It would seem fair to say that the US hard right is not having a great time at the moment. The wonderful Twitter account @copingMAGA is keeping a record of all the craziest, angriest, butt-hurtiest comments as Trump’s army come to terms with the failure of the January surprise — its belief that Joe Biden’s inauguration would be the moment when Donald Trump called in “the storm” and hundreds of progressives would be executed for their pizza-based paedophilia conspiracy. Hey, why were the fences there? Why all the troops?
Hardcore MAGA and QAnon types have since revised that expectation: the storm will now occur in March, the original date of inaugurations as laid down in the constitution. But they’re a dwindling bunch.
For many of the Q army, the whole conspiracy has come apart in an instant. “So it was all a hoax” is the tenor of many comments. It’s the disappointed tone of people who always knew at some level that it might be — like a great party with celebs and free booze that turned out to be a rumour. Ah, but the getting there was fun!
That is one reason why QAnon became so vast and all-encompassing, and why it never resolved to a simpler statement of power but became steadily more baroque in its specificities. If you’re going to commit to a conspiracy, you want it to be the best one ever, a whole alternative world to get lost in.
Many of the Qsters appear to have begun as straight Trump fanatics. What attracted them to him was the simplicity of his pitch. He was going to fix everything, only he could do it, Americans would be “tired of winning”. The tortuous complexity was all on the other side.
Q emerged — almost certainly as a hoax by a small group at the core of the 8chan/8kun netherworld — and caught on as MAGA began to falter. The factories didn’t arrive, the wall didn’t get built, Hillary didn’t get jail. The foreign policy was confusing — Trump schmoozed up to bad guys more than Obama did — and the genuine improvements in the local economies of “flyover country” didn’t amount to a visible transformation. Mom still worked at the diner; the tyre factory never reopened.
Q can’t have been for everybody in the MAGA army, but its reach is astonishing given how wilfully, surreally, at odds with rationality it is. We have become accustomed to its viability, though none of us would have believed it possible if told in 2015.
Yet why not? Trump’s campaign was a distinctive hybrid of business hucksterism and the occult hard rightism supplied by the likes of Steve Bannon, a devotee of the European beliefs that modernity itself is a product of conspiracies by abstract enlightened illuminati. The Q creators, taking a hint from Bannon’s populism, gave their conspiracy an all-American gloss.
QAnon is a hand-cracked, crowd-sourced version of the grand conspiracies in the great 20th century American novels: Gaddis’s J R, Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow, Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest. But it’s also the culmination of a half-century of popular conspiracy roaring out of the ’50s: UFOs, shadow agencies, JFK, phantom hitchhikers, the Bermuda Triangle, every pulp-printed book with raised cover lettering bought off a bus-stop spinner-rack. It’s The Da Vinci Code done by Mad magazine, with the vast Walmart-aisle sprawl of American crap providing the raw material.
Q sprawls, aggregates, proliferates on a single plane, a series of interlocking concrete mythemes. No one part of it organises any other. Q sets its followers photo riddles (“Have you worked it out yet?”) that drift into numerology and out again to decades-old true-crime obscurities. It’s equal and opposite to the cultural forms of the elite, which are relentlessly hierarchised.
Many Q followers are middle-class and have degrees, but together with those lacking that they marshal mythical knowledge against the intersecting systems of control laid across everyday life: that culture has been stolen, and technoscience — what is presented as most rational — is utterly mysterious.
To the news that Hillary and Chelsea Clinton are producing a streaming series about Kurdish woman freedom fighters, what can one say but is Congress running a child sex ring from a pizza parlour?
Yet the overwhelming feel of the Q conspiracy is of something running out of steam, as actual Q “drops” have fallen away since the election, and attempts to build from what remains runs on fumes: the inauguration was staged because Kamala Harris allegedly swore the oath on a purse; John F Kennedy Jr is not dead, is Q, and has taken control of Space Force, which will enact “the storm” etc.
A convenor of 8kun has suggested people go back to their ordinary lives, and so on. Since Q was a steered, collective psychotic break, a mass waking dream, that may be more straightforward than it seems. The building of Q across a mass web of co-interpreters — mining Q for meaning, as Bitcoin is mined by maths — mirrored an individual’s dreaming; the non-conscious synthesis of disjunctive elements into an (internally) coherent story.
On the one hand it breaks, as a dream breaks on waking. Yet in the political realm, it leaves the remains of the day. For those on the US hard right who drew their politics from more established and rational, if noxious, sources of white supremacism and ethno-nationalism, the dissolution of Q may be not unwelcome.
For many of the harder right, many of the Q people will have been exactly the sort of deluded carbs-n-YouTube types that they disdain as lumpen America. They will hope to have recruited a few, as Q’s focus on elite Satanism transformed easily into conventional anti-Semitism, but they may also welcome the clarification afforded by the demise of Trump, whose capacity and will to push through a real cultural revolution proved lacking.
For stalwarts of ethno-nationalism and beyond, the fall of Trump may prove an opportunity to build out their organisations with smaller numbers of more hardened and committed people — “winter soldiers” in it for the duration, energised by being in opposition, their mission clarified by such.
The Biden administration, with its centrist core and progressive minor players hiding under the wings, looks to the left like a shabby compromise, but to the right like a Trojan Horse and progressivism’s breakthrough victory.
The assumption that everything will go back to normal ignores the hard-right perspective that history has landed them in the utterly abnormal, and they must tend the tiki flame until the forces of rightness can rally.
Such eras are a call to resistance, guerilla activity, martyrdom and atrocity, and it seems quite possible that a new and more violent phase may begin in which right-wing force comes from the very opposite of the manically networked Q subculture, but from groups willing to go offline, or be online behind clever facades, to practice patience and focus.
