Monday, January 02, 2023

 

EU Parliament bids to lift immunity for two MEPs in corruption probe

2 January 2023, 16:24

Europe Corruption
Europe Corruption. Picture: PA

President Roberta Metsola asked all services and committees to give the procedure priority, with the aim of completing it by February 13.

The president of the European Parliament has launched an urgent procedure to waive the immunity of two MEPs following a request from Belgian judicial authorities investigating a major corruption scandal rocking EU politics.

The European Parliament said on Monday that President Roberta Metsola asked all services and committees to give the procedure priority, with the aim of completing it by February 13.

“From the very first moment the European Parliament has done everything in its power to assist in investigations and we will continue to make sure that there will be no impunity,” Ms Metsola said. “Those responsible will find this Parliament on the side of the law. Corruption cannot pay and we will do everything to fight it.”

The EU Parliament press service did not identify the two MEPs. According to two people familiar with the case who were not allowed to speak publicly because the investigation is ongoing, they are Italian Andrea Cozzolino and Belgian Marc Tarabella.

Europe Corruption
Lawyers for Eva Kaili speak to the media at a court in Brussels (Olivier Matthys/AP/PA)

Both men are members of the Parliament’s Socialists and Democrats group. Mr Tarabella, whose home was raided last month, has denied wrongdoing. The two were asked for comment.

A third member of Parliament, Eva Kaili, has already been charged in relation to the scandal, which allegedly involves Qatari and Moroccan officials suspected of influencing economic and political decisions with gifts and money.

Prosecutors accuse Kaili of corruption, membership in a criminal organisation and money laundering. A Greek socialist MEP, Kaili has been in custody since December 9. Her partner, Francesco Giorgi, an adviser at the European Parliament, is being held on the same charges.

Kaili was relieved of her duties of parliament vice-president after being charged. She would have normally enjoyed immunity from prosecution but was brought before a judge after Belgian police launched raids on premises across Brussels last month and large sums of cash were reportedly found at her home.

Kaili and Giorgi are suspected of working with Giorgi’s one-time boss, Pier Antonio Panzeri, a former EU politician. According to arrest warrants, Panzeri “is suspected of intervening politically with members working at the European Parliament for the benefit of Qatar and Morocco, against payment”.

The Parliament has halted work on files involving Qatar as it investigates what impact the cash-and-gifts-for-influence bribery scandal might have had. Qatar vehemently denies involvement and Morocco has yet to respond to allegations that its ambassador to Poland might have been involved.

Europe Corruption
Seals are pictured on Eva Kaili’s office door at the European Parliament in Strasbourg (Jean-Francois Badias/AP/PA)

Belgian prosecutors are also seeking the handover of Panzeri’s wife and daughter from Italy, where they were put under house arrest on similar charges.

A fourth suspect in Belgium — Niccolo Figa-Talamanca, secretary-general of the non-governmental organisation No Peace Without Justice — was also charged over the affair.

The scandal came to public attention after police launched more than 20 raids, mostly in Belgium but also in Italy. Hundreds of thousands of euros were found at a home and in a suitcase at a hotel in Brussels. Mobile phones and computer equipment and data were seized.

By Press Association

Stand Up and Fight': Sanders Delivers New Year's Message on 2023 Priorities


Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) delivers a New Year's Day message.
(Photo: BernieSanders.com/Screenshot)

"What we have in this country is really disgraceful" when it comes to healthcare, says the U.S. senator from Vermont.


JON QUEALLY
Jan 01, 2023

Sen. Bernie Sanders issued a New Year's Day message on Sunday as he gets ready to take over as chair of the powerful Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee in the U.S. Senate when Congress comes back into session later this month.

Laying out his priorities for the committee in 2023, Sanders put a familiar focus on the need for an improved and expanded Medicare system and lower drug costs as he lambasted the nation's "cruel and dysfunctional" for-profit system that leaves tens of millions of people uninsured or grossly underinsured.

"What we have in this country is really disgraceful" in terms of healthcare, Sanders says in the video address posted to YouTube and shared on social media.

Fixing the nation's healthcare system, he said, is "an issue, together, we are going to have to work on. We must have the courage to stand up to the greed and recklessness of the insurance companies and the drug companies" who continue to oppose progressive reforms, including the push for Medicare for All.

"We have to work to substantially lower the cost of prescription drugs," Sanders added, "and we have got to work to guarantee healthcare as a human right for all of our people, not a privilege."

Watch the full video:


Happy New Year. Here’s what’s on my mind for 2023.

