On Saturday, in communities all over the United States, protesters took to the streets in what many of them called rallies to “save our children” from the very real problems of sexual abuse and abduction -- except that these rallies were organized online by supporters of the QAnon conspiracy theory.
According to NBC’s Brandy Zadrozny and Ben Collins, reporters who specialize in the dangerous and anti-Semitic conspiracy theory, more than 200 “Save The Children” or “Save Our Children” (these appear to be used interchangeably) rallies were scheduled across the country beginning on August 9, but taking place as recently as August 22. The marches were often peaceful and, when talking to reporters, they “rarely mention[ed] QAnon or wider conspiracy theories, sticking instead to demands like stricter laws against pedophilia and greater media attention on sex trafficking.” But the rallies were not actually about protecting children; in actuality, they were attempts to lure more people into supporting the demented conspiracy theory.
Unfortunately, media all over the country failed to report on the rallies’ connections to QAnon, supporters of which have been linked to child abductions, domestic terrorism, and at least one murder. Instead, most media outlets covered the nationwide QAnon rallies as credible attempts to call attention to child abuse -- even when well-known QAnon-related slogans and signs were plainly visible, sometimes even appearing in the televised reports.
Reporters should already know about the dangerous conspiracy theory: It has been mainstreamed by Republican congressional candidates and flourished in Facebook groups; President Donald Trump has promoted QAnon-promoting accounts on Twitter over 200 times, and he called a QAnon supporter congressional candidate “a future Republican star.” Despite high-profile actions social media platforms have taken against QAnon-related content, the conspiracy theory continues to thrive online. Media outlets need to do better at identifying and truthfully reporting the conspiracy theory’s increasing influence.