Opinion
How QAnon and Jan. 6 Ripped the Conspiracy Theory
World Apart
By Annie
Kelly
Dr. Kelly
is a postdoctoral researcher working on conspiracy theories and a correspondent
for the podcast “QAnon Anonymous.”
Aug. 4,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/04/opinion/conspiracy-theory-qanon.html
The date
was Jan. 20, 2021, and Stephen Miles Lewis was trying to keep the peace.
Two weeks
before, a mob of pro-Trump protesters had stormed the Capitol building, and the
circles Mr. Lewis ran in were now brimming with tension. Many of his closest
friends had been outraged by what they saw. But he also knew someone who had
been there, who now claimed that the violence had been stirred up by antifa
agents disguised as Trump supporters.
Mr. Lewis,
a middle-aged man with a round face and a gray beard who goes by the nickname
SMiles, sat at his desk, in front of a wall covered with posters of aliens,
flying saucers and Bigfoot. In a YouTube video, he urged viewers to “take a
step back and hopefully think, meditate, reflect on the times that we’re in,”
to not “malign the others’ viewpoint.” He expressed frustration that the term
“conspiracy theorist” was increasingly being used as an insult. After all, he
pointed out: “I am a conspiracy theorist.”
At the
time, Mr. Lewis was trying to project calm, to help ensure that the community
he’d been part of since he was 18 didn’t tear itself apart. But in the years
since, he has found himself unsettled by the darker elements of a world he
thought he knew.
Over the
past year, I’ve been part of an academic research project seeking to understand
how the internet changed conspiracy theories. Many of the dynamics the internet
creates are, at this point, well understood: We know its capacity to help users
find one another, making it easier than ever for people to get involved in
conspiracy networks; we also know how social media platforms prioritize
inflammatory content and that as a result, ideas and information that make
people angry travel farther.
What we
felt was missing from this story, though, was what this period of change looked
like from the perspective of conspiracy theorists themselves.
My team has
been speaking to researchers and writers who were part of this world or
connected to it in the pre-social media era. And we’ve learned something
surprising: Many of the people we’ve interviewed told us they, too, have spent
the past few years baffled by the turn conspiracy culture has taken. Many
expressed discomfort with and at times outright disgust for QAnon and the
related theories claiming the 2020 election had been stolen and said that they
felt as if the very worst elements of conspiracy culture had become its main
representatives.
It’s worth
noting that our sample was biased by who agreed to speak to us. While all of
conspiracy culture can be characterized by its deep skepticism, that skepticism
doesn’t always point in the same direction. Although we’ve approached as many
people as possible, so far it’s mostly been those on the left of the political
spectrum who have been interested in talking to university researchers.
(They’ve also been overwhelmingly men.)
Still, what
our interviewees had to say was striking: The same forces that have made
conspiracy theories unavoidable in our politics have also fundamentally changed
them, to the extent that even those who pride themselves on their openness to
alternative viewpoints — Sept. 11 truthers, Kennedy assassination investigators
and U.F.O. cover-up researchers — have been alarmed by what they’ve seen.
Mr. Lewis’s
sense that conspiracy networks would be rived by tensions in the aftermath of
Jan. 6 was well founded. Rumors immediately began circulating that the rioters
had been infiltrated by agents instigating violence — an accusation that some
of the rioters themselves took to social media to denounce. Ashli Babbitt, the
rioter who was fatally shot by a police officer during the attack, was
simultaneously lionized as a martyr and derided as a false flag.
All this
ultimately left Mr. Lewis less inclined to play peacemaker and more inclined to
take a step away from it all. Today, he says, he increasingly avoids some of
the language that floats around the conspiracysphere: Terms like “the
illuminati” used to feel like fun ideas to play with. Now he worries they could
be used to create scapegoats, or even encourage violence.
***
SMiles
Lewis grew up in Austin, Texas, with his mother — his parents separated when he
was very young — and it was his close connection with her that first sparked
his interest in the unexplained: “There was a sense, early on with my Mom and
I, where we felt like we were reading each other’s minds,” he said. The two of
them would watch shows like “That’s Incredible!,” which retold stories of
paranormal encounters. Mr. Lewis recalls his mother telling him after one
episode: “If you are ever in distress, just concentrate on me really hard, and
I will get the message.” Her theory got put to the test when Mr. Lewis was a
teenager: Once, when home alone, he heard voices in their yard after dark.
Afraid, he considered calling his mother, but the fear of losing precious new
adult freedoms stopped him. The next day she asked him if everything had been
all right, because out of nowhere, she had felt the overwhelming urge to call.
Mr. Lewis took this as confirmation that there was more to human abilities than
science could yet rationalize.