On education, Sanders blasted that the richest nation on Earth—which somehow manages to provide "massive tax breaks to the billionaire class—still allows its heroic teachers to struggle in underfunded schools that disadvantages all children trying to learn. He also criticized a higher education system that has saddled an estimated 45 million college students and their families with outrageous levels of debt.

With labor the other key area of jurisdiction for the committee he will soon be leading, Sanders lamented in his address the existence of a "very rigged economy with unprecedented level of income and wealth inequality" that is hurting working families in favor of making life better the already rich and powerful.

"I'm thinking about a country today where at this moment workers all across this country—at Starbucks, Amazon, nurses at hospitals, workers at factories, young people at college campuses—they are organizing unions in order to receive better wages and working continues, because they know, at the end of the day, that unity—bringing people together for collective bargaining—is the only way that many workers are going to get the benefits, wages, and working conditions that they so desperately need."

With that context, Sanders said these workers in unions or those trying to organize a new union are being "vigorously" opposed by corporate bosses using "fierce and illegal anti-union action."

Countering those anti-union efforts by Starbucks, Amazon, and other major employers, he said, will be something he intends to do from his chair position.

Acknowledging political realities, however, Sanders said he knows very well that he will not have the power to simply pound his gavel of the new committee "and lo and behold all these important pieces of legislation get passed."

"It ain't gonna happen that way, that's for sure," said Sanders. While admitting that Republicans and certain "conservative Democrats" are not going to be supportive of his progressive agenda, Sanders said, "That doesn't mean we give up on these issues. We're going to take these issues to the people and continue the fight.

Despite partisan opposition on many things, Sanders said he has genuine hope that some progress can be made on things like reducing the cost of prescription drugs and childcare in the upcoming session.

In the end, Sanders called on listeners to join together in the battles to come in the new year "as we stand up and fight to make sure that working families in this country can live with the kind of dignity and security that they are entitled to."

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.


JON QUEALLY is managing editor of Common Dreams.
BOOK EXCERPT
"They got Daddy": Reckoning with my grandfather's kidnapping, racial terror and our family's trauma

My grandfather was brutalized for suing a white cop in Jim Crow Alabama. Here's what reporting the story taught me

By SHARON TUBBS
PUBLISHED JANUARY 2, 2023 
Israel Page and Margaret (Warren) Page, Sharon Tubbs's maternal grandparents, and the house in Uniontown, Alabama, where the Tubbs family traveled from Fort Wayne, Indiana, each summer to visit grandparents.
 (Photo illustration by Salon/Photos courtesy of author/Getty Images)

Adapted from the introduction of "They Got Daddy: One Family’s Reckoning with Racism and Faith" by Sharon Tubbs. Published by the University of Indiana Press, 2023. Used with permission.

Memories of my grandfather remain both vivid and vague, even now, after researching and writing about the most tumultuous season of his life. I see him in demented old age, sitting on a pine wood chair in my grandparents' rural Alabama home, his gaze distant, his suspenders securing a pair of baggy slacks. Yet, I cannot recall any words or sentiments exchanged between us. I see the disabled arm hanging at his side, something I'd wondered about but never asked anyone to explain.

Several years passed from when I wore a ponytail and patent leather Mary Janes at his funeral to the day my mother mentioned the kidnapping. We were watching the news, and one story featured an upcoming Ku Klux Klan rally in some part of Indiana. My childhood mind questioned whether the hate group still existed in the 1980s, but my mother verified that they most certainly did. As a matter of fact, she said, "They got Daddy," referring to my grandfather. Those words would guide me along a journey to learn much more about Israel Page, the grandfather whose character I saw more clearly after death than in my memories of his life. In the process, I would also learn about how racism affected me as a Black woman in America.
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My first career as a newspaper journalist prepared me for the task. Editors and experience trained me in interviewing and researching people and their pasts. I gathered details from my mother, her siblings, my grandmother, and my grandfather's contemporaries. Israel Page had worked as a church pastor, a sharecropper, and a well driller, they'd said. Research through courthouse records, libraries, online databases, and writings about racism yielded more results. I learned that the kidnapping ordeal began in 1954 with a car accident between my grandfather and a white sheriff's deputy. The accident left his right arm lame, which meant he could no longer drill wells, which led to his lawsuit against the deputy, which culminated in the 1959 kidnapping and beating by white supremacists.

I originally planned to tell the story of Israel Page's five-year legal battle with that deputy, Benjamin Brantley "B. B." Lee. The tale had moved silently through the Page family, feeding into cultural trauma from one generation to the next. The more I dug, the more the story swelled and extended beyond the 1950s and into the 21st century. Israel Page v. Brantley Lee eventually became my framework to explore lingering systemic issues through the experiences of one family, our family. Today, I still wonder about lasting repercussions from that disturbing slice of his life.

