1) From Will Carless and Jessica Guynn's 5-23-24 USA TODAY article entitled "As Trump Campaigns, He's Spreading QAnon Posts Anew. Some Call That 'Playing with Fire'":
As
Donald Trump heads toward a November
rematch election against President Joe Biden, his online posts are reinvigorating a key element of his support from years past: the conspiracy theory known as
QAnon.
While QAnon largely faded from the spotlight after Trump left office, he has newly amplified the ideas on his social media platform, Truth Social.
Since the site launched two years ago, Trump has reposted or promoted QAnon-affiliated accounts more than 800 times, ensuring their messages will be widely seen, according to
a new study from liberal watchdog group Media Matters shared exclusively with USA TODAY.
Experts say the support amounts to a tacit endorsement of a dangerous movement that has been linked to criminal acts ranging from the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot to isolated cases of violence and even murder.
The Trump campaign did not respond to requests for comment about QAnon. While he was president, Trump spoke favorably of the movement and today he encourages QAnon chants and plays a song associated with QAnon at rallies.
To read the entire article, click HERE.
2) From Guy Chazan's 5-21-24 FINANCIAL TIMES article entitled "Trial of German Plotters Lifts Curtain on QAnon-style Conspiracy":
Nine men and women went on trial in Frankfurt on Tuesday accused of plotting to overthrow the German government, in a sensational case that has revealed how deeply QAnon conspiracy theories have penetrated the world of the country’s far-right.
The suspects, who were arrested in December 2022, stand accused of belonging to, or supporting, a terrorist organisation that planned to attack the German parliament, detain MPs and do away with the country’s postwar political order. They face 10 to 15 years in prison if found guilty.
Prosecutors have identified the ringleaders as Heinrich XIII Prince Reuss, a real estate broker and scion of an aristocratic family, and Rüdiger von Pescatore, a former lieutenant colonel and paratrooper commander. The group also includes a former MP from the far-right Alternative for Germany party, ex-judge Birgit Malsack-Winkemann.
Prosecutor Tobias Engelstetter spent most of the first day of the trial reading out the 617-page indictment, detailing a conspiracy that seemed so outlandish at times it drew gasps of astonishment from the public gallery.
Prosecutors said the conspirators shared a “profound rejection” of the country’s liberal democratic system, believed deeply in the QAnon conspiracy and shared the views of the “Reichsbürger” movement, which does not recognise Germany’s postwar order.
Engelstetter presented the plotters’ worldview as being built around the idea that Germany is controlled by members of a “deep state”, which runs a series of “underground military bases”. Here children are abused, killed and their bodies used to produce a special rejuvenating elixir.
According to this theory, the deep state is opposed by a secret association known as the Alliance, which brings together the armies, governments and intelligence services of various states, including the US and Russia, that have promised to liberate Germany.
To read the entire article, click HERE.
3) From Ryan J. Reilly's 4-3-24 NBC News article entitled "Ex-military Member Charged with Crashing into FBI Office Had Online Links to QAnon, Report Says":
The ex-military member who federal authorities say drove his SUV into a barricade at the FBI office in Atlanta on Monday had online ties to QAnon-related content and appeared to be a supporter of former President Donald Trump, according to an open-source investigation by the group Advance Democracy.
Ervin Lee Bolling currently faces a count of destruction of government property. He has not yet entered a plea. An FBI affidavit states that after crashing his car, Bolling got out and tried to walk past the gate where he was stopped by three special agents. Bolling refused instructions to sit on the curb and resisted arrest when the agents tried to take him into custody, according to the charging documents.
Advance Democracy, in a report seen by NBC News, found social media accounts that appeared to be linked to Bolling that had a history of promoting conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election as well as QAnon.
"I love you @realDonaldTrump," one account suspected to be linked to Bolling posted back in December 2020, according to Advance Democracy. "You have more support than even you know."
