The average membership of 10 of Facebook's biggest (public) QAnon groups increased ~600% from March-July 2020. https://t.co/njQjYM6Kyh
— Dr. Seema Yasmin (@DoctorYasmin) November 16, 2020
For days after the election, adherents to the QAnon conspiracy movement had been trying to get President Trump’s attention with constant false claims about voter fraud connected to a company that makes voting machines.
— NBC News (@NBCNews) November 13, 2020
On Thursday, they celebrated. https://t.co/L8CCEiSpyn
MCCARTHY on QAnon sympathetic Rs coming to Congress: these are new members — give them an opportunity
— Jake Sherman (@JakeSherman) November 12, 2020
She fell into QAnon and went viral for destroying a Target mask display.
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) November 11, 2020
Now she’s rebuilding her life. https://t.co/K3cmaEIVhD
Our first Q supportive (her campaign insists it was in the past) congresswoman puts out a video with the following graphic up top pic.twitter.com/1UbtvZ8VFS
— Sam Stein (@samstein) November 11, 2020
QAnon is supposed to be all about protecting kids. Its primary enabler appears to have hosted child porn domains. https://t.co/ITapRPCrdK
— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) November 11, 2020
This is how the QAnon community is reacting to the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine news:
— Shayan Sardarizadeh (@Shayan86) November 9, 2020
"You can keep your vaccine and your microchip"
"NWO wants only 500 million people globally"
"This is not a win for the people in any way" pic.twitter.com/8mLxxogAFl
Researchers are exploring a possible link between polling errors in states where surveys underestimated President Trump’s support and a higher-than-average volume of QAnon activity in those states. https://t.co/QnJrVdGEiQ
— The New York Times (@nytimes) November 6, 2020
"Once Trump settled on this narrative, QAnon supporters appeared energized and focused."
— John Hendrickson (@JohnGHendy) November 5, 2020
Great @kait_tiffany piece: https://t.co/RQSkMr8eHY
K-pop fans are "keyword squatting" again, this time disrupting chat about the million maga march with news about pancakes. Here's a good primer:https://t.co/Y85yqzoQDM
— Dr. Seema Yasmin (@DoctorYasmin) November 13, 2020
The QAnon conspiracy theory faces a post-Trump identity crisis https://t.co/qBOYOWZQrx
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) November 10, 2020
Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) donated $2,000 to QAnon congressional candidate Angela Stanton-King, an author and television personality who is very unlikely to win her race. (The @ajc previously reported Loeffler's donation.) https://t.co/1eGGg8FoLP
— Eric Hananoki (@ehananoki) November 2, 2020
The dozens of Republicans who have voiced support for at least some elements of QAnon show how GOP leadership has allowed QAnon to become a part of the party, even if the GOP hasn’t explicitly embraced it. https://t.co/E52MgHaUen
— FiveThirtyEight (@FiveThirtyEight) October 30, 2020
In the U.S., QAnon has already evolved from a fringe internet subculture into a mass movement veering into the mainstream. In Germany, it has found fertile ground in the putsch fantasies and anti-Semitic tropes long popular on the far-right fringe.https://t.co/RY8soZ0VBN
— The New York Times (@nytimes) October 11, 2020
Flagging for all the reporters who questioned whether the NRCC ads were really QAnon dog whistles. https://t.co/5ru3YWx70J
— Tommy Vietor (@TVietor08) October 1, 2020
Another QAnon mom has allegedly kidnapped her kid.
— Will Sommer (@willsommer) October 1, 2020
It's the latest collision between child custody fights, QAnon, and fringe legal theories. https://t.co/t8SxnAe256
Facebook announced that it will ban any ads in support of the far-right group Qanon and any militarized social movements. – @CNBC https://t.co/Xq5ot9RLVq
— NBC News (@NBCNews) October 1, 2020
anyhow maybe they won't screw this up but…idk this isn't the direction i'd go after reading reports like this one! pic.twitter.com/VK87HZDYkX
— Charlie Warzel (@cwarzel) October 1, 2020
Hours before the first debate, the GOP chairwoman is quoting the first daughter to wink at QAnon as if all of this is normal and not in fact the saddest party ever hoping the votes of a conspiracy cult can save them in the election. pic.twitter.com/pBMFoMppst
— Molly McKew (@MollyMcKew) September 29, 2020