Trauma's generational impact

Cultural trauma describes the lasting effects of racism on African Americans, or, more generally speaking, it occurs when members of a group endure something horrendous that scars their group consciousness and changes their identity. The concept applies, then, to Jewish people whose ancestors endured the Holocaust, Japanese Americans forced into internment camps, and of course African Americans in the aftermath of slavery, Jim Crow, and even 21st-century tragedies of police brutality. Racism and the cultural trauma it carries seeped from my grandfather to my mother, uncles and aunts, to me.

Author and experienced birth doula Jacquelyn Clemmons said cultural trauma can't simply be dismissed or forgotten. "When we consider that we are not only walking around with our own lived experiences and traumas but also those of our ancestors, we must slow down and take a hard, honest look at our past," Clemmons wrote in a 2020 article for Healthline. To truly heal, we must address the cultural trauma that has always been there, shaping our perspective from birth."

Israel Page v. Brantley Lee eventually became my framework to explore lingering systemic issues through the experiences of one family.

While writing the book, my own racial fears and triggers unveiled themselves. I began remembering certain incidents, such as the time a retail worker practically chased my sister and I out of a store, assuming we'd plotted to steal clothes. Then there were instances when I shrank inwardly. Like when my homemade bologna sandwich fared cheaply compared to my white friends' lunches during an elementary school field trip. When I froze as a young journalist while covering a story about a Klan march. When, as an adult, I feared stopping for fast food in a city once rumored to be a "sundown town" that forbade Blacks from being out past dark. In an instant, tears would fall as my body recalled the shame, embarrassment, or fear I felt during those moments. And I realized that I, like so many other African Americans — be they impoverished or wealthy, unknown or celebrity — fit within the rubric of the culturally traumatized.

Linking the past and present

My research became more than ingredients for a book when I considered the impact of cultural trauma and the stigma of black and brown skin in my life. This was a journey of reckoning, of relating and healing that linked my grandfather's experiences with my own. I saw how my fears and emotions mirrored situations my ancestors suffered. Not that I had been blind to these connections before, but I hadn't previously felt or processed them to the same degree. Civil rights legislation deleted the Whites Only signs, but total equity remained elusive.

In 2020, the killings of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd occurred in a four-month span. Other fatal shootings followed into 2021, pitting some white police officers against unarmed African Americans. The era marked a shift, an uprising of sorts that yielded protests nationwide, sharp social media debates of free speech and so-called cancel culture. America revealed its heart as divided, its future headed backward toward a stark segregation of ideals. For many people of color nationwide, these tragedies equaled triggers, awakening the trauma inside of us, sparking emotional pleas for help and hope, eliciting passions that our white friends and allies could not fathom because their bloodline lacked the tainted plasma of discrimination.

We have always amounted to more than the ferocity of our racial battles.

Today, I work as a nonprofit leader serving under-resourced communities and underserved groups. My experience and research in the human services realm, coupled with my work for "They Got Daddy," revealed more links between past and present systemic racism. For instance, the eugenics movement sanctioned doctors who unwittingly sterilized Black women during the early 20th century. I recall mentioning a surgical procedure in 2017 to a friend who told me her family shunned major surgery of any kind because doctors stole the wombs of two Black relatives during the eugenics era. The horror echoed in 2020 when a whistleblower accused a doctor of performing hysterectomies on undocumented women detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) without their knowledge. It came as no surprise to me or other nonprofit leaders, then, when African Americans initially ranked among the most resistant groups to take COVID-19 vaccines. Of course, we were. A deep mistrust of American medicine had baked into the culture due, in part, to records of the eugenics movement, the well-documented Tuskegee Experiment, and modern reports of implicit bias in hospitals, to name a few reasons.

We are more than our struggles

Still, so much more filled my research journey than oppression and fear. Equally ingrained in our story are the family reunions, the bonds formed through laughter and perseverance, the oral histories I'd heard for years without appreciating their warmth and cultural swagger. These were the memories that relatives retold at holiday gatherings, during dinner after a funeral service, while sitting on the front porch to catch a spring breeze. These proud snapshots convey the strength of the Black family, the overcoming spirit that refuses to let the pangs of the world steal our joy and zeal for living. We have always amounted to more than the ferocity of our racial battles.

