledges the
platform “admitted after the election that it had made a mistake.”)
It has
become established rhetoric among the political right that suppressing the
story about Hunter Biden’s laptop was nothing short of a conspiracy between the
Biden campaign and Twitter, supposedly proving Trump’s grandiose claims of an
orchestrated effort to keep him from the White House.
“The
Twitter Files confirm Q’s entire main narrative,” one QAnon influencer wrote.
“Balenciaga confirms the rest.” That message, which references the fantastical
claims about fashion brand Balenciaga’s role in child trafficking, was seen
more than 120,000 times on Telegram. (Despite some optimism that his account
would be restored, that particular QAnon influencer remains suspended on
Twitter.) Other QAnon influencers seized on the fact that former Twitter CEO
Jack Dorsey’s personal email, which Taibbi failed to censor in a screenshot he
shared, used the custom top-level domain .pizza.
Liz Crokin,
a popular QAnon influencer who boasts more than 100,000 followers on Telegram
and hundreds of paid subscribers on Substack, wrote on Telegram that the emails
implicate Dorsey in the same Satanic cabal as Hillary Clinton adviser John
Podesta. “Pizza is a pedophile code word that’s been identified by law
enforcement,” Crokin wrote. (She, too, is still suspended from Twitter.)
On Tuesday,
Crokin spoke at Mar-a-Lago, where she discussed “Pizzagate, Balenciaga, and
what President Trump’s Administration did to combat human trafficking,”
according to her Telegram channel. Crokin also uploaded a speech from Trump to
the small gathering, where he heaped praise on his briefly tenured national
security adviser, Michael Flynn—who has become one of the most high-profile
QAnon influencers in recent years.
The
enormously popular @catturd account, with its more than 1 million followers on
Twitter and more than 800,000 on Truth Social, called to “disband the FBI” and
“arrest [FBI Director] Christopher Wray” following the release of the
documents. “After what Elon Musk revealed about #TwitterGate—I never want to
hear the phrase ‘free and fair elections’ coming from the FBI, big tech fact
checkers, the media, or the Democrat party, ever again,” the anonymous person
behind the account wrote.
Yet, as
Tabbi himself explains, the files prove no such thing. “Although several
sources recalled hearing about a ‘general’ warning from federal law enforcement
that summer about possible foreign hacks, there’s no evidence—that I've seen—of
any government involvement in the laptop story,” Taibbi wrote.
In fact,
Taibbi reports, the decision was made at high levels of Twitter, but below then
CEO Dorsey. “They freelanced it,” a source who spoke to the journalist said.
The actual
contents of the Twitter Files wouldn’t get in the way of a good story, however.
Eagle-eyed supporters of Trump picked up on one particular name in the Twitter
Files: James Baker.
In the
leaked internal emails, Baker, Twitter’s deputy general counsel, urged a
careful approach. “We need more facts to assess whether the materials were
hacked,” he wrote. As one of the company’s most senior lawyers, he noted that
some evidence pointed to the contents of the laptop having been hacked, while
other indicators pointed to it being legitimately abandoned by Biden. In the
absence of good information, he recommended that Twitter assume the worst and
proceed with “caution.”
Baker had
been general counsel at the FBI from 2014 to 2017, as the bureau had been
investigating Russian efforts to influence the 2016 election. Baker was also
implicated in a particularly thorny saga—he interviewed a source whom John
Durham, a special counsel appointed by Trump, would accuse of lying and
concealing his ties to the Hilary Clinton campaign. Baker denied that he knew
of those ties, and he furnished documents to prove it. His source was acquitted
earlier this year.
Baker,
after leaving the FBI, had become Twitter’s deputy general counsel. The mere
presence of Baker’s name set off alarm bells for right-wing onlookers.
“The same
James Baker neck deep in Russiagate?” Lori Mills, a failed Republican state
assembly candidate, wrote on Twitter. “Anyone ever notice it’s always the same
people?” A QAnon Telegram account mused: “So the General Counsel at the FBI
during the Russia Hoax was also the General Counsel at Twitter during the
Hunter Biden laptop scandal, where he helped cover it up. See a pattern?”
In the hour
after Taibbi’s Friday night Twitter thread, users defaced Baker’s Wikipedia
page to identify him as “an official at the Department of Justice who committed
treason by helping suppress the Hunter Biden laptop story.” Shortly thereafter,
conspiracy website The Gateway Pundit proclaimed: “Crooked FBI Lawyer James
Baker—One of the Architects of Spygate—Was Involved in Twitter’s Decision to
Suppress Hunter Biden Laptop From Hell Story.”
Attorney
Jonathan Turley took to the New York Post to explain how that single email
proved that Baker and Twitter’s chief legal counsel “swatted down internal
misgivings to bury a story that could well have made the difference in the
close 2020 election.”
Taibbi
shared Turley’s article on Sunday. On Tuesday, both Taibbi and Musk revealed
that Baker had been fired for, as Taibbi put it, “vetting the first batch of
‘Twitter Files’—without knowledge of new management.”
That
decision, in turn, spurred a whole new round of conspiracy theories. “James
Baker intercepted the Twitter Files before they could get to Taibbi and
scrubbed references to the FBI,” wrote Jack Posobiec, a conspiracy-minded
writer and contributor to Steve Bannon’s podcast, on Truth Social, echoing the
sentiment across his various social media pages.
While
Musk’s acquisition has been troubled—marked by an exodus of advertisers and a
return of neo-Nazis—he has constantly pointed to record-high engagement as
proof positive that his leadership was netting results.
The SpaceX
CEO’s effort to encourage reaction from Trump’s megafans—even if some of them,
like Trump himself, remain on other platforms—has clearly helped drive that
traffic. Musk, now, seems to be clearly reacting to their reactions to keep
that momentum going.

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