"In QAnon, Nazism wants a comeback": Anti-Semitism expert reveals parallels between QAnon and Nazism

There are parallels between QAnon’s conspiracy theories and the anti-Semitism Adolf Hitler and his Nazis promoted

Published September 10, 2020 10:50AM (EDT)

Supporters cheer for Donald Trump at a rally, August 4, 2018. (Getty/Scott Olson)
Supporters cheer for Donald Trump at a rally, August 4, 2018. (Getty/Scott Olson)

This article originally appeared on AlterNet.

The QAnon conspiracy cult enjoyed a major victory when, on August 11, far-right extremist Marjorie Taylor Greene won a GOP congressional primary in Georgia — and given how overwhelmingly Republican her district is, Greene is likely to win the general election in November and be sworn into the U.S. House of Representatives in January 2021. QAnon, known for their outrageous conspiracy theories, believe that the U.S. government has been infiltrated by an international ring of pedophiles and Satanists and that President Donald Trump was put in power to battle them. And Gregory Stanton, president of Genocide Watch and an expert on the history of anti-Semitism, believes that there are parallels between QAnon's outrageous views and the views that Nazis promoted in Germany during the 1930s.

Describing QAnon's views in an article published by Just Security on September 9, Stanton writes, "A secret cabal is taking over the world. They kidnap children, slaughter and eat them to gain power from their blood. They control high positions in government, banks, international finance, the news media and the church. They want to disarm the police. They promote homosexuality and pedophilia. They plan to mongrelize the white race so it will lose its essential power. Does this conspiracy theory sound familiar? It is. The same narrative has been repackaged by QAnon."

According to Stanton, there are countless parallels between QAnon's conspiracy theories and the anti-Semitism that Adolf Hitler and his Nazis promoted in Germany before and during World War II.

"The Nazis worshiped Adolf Hitler as the leader who would rescue the white race from this secret Jewish plot," Stanton explains. "Nazi 'stormtroopers' — storm detachment, Sturmabteilung —  helped bring Hitler to power. Nazi Germany went on to conquer Europe and murder 6 million Jews and millions of Roma, Slavs, LGBTQ and other people."

Central to Nazi ideology, Stanton notes, was the anti-Semitic 1902 pamphlet, "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion," and Stanton stresses that QAnon's ideology is a "rebranded version" of that pamphlet.

"QAnon purveys the fantasy that a secret Satan-worshiping cabal is taking over the world," Stanton observes. "Its members kidnap white children, keep them in secret prisons run by pedophiles, slaughter and eat them to gain power from the essence in their blood. The cabal held the American presidency under the Clintons and (former President Barack) Obama, nearly took power again in 2016, and lurks in a 'Deep State' financed by Jews, including George Soros — and in Jews who control the media. They want to disarm citizens and defund the police. They promote abortion, transgender rights and homosexuality. They want open borders so brown illegal aliens can invade America and mongrelize the white race."

Stanton continues, "QAnon true believers think Donald Trump will rescue America from this Satanic cabal. At the time of 'The Storm,' supporters of the cabal will be rounded up and executed. The QAnon conspiracy theory has now spread to neo-Nazis in Germany, where over 200,000 German QAnon accounts infest the internet."

Stanton goes on to write that QAnon's critics "are perplexed at how any rational person could fall for such an irrational conspiracy theory." But when people are suffering hardships, Stanton explains, they "respond to fear and terror" and "blame their misfortunes on scapegoats" — which is what happened in Germany during the 1930s.

"In the 1930s," Stanton recalls, "millions of Europeans were unemployed. Violent battles between Nazis and communists raged in city streets. Democratic governments were powerless. Fascist dictators ruled Spain and Italy. Hitler took power in Germany and conquered Western Europe. Stalin's communists conquered the East. The Hitler-Stalin Pact sealed totalitarian rule over most of Europe. It took World War II and the deaths of millions to defeat the Nazis' genocidal tyranny, and another 50 years to free the gulags of the Soviet Union."

Stanton adds that in 2020, it is obvious that QAnon's influence is growing when a QAnon supporter like Greene is "likely" on her way to Congress and President Donald Trump praises her as a "future Republican star."

"The world has seen QAnon before," Stanton warns. "It was called Nazism. In QAnon, Nazism wants a comeback."


By Alex Henderson

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Alternet Conspiracy Theories Marjorie Taylor Greene Politics Qanon