Formally speaking, one could see a potential historical mirror on the US right, of the Western radical left in the late 1960s when the failure of mass movements — especially the more carnivalesque ones — led to strategies of small-group armed struggle and eventually to wilful atrocity as a historical “acceleration” strategy.
Although many are keeping an eye out, post-Q, for new Christchurch killers, there is a third possibility: hard-right Charlie Hebdo-style massacres visited on “traitorous” leftist groups — violent actions with contained aims and focused impact as a continuation of the global social war, ceasing to mirror its expansive sprawl, instead swimming as fish within it.
As with everything at the moment, history is an incomplete guide. We may be in a period in which media, image and network so outpace “society” that there is no longer a clear path from the spectacular to action.
If so, the remnants of Q may go the other way; dissolve into a post-political religious movement, explicitly supernatural.
I wouldn’t bet on peace though. The right are not very happy at the moment, and some will be determined to share the misery.
Another excellent bit of scribbling by Rundle. Some of the word imagery is sublime.
I’m torn between renewing my Crikey subscription or not, as Rundle is really the only reason to be here.
With articles like today’s leaning more to subscribe 🙂
Yes, after letting my subscription lapse for a couple of years, I eventually renewed to access the Rundle writing.
same, I don’t read Crikey, and friendlyjordies did a fantastic put-down, but I still subscribe for Rundle!!!
Got to agree. That friendly Jordie’s palaver nearly put me off renewing my subscription. We can go to the guardian for progressive lite, cultural left stuff. I still also really appreciate the economic analysis.
No GRundle, no Crikey.
I’m another ‘subscribe for Rundle’ reader.
Been a subscriber for 15 years, but it’s really gone downhill … old media hacks and inner Melbourne knowledge workers.
Bring back the cheeky shitsheet of days gone past!
A thing devoutly to be wished but it ain’t gonna happen – sometimes this site looks like a thoroughly deracinated, homogenised, skimmed & skinny version of those glory days.
Interns with no concept of grammar or sentence construction, hacks who should have been sent straight to the knackery when they were ejected from the foul clasp of NewsCorpse and bien pissants who can just about manage cut’n’paste but have so little general knowledge that they don’t even notice when howlers appear due to too much material & too little discernment.
It seems that even Grundle has received, and more disturbingly complied with, a change to his riding instructions to judge from the milquetoast copy that he’s been turning in – or phoning in – for the last couple of months.
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Sheer brilliance Guy. Best you’ve given us for yonks.
I mean seriously… QAnon, It’s the Da Vinci Code done by Mad Magazine.
Best description ever. 🙂
Well worth my sub to Crikey.
$cientology started off as a joke.
Excellent point. Making the tenets of the conspiracy or cult or proto-religion as mad as possible seems to increase its attraction.
And the fortunes of those who invent it.
The Capitol surprise was the watershed moment for many Republicans riding the hard-right wave, it marked a hard boundary between their ideological indulgence and respect for the political system they purport to defend. Guy, wouldn’t many of these fringe groups lose supporters and fighters when they reach their watershed moment? I think your analysis implies a hardened and serious departure from the current capitalist democratic system, a departure I am unsure if even the hardest of right in that crazy land are committed to.
Agreed, but there is something weird going on. On the said night of the storming of Capitol Hill there are several videos online of police and officials ushering the QAnon members unopposed through the various entry points. The cameras rolled and the action began. Was this a Boston Tea Party take 2? I don’t wanna upset Rundle’s love of all things left, but hey!
It’s no secret that some police are sympathetic to the extreme right. They’re not the Republican Party.
It was n’t just a few sympathetic coppers. It was the whole entourage. Almost like they were all instructed in unison. In one video both groups are even talking and communicating.
And your point is?
Not much really. Just another bought and paid for false-flag. Both sides do it.
Follow the outcome. Who benefits. It’s not too difficult to join the dots here. Everyone knew what was about to happen, and it was allowed to happen anyway. For very obvious reasons. Trump is now a spent force.
Agree. All political leaders in a democracy tend to fade when they get the arse. The revengeful Trump may be a slow fader.
If you mean a return to politics : probably. If you mean still has a large following : very much so.
It’s not difficult to find plenty of the hard-right making exactly that departure. Many of the right in the USA argue that the current government is a tyranny, so they can – and indeed must, it is a duty – take up arms to overthrow it. They quote John Locke and the leaders of the first revolution, in 1776 to justify their Revolution 2.0. And they’ve been making this argument for years.
Unfortunately no need to speculate, Nina – the Hebdo-style ‘departures’ have actually been happening for most of the last decade. See:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupation_of_the_Malheur_National_Wildlife_Refuge
It’s delicious to think that, like the society for the clothing of naked animals, Q is a massive joke whose originator will one day confess to having made it up. The stories Qsters believe are as batty as the sad tales of tragically embarrassed naked horses that managed to bring a tear to a believer’s eye.
Q is a massive joke whose originator will one day confess to having made it up
But how will we know it’s not a cover-up, a fake one at that?
It maybe a joke but its endgame could well be an Inquisition, religion would still be the top order with a string of add-ons. Couldn’t happen in the US, as it declines its inevitable to happen.
It’s no joke. That’s part of the attitude that got us into this mess in the first place. Q is not a prank; it’s a poorly-executed plan which has morphed from the internet into the minds of vulnerable people who have no understanding of its origins or the people behind it.
The story of 4-chan, 8-chan, 8-kun, Peter Ferger and the Watkins family would and will make an amazing movie.
But their potentially devastating influence, and what the desperate QAnon followers will do next, is no joke.
*correction: Paul Furber
How long ’til their star ship comes back to pick them up, so they can all go back home?
Mr Musk is trying, but his starships keep crashing.