#granted these rumours originate from 4chan
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
werewolf-cuddles Ā· 5 years ago
Text
Me: Alright, I think Iā€™ve got all my salt about The Rise of Skywalkerā€™s ending out of my system
*rumours and speculation spreading around that Ben was originally supposed to live, but the ending was changed at the last minute, which is why his death scene is so awkwardly done and why Rey barely mourns him afterwards*
Me: ...
youtube
21 notes Ā· View notes
wumingfoundation Ā· 6 years ago
Text
On #QAnon: The full text of our Buzzfeed Interview
Tumblr media
Ryan Broderick of Buzzfeed just published an article on this #QAnon conspiracy bullshit titledĀ It's Looking Extremely Likely That QAnon Is A Leftist Prank On Trump Supporters. The piece features quotes from an interview we gave via email. Hereā€™s the full email exchange.
--
Can you tell me a bit about when and how your book Q was written?
We started writing Q Ā in the last months of 1995, when we were part of the Luther Blissett Project, a network of Ā activists, artists and cultural agitators who all shared the name Ā«Luther BlissettĀ». Luther Blissett was and still is a British public figure, a former footballer, a philanthropist. The LBP spread many mythical tales about why we chose to borrow his name, but the truth is that nobody knows.
Initially, Blissett the footballer was bemused, but then he decided to play along with us and even publicly endorsed the project. Last year, during an interview on the Italian TV, he stated that having his name adopted for the LBP was Ā«a honourĀ». The purpose of signing all our statements, political actions and works of art with the same moniker was to build the reputation of one open character, a sort of collective "bandit", like Ned Ludd, or Captain Swing. It was live action role playing. The LBP was huge: hundreds of people in Italy alone, dozens more in other countries. In the UK, one of the theorists and propagandists of the LBP was the novelist Stewart Home.
The LBP lasted from 1994 to 1999. The best English-language account of those five years is in Marco Deseriis' book Improper Names: Collective Pseudonyms from the Luddites to Anonymous. One of our main activities consisted of playing extremely elaborate pranks on the mainstream media. Some of them were big stunts which made us quite famous in Italy. The most complex one was played by dozens of people in the backwoods around Viterbo, a town near Rome. It lasted a year, involving Satanism, black masses, Christian anti-satanist vigilantes and so on. It was all made up: there were neither Satanists nor vigilantes, only fake pictures, strategically spread rumours and crazy communiquƩs, but the local and national media bought everything with no fact-checking at all, politicians jumped on the bandwagon of mass paranoia, we even managed to get footage of a (rather clumsy) satanic ritual broadcast in the national TV news, then we claimed responsibility for the whole thing and produced a huge mass of evidence. The Luther Blissett Project was also responsible for a huge grassroots counter-inquiry on cases of false child abuse allegations. We deconstructed the paedophilia scare that swiped Europe in the second half of the 1990s, and wrote a book about it. A magistrate whom we targeted in the book filed a lawsuit, as a consequence the book was impounded and disappeared from bookshops, but not from the web.
This is the context in which we wrote Q. We finished it in June 1998. It came out in March 1999 and was our final contribution to the LBP.
I've been reading up about it, and it's largely believed that it's underneath the book's narrative it works as handbook for European leftists? Is that a fair assessment? I've read that many believe the book's plot is an allegory for 70s and 80s European activists?
Although it keeps triggering many possible allegorical interpretations, we meant it as a disguised, oblique autobiography of the LBP. We often described it as Blissett's Ā«playbookĀ», an Ā«operations manualĀ» for cultural disruption.
The four authors I'm speaking to now areĀ Roberto Bui, Giovanni Cattabriga, Federico Guglielmi and Luca Di Meo correct? The four authors of Q?
You are speaking with three of the four authors of Q, and you're speaking with a band of writers called Wu Ming, which means Ā«AnonymousĀ» in Chinese. In December 1999 the Luther Blissett Project committed a symbolic suicide - we called it The Seppuku - and in January 2000 we launched another project, the Wu Ming Foundation, centred around our writing and our blog, Giap. The WMF is now an even bigger network than the LBP was, and includes many collectives, projects and laboratories. Luca aka Wu Ming 3 is not a member of the band anymore, although he still collaborates with us on specific side projects. Each member of the band has a nom de plume composed of the band's name and a numeral, following the alphabetical order of our surnames, thus you're speaking to Roberto Bui aka Wu Ming 1, Giovanni Cattabriga aka Wu Ming 2 and Federico Guglielmi aka Wu Ming 4.
