“Tell us about the problem and what, as a country, we can do to help this,” Fox & Friends co-host Ainsley Earhardt asked.
“This is the fastest-growing criminal enterprise in the world, and too often Americans sit back and say this is something far, far away from us, and it is not,” Ballard responded. “Generally speaking, we are the demand for consuming child exploitation material. Often we’re the No. 1 producers. We’re in the top three countries for destination countries.”
Ballard then illustrated how his anti-trafficking rhetoric seamlessly slips into transphobia and xenophobia, all under the guise of protecting children.
“We are the ones pushing these movements about sexualizing kids and calling it sex education,” he said. “We’re the ones who are wanting, or allowing children who are 13 years old to be able to consent to anything, including body mutilation, which will only lead to consent laws around children being able to consent to have sex with adults.”
“We are the country that allows, in the last two years, 85,000 unaccompanied minors to come to our border and then be let in without any vetting, no background check, and then what do you think is happening in the economy of pedophilia?” he continued. “We are the problem, we are the demand, we are creating this.”
Right-wing media outlets have spent years falsely claiming gender-affirming care for trans youth amounts to “mutilation,” as Ballard repeated. In fact, gender-affirming care is associated with positive mental health outcomes, and by definition increases — rather than subverts — a young person’s bodily autonomy. It is also baseless anti-trans bigotry to assert that gender-affirming care is a Trojan horse to push “consent laws” that would allow adults to abuse children.
Ballard’s mention of 85,000 migrant children is a reference to a false claim that the Biden administration has “lost” those kids, an accusation that has become rampant in right-wing media. It is nearly always deployed in service of a restrictionist immigration policy, again under the guise of promoting children’s safety. Right-wing outlets have also pushed the falsehood that President Joe Biden has opened the southern border, allowing people to enter the country “with no vetting.”
Ballard’s implication that further militarization of the border would serve to protect migrant children is similarly unsupported. U.S. crackdowns on irregular border crossings appear to have the opposite effect — that is, by criminalizing the act of crossing the border, U.S. authorities create more demand for smugglers, making migrants of all ages at risk of exploitation in underground economies.
Ballard’s argument, at its core, is that gender-affirming care and liberal asylum policies are both bad for children. The solution that seemingly arises from Ballard’s point of view is a reaffirmation of rigid borders — between nations and gender categories — enforced by reactionaries with guns and either backed by the state or operating outside the law, as his character does in the film.
In the Fox & Friends interview, Ballard also denied the film itself had anything to do with the QAnon conspiracy theory, which holds that a cabal of liberal elites are engaged in a worldwide pedophile ring.
“There has been criticism in the mainstream media where they suggest there is some sort of a connection to your movie and QAnon,” co-host Steve Doocy said. “Can you explain that?”
“I can't explain it and neither can they,” Ballard responded.
Ballard has refused to distance himself from QAnon in the past, legitimizing an outlandish theory that furniture company Wayfair was involved in child trafficking, for example. More broadly, the anti-trafficking movement that Ballard has helped to create retains significant overlap with QAnon. (OUR ultimately denounced QAnon in a written statement to The Atlantic.)
Sound of Freedom’s star, Jim Caviezel, has fully embraced multiple tenets of QAnon while promoting it on right-wing media. Caviezel claimed that traffickers tortured children to extract adrenochrome from their bodies, an absurd myth long associated with QAnon. He also argued that Ukrainian biolabs were involved, as were “three-letter agencies” such as the CIA and FBI. Like Ballard, Caviezel also invoked the supposed 85,000 missing migrant children.
Although The Washington Post, Rolling Stone, The Guardian, and Jezebel have highlighted the overlaps between the film’s rollout and QAnon, much of the mainstream entertainment press either failed to make that connection or actively attempted to depoliticize the movie.
Variety’s headline praised Sound of Freedom as “a Solidly Made and Disquieting Thriller About Child Sex Trafficking,” assuring readers, “It's been sold as a ‘conservative’ thriller, but you don't need that mindset to find it compelling.”