After Donald Trump touted his support last week for a QAnon adherent who won a Republican congressional primary, a reporter asked the president on Friday for his thoughts on the crackpot conspiracy theory. It offered the president a great opportunity to denounce the nonsense publicly.
He let that opportunity pass. Trump didn’t voice support for the ridiculous conspiracy theory, but he also dodged the question.
It was a disappointing response, which he made vastly worse nearly a week later.
President Donald Trump declined Wednesday to disavow the QAnon movement, saying that the followers of the extreme conspiracy theory oppose violent protests and that “I’ve heard these are people who love our country.” When reminded by a reporter for NBC News that the movement’s followers believe he is fighting to stop a satanic cult of pedophiles and cannibals, he asked: “Is that supposed to be a bad thing?”
The president added that he doesn’t know much about the deranged theory or its followers, “other than I understand they like me very much, which I appreciate.”
For those who may need a refresher, the basic idea behind the theory is that Donald Trump is secretly at war with nefarious forces of evil, including Democrats, Hollywood celebrities, the “deep state,” cannibals, and an underground ring of Satanic pedophiles that only adherents of the conspiracy theory are aware of.
As we recently discussed, this isn’t just the usual conspiratorial nonsense bubbling up from the right. It’s vastly weirder and more radical. Last year, the FBI went so far as to classify QAnon as a domestic-terror threat in an internal memo.
Common sense and common decency suggest a sitting American president should want nothing to do with such madness. But Trump has heard that its adherents like him “very much,” and in his mind, little else matters.









