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This week:
- Surveying the George Floyd hoaxes.
- The Secret Service grapples with QAnon.
- How to convince anti-mask Trump supporters to buy $20 masks.
George Floyd Hoaxes
As the protests over George Floydâs death increase, so too has the amount of internet nonsense on the right about Floydâs death. Below are some of the biggest conspiracy theories that are attracting some of the most craven conspiracy mongers.
The Drug Deal Gone Sour
Floyd [worked]( security at Minneapolisâs El Nuevo Rodeo nightclub. So did Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis police officer who killed him. That coincidence has been seized on by right-wing conspiracy theorists claiming that Chauvin killed Floyd over some illegal business related to the nightclub.
InfoWarsâ Alex Jones was an early adopter of this narrative, pushing the idea that Chauvin and Floyd were somehow involved in drug-dealing together at the club. The excellent InfoWars-tracking podcast [Knowledge Fight]( has done a good job debunking Jonesâs claims about Floyd, which rely on just implying that sometimes drug-dealing takes place at nightclubs, generally. Jones doesnât really seem all that committed to the possibility. He relies on his viewers to fill in the gaps from there, with the implication that Chauvin killed Floyd as some sort of payback.
But thatâs just about par for the course for Jones, who has seen his prominence wane lately. Disturbingly, though, this theory has also made its debut on the rightâs biggest stage: Fox News. On Wednesday, Fox News host Jesse Watters [picked up Jonesâs baton](.
âThey worked at the same club together, a nightclub which had a lot of suspicious activity,â Watters said. âPeople should be looking into the night club. Was it a front for something?â
Watters went on to suggest Floyd was killed in a deliberate hit.
"This was some sort of criminal thing that went haywire, and this was a hit that was executed extremely poorly,â he said.
The appeal of this narrative, of course, is that it tars Floyd, suggests that Chauvin is a âcrookedâ cop whose actions canât be held against other police officers, and gets away from the question of structural racism in policing. But itâs not without its holes and drawbacks. Not only is there no proof that Chauvin was motivated by anything related to the nightclub, but it would also mean that the Minneapolis police felt emboldened enough to carry out an execution in broad daylight, while being videoed.
Itâs Fake / The âCash Cabâ Guy Did It
Naturally, in the post-Sandy Hook truther world, thereâs also a false-flag narrative claiming that Floydâs death was either staged, set up, or conducted entirely by âcrisis actorsâ paid to play roles in the Floyd video.
Itâs hard to get a handle on this theory, because it relies more on knee jerk skepticism than on any hard bits of proof. But itâs popular enough that a Republican county chairwoman in Texas [speculated]( that Chauvin was brainwashed by a CIA mind control experiment.
Alternatively, a handful of QAnon conspiracy theorists have just assumed that Cash Cab host Ben Bailey [dressed up as Chauvin]( and carried out the murder. The only proof for this claim is that theyâre both bald:
[Alternate text]
Fake Protester Stories
Amid some genuine violence and vandalism during the protests, false stories have proliferated on the right attributing exaggerated violence to the protestersâoften in order to justify police action against protesters who otherwise seem peaceful.
Fox Nation host Lara Logan and others have [promoted]( a years-old document supposedly laying out elaborate antifa plans for violence.
The document, which comes for unclear origins and has circulated for years, claims to organize left-wing antifascist demonstrators, but is almost certainly a hoax thatâs been repurposed yet again for the Floyd protests. Logan claimed the bogus document was proof that activists had infiltrated police departments.
An âantifaâ tweet promising to terrorize âwhite hoodsâ [gained traction](, until it turned out to be the creation of white nationalist group Identity Europa. And after an Egyptology professor [tweeted]( about how to pull down obelisks, with the implication that the information could be used to pull down a Confederate monument in Alabama, right-wing personalities claimed instead that she was providing info on how to use ropes to pull down the Washington Monument â a project that would require tens of thousands of people.
But maybe the strangest claim about the protesters came on Tuesday, when Pizzagate promoter and perennial Right Richter character Jack Posobiec [claimed]( that âcratesâ of pipe bombs had been discovered at the Korean War Memorial. Posobiecâs allegation exploded on the right, prompting blog posts from the likes of The Gateway Pundit and even a real-life Park Police search of the monument. But, as it turned out, the pipe bombs never existed, according to the Park Police. Posobiecâs claim was completely made up.