Once Mr.
Lewis graduated from high school, he joined the Austin chapter of the Mutual
U.F.O. Network, an organization for enthusiasts to meet and discuss sightings.
From there, he became the leader of a support group for people who believed
they’d had close encounters with aliens. Mr. Lewis never had such an experience
himself, but he said the group didn’t mind — they just appreciated that he kept
an open mind.
U.F.O.s and
conspiracy theories have always been intertwined, but it was Sept. 11 that
really turned Mr. Lewis political. As he speculated in an editorial for The
Austin Para Times after the planes hit the towers, he felt that he had “been a
witness to Amerika’s greatest Reichstag event ” — a planned disaster to justify
fascist encroachment on civil liberties, something many of the writers Mr.
Lewis admired had warned of.
For Mr.
Lewis, conspiracism was always about thinking critically about the narratives
of the powerful and questioning your own biases. In our interviews, he saw his
interest in the parapolitical — in how intelligence and security services
quietly shape the world — as connected to his political activism, not so
different from attending an abortion rights rally or joining a local
anti-Patriot Act group. All were about standing up for civil liberties and
citizen privacy against an opportunistic, overreaching state.
But for all
Mr. Lewis’s political idealism, there was also something undeniably
invigorating about conspiracy culture. This was a scene free from the stifling
hegemony of sensible mainstream thought, a place where writers, filmmakers and
artists could explore whatever ideas or theories interested them, however weird
or improper. This radical commitment to resisting censorship in all its forms
sometimes led to decisions that, from the perspective of 2023, look like
dangerous naïveté at best: Reading countercultural material from the 1990s can
feel like navigating a political minefield, where musings about the North
American “mothman” and experimental poetry sit side-by-side with Holocaust
denial. Conspiracy culture was tolerant of banned or stigmatized ideas in a way
many of our interviewees said they found liberating, but this tolerance always
had a dangerous edge.
Still, Mr.
Lewis looks back nostalgically on days when there seemed to be more respect and
camaraderie. The aftermath of Sept. 11 and the war on terror presented, he
said, a threat to citizens that the conspiracy-friendly left and right could
unite over. Now the rift between the two was deep and vicious. He felt as if
the ideas that had first attracted him to conspiratorial thought had been
“weaponized,” pointing people away from legitimate abuses of power and toward
other citizens — the grieving parents of Sandy Hook, for example — and at times
involved real-world violence.
When I
asked Mr. Lewis when he first heard of QAnon, he told me a story about a family
member who’d sent him a video that began with what he saw as a fairly
unobjectionable narrative of government abuses of power. “I’m nodding my head,
I’m agreeing,” he said. Then it got to the satanic pedophile networks.
The
conspiracy culture that Mr. Lewis knew had celebrated the unusual and found
beauty in the bizarre. He had friends who considered themselves pagans, friends
who participated in occult rituals. “The vast majority of them are not
blood-drinking lunatics!” he told me. Some of his friends were no longer
comfortable talking about their beliefs for fear of becoming targets.
Others we
interviewed told us similar stories: about a scene that had once felt niche,
vibrant and underground but had transformed into something almost
unrecognizable. Greg Bishop, a friend of Mr. Lewis’s and editor of the 1990s
zine The Excluded Middle, which covered U.F.O.s, conspiracy theories and
psychedelia, among other things, told me that as the topics he’d covered had
become more mainstream, he’d watched the vitriol and division increase. “You’d
see somebody at a convention who was frothing at the mouth or whatever,
figuratively, and that’s changed into something that’s basically a part of the
culture now.”
Joseph E.
Green, an author and parapolitical researcher, described how in the past,
attending conferences on conspiracy topics, “there’s always a couple of guys in
there who will tell you after they get familiar with you that the Jews run the
world.” Mr. Green had no interest in such ideas, but nor did he think they ran
much risk of going mainstream. But somewhere along the way, conspiracy spaces
on the internet had become “a haven” for the “lunatic fringe” of the right
wing, which in turn spilled back into the real world.
Jonathan
Vankin, a journalist who wrote about the conspiracy scene of the 1990s, said
watching the emergence of QAnon had been disillusioning. Mr. Vankin never
considered himself a conspiracy theorist, but as a journalist he felt an
appreciation for them. They may not have always gotten the facts right, but
their approach was a way of saying, “The official story, the way we’re fed that
every day, isn’t really necessarily the way it is.” Now, he said, conspiracy theories
felt more like “tools of control” that changed how people saw the world, not in
a liberatory sense but “in a distorted way” — one that no longer challenged
power but served its interests.