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For many Black families, including ours, faith charted the course to overcome. It empowered us to survive the harshest of conditions from 17th-century fields, to the protest marches of the Sixties, to the shootings that preceded the Black Lives Matter movement. Throughout this project, I felt the complexity of emotions, including the pain that my relatives must have worked through and that people of color live with regardless of our generation or time. The defeat of discrimination. The frustration and belittling of injustice. But also, I felt the reasons why African Americans possess pride and distinction in who we are, nonetheless. The passion for our culture. The hope and confidence found through faith.

In the end, I embraced my grandfather by filling the voids left in my childhood memories. He was not the Martin Luther King Jr. I wrote about in a middle-school essay. He was no Medgar Evers or Thurgood Marshall. He was a Black man in suspenders who wanted to take care of his family and live his life in a small country town, a man who believed strongly in a God much bigger than us all. He was this guy living at a time when an unjust system threatened to use his skin color to steal his greatness and hope, in much the same way that injustice threatens us all. That same threat never stopped breathing through my grandfather's children. It still breathes in me today. Yet, learning the fullness of his story — our story — has allowed me to exhale.

Read more

about U.S. history of racial injustice

Sharon Tubbs is an author, speaker, and nonprofit leader, currently living in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Her latest book is "They Got Daddy: One Family's Reckoning with Racism and Faith."

MORE FROM SHARON TUBBS
NOT PATTY HEARST
Not the Camilla We Knew
One Woman’s Path from Small-town America to the Symbionese Liberation Army

2022 •
Author:
Rachael Hanel


Tags
Literature, Cultural Criticism, History, Minnesota and the Upper Midwest, Sociology, Creative Nonfiction, Social Movements, Women’s Studies

Behind every act of domestic terrorism there is someone’s child, an average American whose life took a radical turn for reasons that often remain mysterious. Camilla Hall is a case in point: a pastor’s daughter from small-town Minnesota who eventually joined the ranks of radicals like Sara Jane Olson (aka Kathleen Soliah) in the notorious Symbionese Liberation Army before dying in a shootout with Los Angeles Police in May 1974. How could a “good girl” like Camilla become one of the most wanted domestic terrorists in the United States? Rachael Hanel tells her story here, revealing both the deep humanity and the extraordinary circumstances of Camilla Hall’s life.

Camilla’s childhood in a tight-knit religious family was marred by loss and grief as, one after another, her three siblings died. Her path from her Minnesota home to her final, radical SLA family featured years as an artist and activist—in welfare offices, political campaigns, union organizing, culminating in a love affair that would be her introduction to the SLA. Through in-depth research and extensive interviews, Hanel pieces together Camilla’s bewildering transformation from a “gentle, zaftig, arty, otherworldy” young woman (as one observer remarked), working for social change within the system, into a gun-wielding criminal involved in the kidnapping of Patty Hearst.

During this time of mounting unrest and violence, Camilla Hall’s story is of urgent interest for what it reveals about the forces of radicalization. But as Hanel ventures ever further into Camilla’s past, searching out the critical points where character and cause might intersect, her book becomes an intriguing, disturbing, and ultimately deeply moving journey into the dark side of America’s promise.

Cover alt text: Group photo, with Camilla in black and white divided by slashes from colorized parents on left and Patricia Soltysik on right.

$17.95 paper ISBN 978-1-5179-1345-8
$17.95 ISBN 978-1-4529-6832-2
240 pages, 18 b&w plates, 5 3/8 x 8 1/4, December 2022
Gen. Mark Milley said there were talks about court-martialing former military officers who wrote 'very critical' op-eds of Trump

Kelsey Vlamis
Jan 2, 2023
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks as Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, Army Gen. Mark Milley looks on after getting a briefing from senior military leaders in the Cabinet Room at the White House on October 7, 2019. Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Gen. Mark Milley said there were talks of retaliating against retired officers critical of Trump.

Several former military officers wrote up-eds criticizing Trump during his presidency.
Milley said he was concerned about politicization of the military in his testimony before the January 6 committee.

Gen. Mark Milley said there were discussions about retaliating against retired military officers who wrote critical op-eds about former President Donald Trump, according to testimony released by the January 6 committee.

Milley has served since 2019 as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the top military adviser to the president, after being nominated by Trump. His testimony, taken on November 17, 2021, was among a trove of documents released Sunday by the House committee investigating the Capitol riot.

Democratic Rep. Elaine Luria asked Milley if he had considered addressing Michael Flynn, the retired general who served as Trump's national security adviser and later called for the US to have a coup like Myanmar after Trump left office.

Milley responded by saying he was concerned about the politicization of the military, and that the issue had come up during the Trump administration after op-eds written by retired military officers were "very critical of then President Trump."

