Pastel QAnon
Pastel QAnon is a collection of techniques and strategies of using feminine-coded aesthetics to indoctrinate predominantly women into the QAnon conspiracy theory, mainly on social media sites like Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp, Telegram, YouTube and TikTok.[1][2][3][4] It co-opts the aesthetics (including a pastel colour palette, which is where it gets its name) and language of communities and activities popular with women and uses gateway messaging to frame the conspiracies as reasonable concerns.[5][better source needed][1] The trend was identified by Marc-André Argentino, a researcher at Concordia University, Canada.[6][7][8]
Groups targeted[]
Pastel QAnon targets several existing communities and 'movements' which are predominantly populated by women including; lifestyle, celebrity, influencers, fashion, beauty, fitness, dieting, mothers and community groups, yoga, self improvement and self care, holistic living, childbirth (including home birth), pregnancy and childcare support groups, interior design and party planning.[1][9][2] 'Conspirituality' messaging within groups is often spread by their 'leaders' and 'influencers' for monetary gain especially during the COVID-19 pandemic due to the impact on their businesses e.g. yoga instructors and other 'wellness' professionals spreading anti-vaccination conspiracies.[9][10][11] Researchers have identified lack of investment in women's health as a key driver for women adoption of 'conspirituality'.[10][5]
Aesthetics[]
Pastel QAnon uses a feminine-coded aesthetic of an often pastel colour palette, aspirational imagery, font, design language and phrases used widely in marketing of products and services aimed at women.[5][9][12] This includes pastel colours, glitter, watercolours, handwriting fonts, illustrations, photographs (e.g. natural scenery, fashion and make up, aspirational lifestyles) and language (e.g. spirituality and 'motivational' quotes) in styles the targeted groups are familiar with to make them attractive.[5][9]
Becca Lewis, Stanford University researcher of online political subcultures, writes:[9]
We say you ‘fall down a rabbit hole.’ But it’s not how the ecosystem actually works. So much of this content is being disseminated by super popular accounts with absolutely mainstream aesthetics.... If you’re able to make this covetable, beautiful aesthetic and then attach these conspiracy theories to it, that normalizes the conspiracy theories in a very specific way that Instagram is particularly good for.
Gateway messaging[]
Pastel QAnon uses gateway coded messages about child protection, child trafficking, health (including 5G, COVID-19 denialism and vaccines) and other topics and frames them using language familiar to women e.g. ‘awakening,’ ‘enlightenment’, ‘seeking one’s own truth’, ‘freedom of thought’, 'self-exploration', 'truth seeker', 'censorship' and 'do your own research'.[5][1][10] The messages do not identify themselves as related to QAnon and posters often deny any knowledge of QAnon, but spread the same conspiracy theories framed for a female audience.[5][13][14]
The messages often use and expand upon on existing distrust and misunderstanding of the groups targeted, positive reinforcement and concerns about the COVID-19 pandemic.[1][9] For example:
- Targeting black and brown women, who have a history of medical experimentation without informed consent, with messages about 'forced vaccination' and other healthcare related conspiracies.[1]
- Targeting mothers and neighborhood groups with messages about child safety including furniture companies.[1]
- Using concerns by parents during the COVID-19 pandemic to spread conspiracy theories related to vaccines, masks, social distancing[1] and 5G.[5]
The messages use QAnon hashtags and other methods to encourage social media algorithms to suggest users increasing extremist QAnon affiliated content to indoctrinate readers.[5]
Piggybacking on social media campaigns[]
Pastel QAnon piggybacks on existing social media phrases, slogans and hashtags to spread its messages to a much wider audience.[9][15] E.g. Save the Children's human trafficking hashtag #savethechildren was used to spread conspiracies about sex-trafficking Satanist paedophiles and white supremacist and xenophobic narratives.[12][16][better source needed][11][17]
Avoiding content moderation and deniability[]
By co-opting and adapting existing language and using private groups and auto-deleting 'stories' Pastel QAnon messages largely avoid content moderation. This also gives people spreading the conspiracies semi-plausible deniability with people and groups pushing Pastel QAnon messages often denying any knowledge of QAnon.[10]
References[]
- ^ a b c d e f g h Dickson, E. J. (2020-12-14). "'Pastel QAnon' Is Infiltrating the Natural Parenting Community". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
- ^ a b McGowan, Michael (2021-02-24). "How the wellness and influencer crowd serve conspiracies to the masses". the Guardian. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
- ^ Breland, Ali. "On Telegram, white nationalists are trying to radicalize those fleeing Parler". Mother Jones. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- ^ Frenkel, Sheera (2021-01-12). "Fringe Groups Splinter Online After Facebook and Twitter Bans". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Meet The White Women Empowering QAnon Part 1, retrieved 2021-03-14
- ^ Episode 123: International QAnon (The Netherlands) feat Marc-André Argentino, retrieved 2021-03-17
- ^ "world of weird things podcast: further down the rabbit hole with marc-andre argentino". [ weird things ]. 2021-01-01. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- ^ Argentino, Marc-André. "QAnon and the storm of the U.S. Capitol: The offline effect of online conspiracy theories". The Conversation. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- ^ a b c d e f g Tiffany, Story by Kaitlyn. "The Women Making Conspiracy Theories Beautiful". The Atlantic. ISSN 1072-7825. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
- ^ a b c d Guerin, Cécile (2021-01-28). "The yoga world is riddled with anti-vaxxers and QAnon believers". Wired UK. ISSN 1357-0978. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
- ^ a b Cheetham, Joshua (2021-02-19). "Does yoga have a conspiracy theory problem?". BBC News. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
- ^ a b Haubursin, Christophe (2020-10-28). "The Instagram aesthetic that made QAnon mainstream". Vox. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
- ^ Makuch, Ben (8 January 2021). "How QAnon Fuelled the Invasion of Capitol Hill". Vice. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- ^ Beckett, Lois; Ho, Vivian (2021-01-09). "'She was deep into it': Ashli Babbitt, killed in Capitol riot, was devoted conspiracy theorist". The Guardian. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- ^ Warzel, Charlie (2021-01-06). "Opinion | The Pro-Trump Movement Was Always Headed Here". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- ^ Meet The White Women Empowering QAnon Part 2, retrieved 2021-03-14
- ^ Greenspan, Rachel E. (8 January 2021). "The bizarre origins of the lizard-people conspiracy theory embraced by the Nashville bomber, and how it's related to QAnon". Business Insider. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
- 2020s hoaxes
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