***
Have
conspiracy theories and conspiracy theorists gotten nastier? It’s worth
recalling that the reactionary, violent impulse that we think of as
characterizing contemporary conspiracism was always there: The John Birch
Society of the 1960s and its hunt for secret Communists in the very top levels
of government has been described by some historians as an early ancestor of
QAnon. And it’s also worth remembering that the historical friendliness between
left and right conspiracism could be ethically murky. When Timothy McVeigh
detonated a truck bomb in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people and injuring
hundreds more, he said he was acting in retaliation for the Waco siege of 1993
and its aftermath — what he and many others in militia circles saw as the
government covering up a deliberate massacre of its own citizens. Some liberal
writers in the conspiracy scene defended him — some even went as far as to
suggest he had been framed.
What does
seem clear is that conspiracy theories have become less of a specialist
interest and more of an unavoidable phenomenon that affects us all, whether in
the form of anti-vaccination sentiments or election denialism. With both Robert
F. Kennedy Jr. and Donald Trump running for president, none of this seems
likely to fade away anytime soon.
Michael
Barkun, a scholar of religious extremism and conspiracy theories, describes
conspiracy-minded networks as spaces of “stigmatized knowledge” — ideas that
are ignored or rejected by the institutions that society relies on to help us
make sense of the world. Recently, though, Mr. Barkun writes, in part because
of the development of the internet, that stigma has been weakening as what “was
once clearly recognizable as ‘the fringe’ is now beginning to merge with the
mainstream.”
The story
we’ve heard from our interviewees is that this mainstreaming process has had
profound effects, fundamentally altering the character of both the theories
themselves and those who claim to be adherents, by making conspiracy theories
more accessible and more potentially profitable. It’s these shifts that have
left people like Mr. Lewis feeling so out of place in the spaces they once saw
as their ideological homes.
The
conspiracy scene, on left and right, immediately grasped the significance of
the World Wide Web’s arrival in the 1990s. For people who wanted to explore
stigmatized topics, the liberatory potential was obvious, and most of the
people we spoke to were early adopters. Mr. Lewis himself at one point had
between 70 and 80 registered domain names.
And yet,
despite pouring more effort into his passion than some people put into their
jobs, Mr. Lewis never made much, if any, money from it. When I asked him about
it, it didn’t even seem to have occurred to him to try. This wasn’t unusual;
the biggest names in conspiracy culture before the internet — radio hosts like
Bill Cooper and Mae Brussell — may have sold books and tapes but hardly built
media empires. Making money seemed secondary to the principle of getting the
truth — as they saw it, at least — out there, for like-minded people to debate
and discuss.
Today’s
conspiracy theorists are different. Termed “conspiracy entrepreneurs” by
academics, they combine the audience-growth strategies of social media
lifestyle influencers with a mixture of culture war and survivalist rhetoric.
They’re active on various platforms, constantly responding to new developments,
and most of them are selling their audience something on the side.
One of the
first entrepreneurs to pioneer this approach was Alex Jones, who a recent court
case revealed had an estimated combined net worth with his company of up to
$270 million. Before his name became synonymous with conspiracy theories, Mr.
Jones got his start in Austin community access television in the 1990s — a
scene that Mr. Lewis was intimately familiar with. But as Mr. Lewis and others
tell it, Mr. Jones always possessed both an aggressive streak and a sense of
showmanship that many of his contemporaries lacked, making him perfect for
social media, where conspiracy theorists, like everyone else, are competing in
an attention economy.
“The last
thing I want to do is sit on a recorded video and say to you, ‘In our day,
conspiracy theories were kinder and gentler,’” said Ruffin Prevost, an editor
at ParaScope, a now-defunct site set up in 1996 that covered U.F.O.s, secret
societies, and mind control, among other subjects. “But there is definitely a
different tenor to how people go about this stuff now,” he said. “It’s almost
like you’ve got to be strident and hard-core about whatever your thing is to
have enough bona fides to capture that audience.”
The belief
that the incentives of social media had shorn conspiracy research of its
serious, scholarly edge was a common theme. “The things that we’re describing
are not really the same thing,” Mr. Green declared to me flatly, comparing the
archival work and conferences that he had been involved with to the salacious
videos of QAnon influencers. The scholarly work “is never going to have that
commercial appeal,” he said. “You know, just like if I try to get somebody to
watch a film by Ingmar Bergman, it’s much more difficult than to get them to
watch a film by Michael Bay. It’s almost not even the same thing, right?”