"And there was actually discussions with me: Bring him back on Active Duty, court-martial him, you know, make him walk the plank sort of thing, right? I advised them not to do that, because that would further politicize, in my personal view," Milley said, adding he would also advise caution in addressing Flynn.

Milley did not specify which retired military officers were considered for court-martialing, but several wrote critical op-eds of Trump during his time in office. Some were published in 2020 in response to Trump's handling of civil unrest that occured after the murder of George Floyd, including his walk from the White House to St. John's Episcopal Church after law enforcement was used to disperse peaceful protesters.

Retired Marine Corps Gen. John Allen wrote a scathing commentary for Foreign Policy, saying the president "threatened to deploy the U.S. military against American citizens." Navy Adm. Mike Mullen said in The Atlantic he was "sickened" to see security personnel "forcibly and violently" removed protesters from Lafayette Square and that Trump had "laid bare his disdain for the rights of peaceful protest."

Milley, who also apologized for his role in Trump's photo op at the church, also testified that while he was worried about the "broader implications" of politicization of the military, taking action against retired officers who speak out shouldn't be done lightly.


A representative for Trump did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

QAnon, a Compensatory Fantasy for a Nation in Decline: On Robert Guffey’s “Operation Mindfuck” and Mia Bloom and Sophia Moskalenko’s “Pastels and Pedophiles”

December 31, 2022   •   By Jordan S. Carroll


Operation Mindfuck: QAnon and the Cult of Donald Trump

ROBERT GUFFEY

Pastels and Pedophiles: Inside the Mind of QAnon

MIA BLOOM

LIKE MANY TEENAGERS in the 1990s, I had an ironic interest in conspiracy theories. I watched The X-Files, collected paranoid screeds, and read Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson’s Illuminatus! trilogy. Sometimes, the weird beliefs parodied by the Church of the SubGenius seemed like a welcome break from normalcy; at other moments, they were a way of playing with belief. Amidst the period’s Gen-X cynicism and evangelical fervor, conspiracy fandom allowed me to get close to commitment even as I disavowed it. What would it be like to subscribe to an ideology that diagnosed what was wrong with the world and spelled out what is to be done about it? Fredric Jameson suggested that conspiracy theories serve as a “poor person’s cognitive mapping,” and indeed, for me, they represented the absent place that more plausible systemic accounts of economic and social inequality would later fill.

All of that adolescent fooling with conspiracy went away when I actually met a conspiracy theorist in the 2000s. Working as a features editor for my college newspaper, I decided to interview the author of the odd tracts that showed up at the local record store. He seemed gracious and personable, pointing out, as I opened the door with my left hand, that I would have been considered sinister in a more superstitious age. But meeting him made his published rants about Babylonian mystery cults seem a little too real. It was one thing to listen to raconteurs spinning tales about Bigfoot on Art Bell’s radio show and another thing to see firsthand that people actually believed this stuff. Needless to say, I didn’t write the article.

I imagine that many other people have undergone similar shifts in tolerance for conspiracy theories over the past few decades. Conspiracy theories have always had a dark side, fueling right-wing violence and antisemitic hatred. But, as conspiracists organized themselves into online communities around hucksters such as Alex Jones, the shaggy dog stories about UFOs and time-traveling naval ships fell away to reveal a reactionary politics that moved from the message boards into the streets.

QAnon has been a major part of this shift. During the 2016 election, conspiracy theorists hallucinated hidden meanings into the Clinton campaign’s leaked emails, interpreting innocent references to lunch plans as evidence of a child sex-trafficking ring surrounding a popular Washington, DC, pizza parlor. When Donald Trump entered office, however, he seemed to do nothing to stop this alleged cult of Satanic pedophiles. If what came to be known as Pizzagate were true, why were its principals still walking around free? QAnon emerged to resolve this cognitive dissonance.

In 2017, an anonymous user on notorious online message board 4chan known as “Q Clearance Patriot” began posting cryptic clues suggesting he had top-secret knowledge that Trump was orchestrating a covert plan to expose and execute the nation’s enemies among the Hollywood and Democratic elite. Although these posts represented part of a long tradition of online role-playing as government agents that most 4chan users understood to be a game, QAnon proved wildly popular, spreading to other websites to become a full-fledged political movement. Popular influencers on platforms such as YouTube and Facebook positioned themselves as interpreters of QAnon’s oracular pronouncements for less tech-savvy users unfamiliar with the imageboards where one or more users claiming to be QAnon posted.

