Why QAnon followers are like opioid addicts, and why that matters
A few years ago, QAnon had an obscure internet following organized around a baseless conspiracy theory. It has now become ubiquitous, with regular and disturbing news stories reminding us of its reach.
Last week, we learned of a QAnon-related data leak of Colorado voting machine logins. The week before, people around the country struggled to comprehend a gruesome homicide allegedly committed by a QAnon-following father who, according to authorities, told the FBI he killed his two small children because he believed theyd inherited from their mother lizard DNA that would turn them into monsters. Last spring, a mother admitted to killing her three children, saying she wanted to protect them from becoming victims of a sadistic cabal of pedophiles whose existence is widely believed among QAnon adherents.
Why would such outlandish conspiracy theories hold sway over these parents and others around the country? One way to comprehend the incomprehensible is to recognize the parallels between QAnon and addictive drugs like opioids which are also manipulated by malicious actors to trap vulnerable people in increasingly unhealthy spirals that ultimately result in the destruction of families and even death. Recognizing these similarities is helpful in both accurately diagnosing the QAnon phenomenon and trying to treat it.
For starters, QAnon, like the painkiller abuse epidemic driven by the drug oxycodone, engulfs people who are most vulnerable to its content. An overwhelming proportion of QAnon followers arrested in connection with the Jan. 6 insurrection, for instance, have mental health problems, including bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and post-traumatic stress disorder, according to a University of Maryland analysis. If you believe the world is out to get you, you are probably more likely to embrace QAnon narratives that explain exactly how the world is out to get you.
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/why-qanon-followers-are-opioid-addicts-why-matters-ncna1277323
Baked Potato
(7,733 posts)-and-
Apparently a treatable addiction:
https://www.addictioncenter.com/drugs/conspiracy-theory-addiction/
littlemissmartypants
(22,654 posts)But I don't find the premise of this commentary persuasive.
Mosby
(16,306 posts)And the media needs to dial back the "war on opiates". They are life saving medicines for millions of Americans not just "addictive drugs...manipulated by malicious actors to trap vulnerable people in increasingly unhealthy spirals".
Who are these malicious actors? Pretty sure opiates are prescribed by doctors.
littlemissmartypants
(22,654 posts)It's a particularly crappie article, barely high school level writing.
And...
I would probably be suicidal without my twelve hour extended release opioid. ❤