In the
minds of many conspiracy theorists, Mr. Jones and his imitators don’t deserve
the title. In his 2017 book, “Trumpocalypse Now!: The Triumph of the Conspiracy
Spectacle,” Kenn Thomas, a towering figure in the world of 1990s conspiracy,
termed the recent crop of opportunists looking to profit from the hard work of
researchers “conspiracy celebrities.” And the conspiracy celebrity in chief,
Mr. Thomas said, was Donald Trump, who referred to conspiracy theories he
hadn’t researched and didn’t understand. To the world at large, it might seem
as if we’re living in a time in which conspiratorial thinking is ascendant. But
in his foreword to Mr. Thomas’s book, Robert Sterling, editor of a 1990s and
2000s countercultural conspiracy blog called The Konformist, argued otherwise:
“If this moment is a victory for the conspiracy culture,” he wrote, “it is a
Pyrrhic victory at best.”
***
“There’s a
few different stories we can tell about what happened,” Douglas Rushkoff, a
media theorist and author, told me. Conspiracy culture up through the ’90s was
dominated by what could be called a “radio sensibility.” Fringe topics were
mostly discussed on late-night talk shows. There were guest experts, and
listeners could call in, but the host still functioned as a (lenient)
gatekeeper, and the theories themselves conformed to a narrative format. They
were, for the most part, complete stories, with beginnings, middles and ends.
In the
digital age, he said, sense-making had become a fragmented, nonlinear and
crowdsourced affair that as a result could never reach a conclusion and lacked
internal logic. There were always potential new connections to be spotted — in
the case of the 2020 election, for instance, two imprisoned Italian hackers, or
a voting machine company founded by Venezuelans. This lack of satisfying
resolution meant the new theories had no natural stopping point, he said, and
their perpetual motion eventually brought them to a place that was “much more
strident” — “even amongst the left.”
The new
“born-digital” conspiracy theories, like QAnon and the Great Reset, are
constantly looking forward by necessity. Attaching themselves to the fast-paced
flow of current events and trending topics is a matter of survival on social
media, which can also explain why those who perpetuate them rarely stay focused
on unpacking just one event: The Great Reset theory, for example, began by
alleging that the Covid-19 pandemic had been deliberately engineered by the
global elite, but soon expanded to encompass climate change, economic inflation
and local traffic schemes.
Some
academics have argued that even when conspiracy theories warn of dark and
dystopian futures, they are fundamentally optimistic: They are assertions that
humans are ultimately in control of events, and humans can stop whatever
terrible catastrophe is coming around the corner. But perhaps the problem is
that human beings are no longer really in control of the conspiracy theories
themselves. Even when Q, the anonymous figure who sparked the QAnon movement,
stopped posting, the movement’s adherents carried on.
Before we
had even spoken over Zoom, Mr. Lewis sent me a 2022 Medium article written by
Rani Baker that he said summed up a lot of his feelings about the topic. It was
titled “So When, Exactly, Did Conspiracy Culture Stop Being Fun?” It was a
question he said he had been struggling with too.
When I
asked Mr. Lewis if he had become more moderate over time, he was ambivalent. He
said he maintains his skepticism about power and the state, but he’s less
dogmatic these days — perhaps because he’s gained a new appreciation for the
destructive power of uncompromising narratives. His thinking on Sept. 11, in
particular, has evolved, from what truthers call MIHOP (Made It Happen on
Purpose) to LIHOP (Let It Happen on Purpose) to today, when he allows it might
have been something very different: an event foreseeable in the abstract, but
as a horrific consequence of decades of U.S. interference in the Middle East,
not a government’s deliberate attack on its own people.
But from
Mr. Lewis’s perspective, asking if he had moderated his views wasn’t quite the
right question. For him and many of the others we spoke to, the paranormal and
the parapolitical had been their passion and their home for their entire adult
lives, places where they had found friends, ideas and ways of theorizing about
the world that fascinated and excited them. They were used to their interest in
these topics making them outsiders. Now they found themselves living with one
foot in and one foot out of the current conspiracy scene, which had become
increasingly popular, ubiquitous and dangerous. As they saw it, it wasn’t that
they had rejected conspiracy culture; conspiracy culture was leaving them
behind.
As we
wrapped up one of our interviews, Mr. Lewis told me that he finds himself
increasingly returning to listening to old broadcasts of his to see if he can
make sense of when that turning point began.
“I keep
trying to imagine,” he said. “Like, I think of the time before, and I think of
the time now, and it’s like, yeah, where did the transition happen? Were there
milestones along the way? Were there signs, portents, that we could have
recognized?” He trails off and pauses. “And I don’t have the answer to this,
but that’s kind of where my mind keeps going.”
Annie Kelly
is a postdoctoral researcher working on conspiracy theories at King’s College
London and the University of Manchester. She is also the British correspondent
for the podcast “QAnon Anonymous.”
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