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What happens when QAnon seeps from the web to the offline world

By Mike McIntire and Kevin Roose
New York Times·
12 mins to read
What happens when QAnon seeps from the web to the offline world
A rally in Washington in September for QAnon, an online conspiracy theory that has steadily migrated offline. Photo / Tom Brenner, The New York Times

A city council member in California took the dais and quoted from QAnon, a pro-Trump conspiracy theory about "deep state" traitors plotting against the president, concluding her remarks, "God bless Q."

A man spouting QAnon beliefs about child sex trafficking swung a crowbar inside a historic Catholic chapel in Arizona,

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