Secret Service fields calls about QAnon kooks
I recently got some Secret Service documents Iâd requested that mention â[QAnon](,â the conspiracy theory that now [has its own Senate candidate](.
While I had been looking for proof that the Secret Service [banned]( QAnon clothes from Trump rallies â something theyâve denied, in the face of plenty of evidence â I learned something else instead. Specifically, the Secret Service has had several strange encounters with QAnon believers.
In 2018, for example, a QAnon believer tried to get into the White House, convinced that âQâ â the mystery person behind the conspiracy theory â worked there and wanted to meet with her. She told Secret Service agents that Q had sent her a message to come to the White House and that sheâd learned who was going to be arrested in the â40,000 sealed indictments,â a fictitious set of indictments that have a talismanic role in QAnon culture.
âIâm where Q told me to go,â she said, according to the Secret Service report.
Eventually, the woman went away, but not before being baffled that she couldnât meet with Q.
âWhen [agents] told [redacted] she was at the White House and âQâ did not work at this location, she became very confused,â the report reads.
In another case, a QAnon believer visited a district office of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) to explain that she had a plan to prove that QAnon is real. While Gaetz is one of Trumpâs most ardents congressional defenders, Gaetzâs staff were freaked out enough by her visit to contact the Secret Service.
âThe meeting was rather uncomfortable even for me,â one Gaetz staffer wrote to the Secret Service.
The woman, who claimed to be a former professional nanny for âVIPs,â had a plan. Like many other QAnon believers, she was desperate for a White House reporter to ask Trump whether QAnon is real. In QAnon lore, this would somehow be the big moment QAnon is proven accurate. Theyâre so convinced that theyâve relentlessly hounded prominent White House reporters to bully them into asking the question. So far, theyâve found no takers.
Frustrated, this QAnon believer thought she could use the security clearance she allegedly obtained while nannying to pose as a reporter and ask âthe questionâ herself, presumably with help from Gaetzâs staff.
âShe even volunteered herself to act as a fake reporter and blend in with the press pool,â the report reads.
Obviously, the Secret Service wasnât thrilled to hear about someone who planned to assume a false identity to sneak into the White House. The documents donât make clear how the case was resolved.
The records request also revealed some sad news for QAnon believers convinced that Iâm about to be shipped off to Guantanamo Bay: a popular fate QAnon fans imagine for their critics.
According to the FOIA response, the Secret Service has been internally using one of my articles, along with other stories on the conspiracy theory, to explain to one another what QAnon is when the Secret Service encounters QAnon believers. Another day, another military tribunal avoided!
Masks Off
Like other entrepreneurially minded people during the coronavirus pandemic, pro-Trump personality Brandon Straka has decided to sell his own masks. But unlike a lot of other mask-mongers, Straka faces a unique problem: many of his fans are convinced the masks are a symbol of submission to Democratic control.
Straka, a former hairdresser, has been a conservative figure of some renown since 2018, when he launched the â#Walkawayâ movement, which urges minority groups to âwalk awayâ from the Democratic Party. While itâs not clear that Straka has actually won many votes, it has given him a platform of nearly 250,000 Facebook fans. Some of them, Straka hoped, would want to buy masks.
But announcing his plans to sell Walkaway masks for a whopping $20 per mask, Straka found himself deluged with angry comments accusing him of being a tool of social control.
âA lot of people think that to wear a mask is a very liberal, Democrat thing to do,â Straka told me.
[Alternate text]
Straka rushed to Facebook to assure his fans that he didnât support wearing masks. He just wanted to sell them to people for $20!
âI (Brandon Straka here writing this) do not personally support wearing the masks because of my beliefs regarding social compliance,â Straka [wrote on Facebook](, adding that he was âstaunchly against being forced into a social dogma which doesnât seem well studied in the first place.â
Yet Straka is still selling the masks. He says he doesnât blame Walkaway fans who donât want to buy them, though. In his telling, many of them think wearing a mask is a sign youâve been fooled by the Fake News.
âThey donât want to physically demonstrate to the rest of the world that they trust the liberal media,â Straka said.
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