by Halima Mohamed
Pizzagate is a conspiracy that grew in popularity during the 2016 presidential race and it suggested that a Pizzeria in Washington DC known as Comet Ping Pong was the home of a child sex ring run by Hillary Clinton along with her campaign manager John Podesta and many other democrats. There are many variations of this conspiracy, but it is centered around many people involved in the Democratic Party being responsible for a large governmental child sex ring which intends to sexually abuse small children and sell them into sex trafficking as part of the New World Order.
This conspiracy gained significant media attention after a man named Edgar Welch travelled from North Carolina to Washington DC with an assault rifle, in order to confront the employees of the store. The origins of the conspiracy are unknown but they seem to have began in October of 2016 after several Twitter users claimed that former democratic congressman Anthony Weiner’s computer was recovered by the FBI and that there is evidence on that laptop that Weiner was involved in a child sexual abuse. Weiner was under investigation for sexting a child at the time.It was reported that many supporters of Donald Trump suggested that Weiner was not the only one committing these acts and that many other democrats were involved.
The conspiracy continued to gain momentum, after emails from the Democratic National Committee were leaked by WikiLeaks one month before the election. When the emails were published, users of popular forum sites including a reddit forum dedicated to Donald Trump, began searching for evidence of the child sex ring in the emails, and suggested that the emails were written in a code.Many participants began commenting on what some words might be code for by connecting words like “cheese pizza” for example, as code for “child poronography” becuase the initials for both were “c.p.”, or the word “pizza” being code for “girl”. Once pizza was connected to the theory, believers began to focus all their attention on potential locations in Washington DC where the sex ring might be taking place, and they zeroed in on Comet Ping Pong after discovering an email exchange between John Podesta and James Alefantis, the owner of the pizzeria and concluded that the crimes were taking place in the basement of the restaurant.
Following this discovery a number of people began harassing the restaurant’s employees along with several other businesses in that area and on December 4th 2016 , Edgar Welch who brought a military style rifle and a handgun to the restaurant, and fired the rifle inside the pizzeria. Luckily, no one was hurt but the incident led to the conspiracy gaining significant attention from the media, and a number of media outlets debunking the conspiracy.
A lot of the evidence for the conspiracy came from James Alefantis and John Podesta’s social media profiles, many claimed that there was a “secret kill room”, in reference to a picture that Alefantis posted on his social media, but the picture was of a walk in freezer for a property Alefantis was considering purchasing. There was also a side by side comparison of John Podesta and his brother Tony Podesta to a police sketch of a person wanted for the abduction of Madeleine Mccann, theorists suggesting that they were responsible for her abduction. A number of organizations have discredited the theory including the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia and most major new sites, but theorists believe that these organizations are also involved in the sex ring.
This conspiracy is extraordinary because it is completely baseless and there is no physical evidence of any of the claims. There seems to be political motivations for this theory, especially since it is so close to the election, and because the many of the creators of the theory were from an extreme fringe of the right wing, the theory might have confirmed some other things that people already believe about liberal elites. It also largely relies on people’s distrust of the government and leans on many already existing theories surrounding the government such as the New World Order and conspiracy theories the Clinton family.
It is thought that people tend to believe conspiracy theories due to a lack of control over their life or finding new ways to blame others for their issues. According to a 2017 study, published in the Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology journal, around 42% of people without a high school diploma believe in conspiracies and only 23% of people who have a postgraduate degree, it was also found that the household income on average for people who tend to believe in conspiracies was around $47,193, while people who did not believe in them had an average income of $63,834. This disparity could explain why many people tend to believe in extreme and unusual theories.
Work Cited:
http://time.com/4965093/conspiracy-theories-beliefs/
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/12/10/business/media/pizzagate.html