QAnon became a catch-all conspiracy theory, gathering into itself narratives that featured celebrity clones, lizard people, government superweapons, anti-vaccine ideology, and all the old antisemitic myths about a Jewish cabal that governs the world. Some QAnon-influenced candidates such as Marjorie Taylor Greene made it into office, and when the movement’s prophecy of Trump-as-savior failed, many QAnon believers were among the insurgents in the January 6th attack on the US Capitol. Gripped by a dangerous paranoia, QAnon supporters have committed murder and other acts of terrorist violence.

QAnon’s bizarreness has sometimes led commentators to approach the conspiracy theory with a derisive if not bemused attitude. Robert Guffey’s Operation Mindfuck: QAnon and the Cult of Donald Trump emphasizes the absurdity of QAnon’s beliefs, taking them to task for what the author calls the “jabberwocky” the movement accepts as truth. Guffey sees the QAnon adherents as bad readers. They have a hard time distinguishing between fantasy and reality. When Hunter S. Thompson fictionalizes adrenochrome as a potent psychedelic that must be harvested from living human beings, the QAnon crowd not only believes him but also imagines a whole mythology surrounding the extraction and consumption of this fictive substance. Guffey argues that the right has figured out how to exploit this credulity, using media manipulation techniques modeled on Shea and Wilson’s Operation Mindfuck and similar left-libertarian pranks from the 1960s and 1970s.

Guffey has written extensively on the subject of conspiracy theory. In his 2012 book Cryptoscatology: Conspiracy Theory as Art Form, he suggests that conspiracy theory — like comedy — provides audiences with a critical perspective via an estranged view of the world. By holding up a funhouse mirror to the authorities, conspiracy theory calls them into question. But, as Guffey observes, the QAnon conspiracy is different because it celebrates the shadowy government agents as America’s saviors. Reactionaries used to warn that patriots were going to be rounded up and placed in FEMA camps. Now they look forward to the day when the state places their political enemies in such camps.

I would argue that we can better understand this surprising reversal if we examine how these fringe ideas tend to operate. Conspiracy theorists often worry that their government is going to do to them what it has already done to more oppressed populations. First the CIA plotted to assassinate Patrice Lumumba, they suggest, then John F. Kennedy. We see the same kind of bizarro victimhood across a variety of conspiracy theories that flip the role of colonizer and colonized. Nick Estes points out that the white nationalists claiming they are being replaced by nonwhite migrants are only projecting onto others the crimes that European settler-colonists already committed against Indigenous peoples. Renaud Camus — who first proposed the Great Replacement theory — even presents distorting citations of decolonial thinkers such as Aimé Césaire and Frantz Fanon to support his argument that France is being colonized by African migrants. Even more outré conspiracies follow the same structure. British conspiracy theorist David Icke borrowed the idea of a globe-spanning empire governed by albino, shape-shifting reptiles from a self-described Zulu sangoma from South Africa. Icke, who did not seem to realize that he was the alien invader being allegorized in these fantasies, now imagines himself tyrannized by a pale elite whose members include the British royal family.

On some level, QAnon believers seem to recognize conspiracy theories as a guilty displacement of Western imperialism, but they feel nostalgic for a time when American empire possessed such power. After decades of punishing government austerity and disastrous imperial entanglements, the QAnon contingent longs for the state capacities intimated in scary stories about unmarked helicopters and men in black. As Trump governed on a whim, sabotaging his own efforts at every turn, QAnon envisaged him as a mastermind orchestrating an invisible takeover with the hypercompetence once attributed to the Illuminati. The QAnon conspiracy theory serves as a compensatory fantasy for a nation in decline.

Guffey also seems to possess an overinflated sense of the Trump team’s capabilities. He believes that QAnon is “a massive psychological warfare operation deployed against the American people by a Trump-backed political think tank.” Guffey lacks the evidence required to prove this accusation, and his argument seems to overlook the fact that QAnon, like many internet phenomena, rather quickly escaped its author’s intentions to become memeified and massively distributed among many communities who ran with it in different directions. Nobody really controlled Q, let alone the inept Trump administration.

Mia Bloom and Sophia Moskalenko’s new book Pastels and Pedophiles: Inside the Mind of QAnon offers a more sober and well-researched account of the movement. This is a good starting place for anyone looking for an overview of all things Q. They name 8chan operators Jim and Ron Watkins among the possible suspects for QAnon’s true identity — a claim also made by HBO’s docuseries Q: Into the Storm — but they rightly argue that QAnon is probably many different people. Borrowing an image from terrorism expert Clint Watts, they suggest that QAnon is like the Dread Pirate Roberts from The Princess Bride, a shared persona passed from actor to actor.