Can you tell me a bit about your background before the Luther Blissett project?
Before the LBP we were part of a national scene that was ā€“ and still is ā€“ called simply Ā«il movimentoĀ», a galaxy of occupied social centres, squats, independent radio stations, small record labels, alternative bookshops, student collectives, radical trade unions, etc. In the Italian radical tradition, at least after the Sixties, there was never any clearcut separation between the counterculture and more political milieux. Most of us came from left-wing family backgrounds, had roots in the working class. Punk rock opened our minds during our teenage years, then in the late 1980s and early 1990s Cyberpunk opened them even more, and inspired new practices.
When did you start noticing similarities between Q and QAnon? I know you've tweeted a bit about this, but I'd love to get as many details as I can. I feel like the details around QAnon are so sketchy that it's important to lock in as much as I can here.
We read a lot about the US alt-right, books such as Elizabeth Sandifer's Neoreaction a Basilisk or Angela Nagle's ā€“ flawed but still useful ā€“ Kill All Normies, and yet we didn't see the QAnon thing coming. We didn't know it was growing on 4chan and some specific subReddits. About six weeks ago, on June 12th, our old pal Florian Cramer ā€“ a fellow veteran of the LBP who now teaches at the Willem de Kooning Academy in Rotterdam ā€“ sent us a short email. Here's the text:
Ā«It seems as if somebody took Luther Blissett's playbook and turned it into an Alt-Right conspiracy lore. Maybe Wu Ming should write a new article: "How Luther Blissett brought down Roseanne Barr"!Ā»,
After those sentences there was a link to a piece by Justin Caffier on Vice. We read it, and briefly commented on Twitter, then in the following weeks more and more people got in touch with us, many of them Europeans living in the US. They all wanted to draw our attention on the QAnon phenomenon. To anyone who had read our novel, the similarities were obvious, to the extent that all these people were puzzled seeing that no US pundit or scholar was citing the book.
Have there been key moments for you that made you feel like QAnon is an homage to Q? What has lined up the best?
Coincidences are hard to ignore: dispatches signed Q allegedly coming from some dark meanders of top state power, exactly like in our book. This Q is frequently described as a Blissett-like collective character, Ā«an entity of about ten people that have high security clearanceĀ», and at the same time ā€“ like we did for the LBP ā€“ weird "origin myths" are put into circulation, like the one about John Kennedy Jr. faking his own death in 1999 ā€“ the year Q was first published, by the way! ā€“ and becoming Q. QAnon's psy-op reminds very much of our old Ā«playbookĀ», and the metaconspiracy seems to draw from the LBP's set of references, as it involves the Church, satanic rituals, paedophilia...
We can't say for sure that it's an homage, but one thing is almost certain: our book has something to do with it. It may have started as some sort of, er, "fan fiction" inspired by our novel, and then quickly became something else.
There will be a lot of skepticism I think that an American political movement like QAnon could have been influenced by an Italian novel, how do you think it may have happened?
It's an Italian novel in the sense that it was originally written in Italian by Italian authors, but in the past (nearly) 20 years it has become a global novel. It was translated into fifteen languages ā€“ including Korean, Japanese, Russian, Turkish ā€“ and published in about thirty countries. It was successful all across Europe and in the English speaking world with the exception of the US, where it got bad reviews, sold poorly and circulated almost exclusively in activist circles.
Q was published in Italian a few months before the so-called "Battle of Seattle", and published in several other languages in the 2000-2001 period. It became a sort of night-table book for that generation of activists, the one that would be savagely beaten up by an army of cops during the G8 summit in Genoa, July 2001. In 2008 we wrote a short essay, almost a memoir, on our participation to those struggles and Q's influence in those years, titled Spectres of MĆ¼ntzer at Sunrise. A copy of Q's Spanish edition even ended up in the hands of subcomandante Marcos. It isn't at all unrealistic to imagine that it may have inspired the people who started QAnon.
Have you seen anything in the QAnon posts that leads you to suspect any activist group in particular is behind it?
No, we haven't.
You think QAnon is a prank? Without some kind of reveal it's obviously hard to see it as that. If you think it was revealed that QAnon was actually some kind of anarchist prank, would it even matter? Would its believers abandon it or would they just see it as a smear campaign?
