‘Coward’: MAGA internet turns on Trump
The president acknowledged his defeat and urged for
political reconciliation. His online faithful didn’t take it well.
By TINA
NGUYEN
01/08/2021
11:20 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/08/maga-internet-turns-on-trump-456490
After years
of fidelity, Donald Trump's most ardent online fans have finally turned on him.
All it took
was for the president to acknowledge the reality of his loss a little over a
day after they, the MAGA faithful, stormed the Capitol in a violent attempt to
stop the certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s win.
“People
were willing to die for this man and he just threw them all under the bus.
That’s the only thing that’s shameful about the events of the past 36 hours,”
Nick Fuentes, the host of the America First podcast and the unofficial leader
of the white nationalist Groyper Army, angrily tweeted, shortly after Trump
released a video Thursday night in which he conceded that Biden would be the
next president and called for political reconciliation.
Cassandra
Fairbanks, a prominent MAGA activist, tweeted: “[He] tells angry people to
march to the capitol [and then] proceeds to throw his supporters under the
bus.”
Jacob Wohl,
the political dirty trickster known for failed plots to incriminate Trump critics,
reposted her Tweet on his Parler page.
And when
far-right stunt journalist and failed congressional candidate Laura Loomer
posted Trump’s concession video on Parler — “It’s over,” Loomer bemoaned, “Life
is about to become very hard for conservatives in America” — the people in her
replies were aghast that she acknowledged Trump’s own words. “He DID NOT
CONCEDE! ITS HIS NEW ADMINISTRATION that will be coming in,” one respondent
wrote, a sentiment repeated ad nauseam down her feed.
The
despondency among the MAGA faithful online represented perhaps the sharpest
break the community has ever made with a president they’ve exalted. But it also
prompted a familiar brand of skepticism that has marked the past four years:
Was Trump merely trying to placate his establishment handlers? Or did he truly
betray the MAGA movement, days after several of his followers died while
following his instructions to storm the Capitol?
In the
past, Trump had been able to keep his online devotees close by swinging back
into their good graces, normally with a pot-stirring tweet or the announcement
of a controversial right-wing policy. But just hours after the president
released his concession video, many expressed shock that he may have closed the
book on them forever.
QAnon conspiracy
theorists, praying for years that Trump would flush Satan-worshipping pedophile
elites out of Washington, tore apart any scrap of data from the video to prove
that he was playing one final trick. They subjected the time stamps to
numerology, thinking that there was a secret message encoded.
“In no way
did Trump say he conceded. He said: transitioning to a new Admin. As in, he
gonna clear this one out and bring a new one,” tweeted We The Inevitable, a
conspiracy account, getting more than 3,000 retweets within the hour. The
account’s followers agreed that this was surely a sign that he was getting rid
of Vice President Mike Pence — now cast as a MAGA traitor after participating
in the certification of Biden’s win — and that on Jan. 20, retired Gen. Michael
Flynn, now a full-fledged QAnon patriot, would replace him in Trump’s second
term.
And there
was anger. It was directed at Trump for letting things get this far. Over on
Parler, the social media platform beloved by the MAGA community for its lax
moderation policies, users erupted in a fury, calling him a number of
expletives, a “dildo,” and “100% THE SWAMP.”
Some tried
to distance themselves from Trump despite their years of activity in MAGAworld,
while aiming to redirect their followers’ anger at the next administration.
“Yes there were issues. Call those out. Yes after FISA fraud and hoax after
hoax, put pressure on Democrats and recognize they have no moral authority,”
posted Mike Cernovich, a pizzagate conspiracist who was once nearly an investigative
journalist. “But never, ever, go all in Trump.”
“Thank you
@realDonaldTrump. We tried our best to uncover the truths in our electoral
system. We learned a lot,” tweeted Ron Watkins, the former administrator of
8Kun, the forum that continues to host “Q drops” from the mysterious figure at
the center of QAnon. “As Americans, we will support our president on January 20
and beyond.”
But the
commentary was not without its share of conspiracy. A popular thread held that
the Capitol rioters were actually antifa in disguise, there to trick the public
into turning against the MAGA faithful and Trump himself. (Antifa is short for
"anti-facists" and is an umbrella description of far left-leaning
militant groups that resist neo-Nazis and white supremacists.) There was hope
as well that Trump was merely biding his time. They analyzed every word of his
video announcement and noticed, to their glee, that he did not formally
acknowledge Joe Biden’s win — just merely that a new administration would take
over on Jan. 20.
And then,
as despair was kicking in, Trump gave them what they needed: a digital attaboy
for their support.
“The
75,000,000 great American Patriots who voted for me, AMERICA FIRST, and MAKE
AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, will have a GIANT VOICE long into the future,” Trump
tweeted on Friday morning. “They will not be disrespected or treated unfairly
in any way, shape or form!!!”
And just
like that, the faith was restored. “He says GIANT VOICE which are used in
military installations to to alert everyone to EMERGENCIES in the area,”
tweeted pro-QAnon account Copious MQ. It was retweeted 700 times within
minutes.
“[I'm]
feeling much better, for a minute I thought I was alone in my thinking,” one
account replied.


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