A separate Telegram account that used the name "Lee Bolling" and has a handle that Bolling appears to have used on other platforms was a member of nine public Telegram groups, several of which were related to QAnon, according to Advance Democracy.
To read the entire article, click HERE.
You can hear me discussing my nonfiction book, OPERATION MINDFUCK: QANON & THE CULT OF DONALD TRUMP, in a series of recent interviews...
OPEN LOOPS
CONSENSUS UNREALITY
SOMEWHERE IN DREAMLAND
TALK GNOSIS
CONSPIRINORMAL (2023)
EXPANDING FRONTIERS
MARC MARON'S WTF PODCAST
THE TYLER'S PLACE PODCAST
CONSPIRINORMAL (2024)
THE FARM
ALMOST CANON
CROPfm
"It's great."
--Marc Maron, WTF Podcast
"Voltaire
suggested that those who can make us believe absurdities can make us
commit atrocities, and QAnon provided the practical demonstration.
Robert Guffey’s razor-sharp postings illuminate how a collage of Shaver
mysteries, Discordian prankster politics and recreational conspiracy
theory played out as dissociative American fugue. Jaw-dropping and
essential."
—Alan Moore, author of V for Vendetta and Watchmen
"One
of the most difficult aspects of confronting QAnon conspiracism is
finding the time and resolve to delve into its ever-expanding network of
self-reinforcing connections and concepts. Robert Guffey does that work
for you in OPERATION MINDFUCK, a codex to madness and a critical
examination of how a massive fraction of our culture has imbibed a
counter-reality. Guffey also explores underground sources lost on many
mainstream historians, bringing us into an (occasionally ingenious)
netherworld of outsider thought forms. Guffey is the Ernest Shackleton
of paranoia—and one hopes his journey will result in a happier ending."
—Mitch Horowitz, PEN Award-winning author of Occult America and Uncertain Places
"It's
practically a guide to your character to discover whether you find this
expose of possibly the stupidest political movement in human history
funny, alarming, or infuriating.... Highly recommended."
—Richard Smoley, author of Supernatural: Writings on an Unknown History and How God Became God
"OPERATION MINDFUCK: QANON & THE CULT OF DONALD TRUMP
by Robert Guffey tackles the conspiracy theories Q draws from, the
history of the Q phenomenon, and the eventual attempts by mobs at least
partially influenced by Q, and certainly influenced by Donald Trump, to
overturn the 2020 Presidential election. The book is well-researched,
with a full Bibliography of notes that reference and identify each quote
from each source that Guffey cites. Guffey, additionally, has a long
background studying conspiracy theories and their origins [...]. Guffey is not a lightweight."
—Steve Henn, author of And God Said Let There Be Evolution
"Whether QAnon is a religion, a cult, a joke, a political movement, or just an online game gone awry, Robert Guffey's OPERATION MINDFUCK: QANON & THE CULT OF DONALD TRUMP is his attempt to figure it all out. Guffey's pedigree in this area is unmatched [...]. Throughout OPERATION MINDFUCK, Guffey follows Theodore Sturgeon's advice he quoted in his book CHAMELEO: 'Always ask the next question.'"
—Roy Christopher, author of Dead Precedents: How Hip-Hop Defines the Future
"[Guffey's] expertise shines through in every chapter of this book. Operation Mindfuck: QAnon and the Cult of Donald Trump
is not only a well written and well researched look into the abyss of
bullshit known as QAnon, but it is also very funny and quite sad at the
same time—an interesting, entertaining, and sometimes frightening read."
--Razorcake
"If
you are still dazed from this [QAnon] business, then Robert Guffey has
written a book just for you. In readable yet well researched fashion, he
lays it all out: where it began, who, why, how. He can’t make it go
away for you—or me, for that matter—but he can make the whole bizarre
business a bit less confusing... [T]his book is what you need. Get your
fire lit, your cup of coffee (or something far stronger), curl up (in
fetal position, if necessary), and prepare to learn."
--Seattle Book Mama