Bloom and Moskalenko are more interested in the social and political implications of QAnon than sleuthing out its true originator. The authors argue that QAnon followers have become radicalized because the social norms they believe in seem to have become unsettled or “unfrozen.” Many women, they show, turned to QAnon because their trust in social institutions has been shaken by revelations of pharmaceutical company malfeasance in the opioid crisis and high-profile cases of sexual abuse by clergy, celebrities, and politicians. They are disturbed by “shifting gender roles,” and many have experienced serious trauma. QAnon provides utility for them by allowing them to feel as if they understand the world while providing them a sense of community and the emotional satisfaction of seeing the sexual abusers finally receive justice. Bloom and Moskalenko’s examination of the gender politics of QAnon, including its special appeal for mothers struggling through COVID-19 lockdowns, is especially powerful.

When they turn to solutions for the QAnon problem, however, the book exemplifies what I consider to be a persistent limitation in anti-extremist framings of conspiracy theories and the far right. Many commentators take what might be called a cognitivist approach that casts conspiracy theories as disinformation. Stopping QAnon thus means curtailing the circulation of falsehoods spread by social-media algorithms as well as by bad state actors such as Russia, while also preparing users to distinguish good sources of information from bad ones.

All of this is true — deplatforming QAnon and the alt-right remains a high priority — but this framework begins to break down when we start to ask what counts as disinformation. If someone imagines that Nikola Tesla invented a miraculous energy source that is being hidden from the public to prop up the fossil fuel industry, we rightly consider them to be a crank. If someone believes that oil is a miraculous energy source that can be exploited forever without any serious consequences, they are welcome to appear on Fox News and publish op-eds in several major newspapers. Both viewpoints rely on bad data resulting from systematic campaigns to obfuscate the truth, but one remains within the bounds of socially acceptable discourse because it has the backing of the Republican Party. We cannot single out the extreme as irrational long after the mainstream has abandoned reason.

A better theory of QAnon must therefore give up pretensions to neutrality while inquiring into the degradation of the public sphere that made the movement seem so attractive. Timothy Melley’s 2012 book The Covert Sphere: Secrecy, Fiction, and the National Security State helps us think about QAnon in a more productive way. Melley argues that, since the beginning of the Cold War, the National Security State has distorted public discussion by transforming many of the government’s operations into open secrets. We know that the state is carrying out covert actions, but we cannot know precisely what those might be. As a result, we find ourselves debating foreign policy in what Melley calls the covert sphere, “a cultural imaginary shaped by both institutional secrecy and public fascination with the secret work of the state.” Because it is illegal if not impossible to discover reliable information about the state’s clandestine activities, the covert sphere represents a space where fictional narratives take the place of rational-critical debate. We can only fantasize about what the covert sector is doing through media such as spy novels, stealth-based games, and television thrillers.

As Melley has argued, QAnon’s desperate search for clues about the deep state emerged as a consequence of our inability to piece together fragments of information about the secretive institutions that govern our society.* Drawing upon the popular fictions that structure our understanding of the covert sphere, QAnon exploits the impenetrable fog of state secrecy by transforming covert operations into a media spectacle. QAnon followers tell each other to get out the popcorn so they can watch Trump’s storm finally arrive on television in a day of mass executions. They are unable to divine the true nature of what our government is doing — much less determine its actions — so they imagine all the detentions and executions as an exciting Hollywood blockbuster.

Conspiracy theories such as QAnon have become immune to fact-checking because, as Melley suggests, the covert sphere has helped inaugurate an era of postmodern skepticism in which anything seems possible. Once we know that the government can carry out propaganda campaigns, false-flag operations, and mind-control experiments, we find it increasingly hard to distinguish truth from falsity. Through readings of novels such as Don DeLillo’s Libra (1988), he argues that this epistemological uncertainty has tipped over into an ontological crisis in which we no longer know what is real. QAnon taps into this fundamental confusion when it presents the world as a dream from which we will all soon awaken.

Jodi Dean’s analysis of conspiracy theory also explores the unraveling of consensus reality. She diagnoses the 9/11 “truther” movement as a consequence of the decline of symbolic efficiency explored by Slavoj Žižek. The public used to be bound together by a shared understanding or common knowledge guaranteed by authorities such as professional experts and political figures. Now that we have lost trust in these authorities, however, we are left without a common ground for communication. Whereas political parties once represented opposing viewpoints, they now face each other with alternative sets of facts. The universe of discourse has splintered into many disparate microcosms, each talking in its own insular codes and obeying its own peculiar authorities. As Daniel Adleman points out, this signification crisis manifests in QAnon as a combination of extreme distrust in the official narrative and extreme credulity in anyone claiming to speak for Q. The movement’s attacks on media networks such as the 5G towers serve as a frightening synecdoche for this much larger communication breakdown.

