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Beyond Q

Andrea Austria / Media Matters

Beyond “Q”

Written by Alex Kaplan

Published 02/08/22 10:16 AM EST

The QAnon conspiracy theory continued to evolve since the start of 2021, despite platform crackdowns, former President Donald Trump leaving office, and its central figure, “Q,” going dark. The movement went on to fuel efforts to undermine democracy and our public health and continued embracing and incorporating new forms of extremism and other conspiracy theories.

Media Matters has documented in a multipart series that continued growth, which helped the conspiracy theory evolve into a lasting movement:

  • Part 1: How QAnon fueled false voter fraud claims and attempts to undermine democracy, including the Capitol insurrection and other efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election -- and future elections.
  • Part 2: How QAnon gave a boost to anti-vax figures and became increasingly intertwined with the anti-vaccine movement, including via cross-pollination between the two movements.
  • Part 3: How the QAnon community focused on local politics, incorporated new extremist beliefs, and saw the rise of new and dangerous influencers.

The Latest

  1. On MSNBC's Deadline: White House, Angelo Carusone describes how Pete Hegseth's “might makes right” worldview appeals to Trump

    Video & Audio 12/17/24 5:39 PM EST

  2. In wake of a school shooting, Newsmax's Greg Kelly condemns “a sick, lame and lazy conversation about gun control”

    Video & Audio 12/17/24 9:11 AM EST

  3. On MSNBC’s ReidOut, Angelo Carusone details how right-wing media entrenched baseless conspiracy theories in “standard Republican Party orthodoxy”

    Video & Audio 12/16/24 9:17 PM EST

  4. Steve Bannon: Republicans will have to “raise taxes on the wealthy” to fulfill Trump's campaign promises

    Video & Audio 12/16/24 7:11 PM EST

  5. Fox host suggests RFK Jr. appointment means “we might not have to worry about our children with autism”

    Video & Audio 12/16/24 5:00 PM EST

Pagination

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In This Article

  • QAnon Conspiracy Theory

    QAnon-Conspiracy-Theory-MMFA-Tag.png

Related

  1. In 2021, people thought QAnon would go away -- instead, it continued to fuel attacks on democracy

    Article 12/31/21 9:15 AM EST

  2. In 2021, the bond between QAnon and anti-vaxxers grew even stronger

    Article 01/12/22 10:03 AM EST

  3. In 2021, an increasingly fractured QAnon community started focusing on local politics -- while embracing more extremist beliefs

    Article 02/08/22 10:01 AM EST

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