There are some scare tweets going around about a third of Republicans believing in QAnon, but the phrasing of the question on the Civiqs survey is "Do you believe that the QAnon theory about a conspiracy among deep state elites is true?" which covers a lot of ground.
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A lot of the reporting around QAnon is done in two steps: 1. Find a public figure who doesn't know much about the conspiracy movement but broadly agrees with some deep state language 2. Claim QAnon is going mainstream
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Clearly it's a very popular belief system, but it's also a vast and sprawling pudding of crazy. I'd love to see more reporting about what parts people actually believe, and how it's morphing as it gains popularity. The "QAnon" label just mixes it all together and explains little
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Replying to @nezumi_ningen @Pinboard
sorry, I was trying to be helpful. I will delete if this is going to be a slapfight.
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Replying to @nezumi_ningen @substitute
I've been dicking around online and not following the Q stuff closely. I'm sorry for the annoying entry-level question
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I remember the Q stuff from a year or two ago, when it was child sex trafficking, Trump working secretly in cahoots with Mueller and also various Q drops that people would eagerly wait for. Then I lost touch with it until I saw journalists writing about QAnon going mainstream
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