QAnon’s ‘Q’ re-emerges on far-right message board
after two years of silence
Cryptic posts on 8kun ask ‘Shall we play a game once
more?’ and ‘Are you ready to serve your country again?’
Adam
Gabbatt
@adamgabbatt
Mon 27 Jun
2022 15.19 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jun/27/qanon-head-posts-message-board-8kun
The leader
of the QAnon conspiracy theory, which captivated a wave of Donald Trump
supporters and infiltrated the Republican party, began posting again over the
weekend, after nearly two years of silence.
“Q”, as the
figurehead of the movement is known, published three cryptic posts on a message
board on Friday night – the account’s first posts since December 2020.
“Shall we
play a game once more?” the account posted on the far-right board 8kun. The
post was signed: “Q”.
The account
had a unique identifier, the New York Times reported, which had been used on
previous Q posts.
When a user
asked why Q had been absent, the account replied: “It had to be done this way.”
Later, the account
posted: “Are you ready to serve your country again? Remember your oath.”
QAnon is an
antisemitic internet conspiracy theory that swept the US right wing in 2017.
Proponents claim that Trump was waging a secret battle against a cabal of
pedophiles and its “deep state” collaborators.
Posts from
Q are known to followers as “Q drops”, and they gripped thousands of Trump
supporters during his presidency. QAnon T-shirts are still a common sight at
Trump rallies, and the baseless theory has also entered Republican politics.
Marjorie
Taylor Greene and Lauren Boebert, US congresswomen who represent Georgia and
Colorado respectively, have previously expressed support for QAnon, and other
QAnon followers are running for Congress in the November midterm elections.
Earlier
this year two separate linguistic studies determined that Paul Furber, a South
African software developer, was behind Q’s early posts, before Ron Watkins took
over the account in 2018.
Watkins’
father, Jim Watkins, owns the 8kun site – previously called 8chan – where Q
posted their drops, and Ron Watkins is a former administrator of the platform.
Watkins has
denied any involvement with QAnon, and the account stopped posting after
Trump’s defeat. However, the silence failed to dampen enthusiasm among the
right for the conspiracy theory.
Q’s new
posts come as Watkins is running as a Republican for a congressional seat in
Arizona. He has raised little money and secured no notable endorsements, and
pundits are widely expecting him to be eliminated from the race when the
primary is held 2 August.
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