QAnon can also be seen as a reflection of the crisis of “symbolic investiture” that Dean explores in her work on conspiracy theories. Pierre Bourdieu developed this notion to describe rituals such as ordinations or swearing-in ceremonies that are used to mark someone’s ascent to the symbolic power and authority that comes from holding an official position within the institutional or legal order. As these offices forfeit the dignity and respect that once commanded reflexive obedience, we begin to see that the law is grounded upon nothing more than lawmaking and law-preserving violence. Eric L. Santner’s brilliant study of Judge Daniel Paul Schreber shows that his well-known paranoia, which left him feeling violated by omnipotent rulers, emerged as a reaction to the obscene overproximity of invasive powers that shed their symbolic authority and resorted instead to naked coercion. Once we lose faith in our leaders after they abuse their positions, it is hard not to see their evil influence everywhere and suspect everyone of malfeasance.

QAnon steps through this break in the symbolic order. Trump’s term was surrounded by other presidents with real or perceived lacks of legitimacy. In his first term, George W. Bush was appointed by the Supreme Court rather than elected by the people. Trump helped stoke the racist “birther” campaign against Barack Obama, questioning his eligibility for office. According to Bloom and Moskalenko, QAnon dead-enders believe that Joe Biden swore his presidential oath on a Bible whose leather binding somehow invalidated his inauguration ceremony. Meanwhile, gerrymandering and voter suppression continue to erode democratic legitimacy for the presidency and other elected offices. For reasons good and bad, the public imagination sees the president as governing based on an arbitrary rule increasingly divorced from the people’s consent.

Most of this legitimation failure can be blamed on the GOP, but through QAnon’s camera obscura, we see elections stolen by the Democrats. QAnon then displaces these anxieties about the eclipse of popular sovereignty onto a “deep state” cabal. QAnon depicts members of this conspiracy travestying what Santner would call the “performative magic” of symbolic authority, conducting Satanic rites whose efficacy depends on torture inflicted upon the bodies of the powerless. Power’s ceremonial trappings come to seem diabolical once they no longer command reverence. Fittingly, all these anxieties about the collapse of symbolic identities are conveyed by an empty position that anyone might inhabit, an authority consisting only of a single symbol: Q.

Donald E. Pease has shown how the crisis of symbolic investiture reached a breaking point with Trump. Trump seemed constitutionally unable to make the transition from private individual to public office–holder. Appearing as both the imposter and usurper that symbolic investiture protects against, he mangled his ritual performance during the inauguration ceremony, abdicated his moral duties by siding with white nationalists after the bloody 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, and disrupted the peaceful transition of power during the final days of his term. Throughout his term, he used his presidential position for petty personal aggrandizement while abjuring any pretense of governing on behalf of the entire nation. When he wasn’t Trump the self-serving celebrity, he was Trump the insurgent fighting on behalf of white reactionaries.

While liberals bemoaned Trump’s offenses against presidential norms, QAnon imagined that Trump could restore democracy by suspending the law. QAnon sometimes diverges into the same kind of crackpot legalism we see in the sovereign citizen movement, which believes that jurisdictional authority hinges on whether the court’s flags sport golden fringes. More often, though, QAnon is oriented toward a fantasy of excessive force without legal restraint: mass arrests, military tribunals, hangings, and guillotines. Trump is the man who they believe will refound the nation by returning it to its moment of constituent violence in a second American Revolution. They seek a bloody solution to the crisis of symbolic investiture.

Bloom and Moskalenko are therefore essentially correct that QAnon emerged because the rules and roles that governed its members’ lives had lost meaning and certainty. But this is part of an even larger shift in politics. We no longer speak the same discourses, heed the same authorities, or recognize the same realities, and increasingly we no longer believe that these fundamental differences in worldview can be resolved through democratic deliberations or electoral contests. The ruling class’s hegemony is collapsing, giving way to forms of domination that rely primarily on state repression and the mute compulsion of economic relations. QAnon therefore must be understood not as a disinformation campaign promulgated by bad actors but instead as another morbid symptom of the capitalist system’s slide into barbarism.

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Jordan S. Carroll is a visiting assistant professor of English at the University of Puget Sound. His work includes Reading the Obscene: Transgressive Editors and the Class Politics of US Literature (Stanford, 2021), and his writing has appeared in such venues as American LiteratureTwentieth-Century LiteraturePost45Polygon, and the Los Angeles Review of Books; he is now writing a short book about science fiction, race, and the alt-right.

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* More of Melley's work on conspiracy theories can be found here and here.


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