Let us take for granted, for a while, that QAnon started as a prank in order to trigger right-wing weirdos and have a laugh at them. There's no doubt it has long become something very different. At a certain level it still sounds like a prank, but who's pulling it on whom? Was the QAnon narrative hijacked and reappropriated by right-wing "counter-pranksters"? Counter-pranksters who operated with the usual alt-right "post-ironic" cynicism, and made the narrative more and more absurd in order to astonish media pundits while spreading reactionary content in a captivating way?
Again: are the original pranksters still involved? Is there some detectable conflict of narratives within the QAnon universe? Why are some alt-right types taking the distance from the whole thing and showing contempt for what they describe as Ā«a larp for boomersĀ»?
A larp it is, for sure. To be more precise, it's a fascist Alternate Reality Game. Plausibly the most active players ā€“ ie the main influencers ā€“ don't believe in all the conspiracies and metaconspiracies, but many people are so gullible that they'll gulp down any piece of crap ā€“ or lump of menstrual blood, for that matter. Moreover, there's danger of gun violence related to the larp, the precedent of Pizzagate is eloquent enough. What if QAnon inspires a wave of hate crimes?
Therefore, to us the important question is: triggering nazis like that, what is it good for? That camp is divided between those who would believe anything and those who would be "ironic" on anything and exploit anything in order to advance their reactionary, racist agenda. Can you really troll or ridicule people like those?
It's hard to foresee what would happen if QAnon were exposed as an anarchist/leftist prank on the right. If its perpetrators claimed responsibility for it and showed some evidence (for example, unmistakeable references to our book and the LBP), would the explanation itself become yet another part of the narrative, or would it generate a new narrative encompassing and defusing the previous one? In plain words: which narrative would prevail? Ā«QAnon sucking anything into its vortexĀ» or Ā«Luther Blissett's ultimate prankĀ»?
In any case, we'd never have started anything like that ourselves. Way too dangerous.
52 notes Ā· View notes
yeonchi Ā· 7 years ago
Text
2017 In Review
Itā€™s been a very eventful and turbulent year, with quite a few things, both good and bad, happening all over the network.
Over on the Waifu Network, Iā€™ve restarted Waifu Pros and Cons with the intention of hopefully posting at least one entry per month. The posts on the Waifu Network are pretty much linked to my anime posting on Facebook, so I neednā€™t make original posts for every page, which makes my life very easier.
Weā€™ve introduced Ritsuā€™s brother and Azusaā€™s boyfriend, Satoshi Tainaka, as a new poster on the Waifu Network this year. This was a tie-in to the series A Month of Summer Azusas and its mini-series The Missing Pics on the Ecchi Waifu Network, which (despite delays) went off without a hitch. Anime Tiddie Check was also intended to be a series that estimated the breast sizes of the Waifu Network girls and compared various artistsā€™ (official and fanart) interpretations and portrayals of them. However, it was made a one-off instalment for the K-On girls because there was a lack of viable nude group fanart for the other series weā€™ve featured.
Iā€™d like to take a moment to pay tribute to three people who inspired me to begin the Koei Warriors Rant Series, namely Matthew Barth, Nathan Kennedy and Mansour Abdulla. Matthew became an admin on the Fans of Anime page for a little bit, but he was a staunch proponent of English voices in Koei Warriors games. Nathan was fighting with depression for a long time (as far as I knew), so I was particularly concerned for him. He deactivated his account in September this year and I havenā€™t heard from him since. Mansour became disillusioned with Koei Tecmo omitting English voices from their games and gave up on them a while back, even when I transitioned to discussing Japanese game localisation in the West. An honourable mention also goes to Scooter McDowell for helping me out with compiling the EX and Musou attack list for the characters in Dynasty Warriors 8 Empires, which was a big help for me at the time (itā€™s been a few years, so you should be able to find that information on wikis already).
The #NoDubNoBuy page will be changing its name to English Dubbed Game News from January 18, 2018 and we will no longer be reposting negative comments in the name-and-shame album as it has now been deleted. I will not confirm or deny the fact that recent events have influenced this decision, but regardless of this, I stand by what I said about the comments and the people who wrote them. More information can be found in this post.
The Undub page has strangely gone dead recently as their last update (at the time of writing) was posted on September 9. In the months before this, they have been promoting a website known as Own Your Game, which provides information on games that have physical releases, whether Western or Japanese. They have even gone to great lengths to show the text and voice languages that the game has, which fits with their standard of games being released with dual audio and as many text languages as possible. (UPDATE: 3 January 2018 - Apparantly, the Undub page is not dead. Thanks for clearing that up.)
Over the past three years, you may have seen me comment about English dubs on some posts on the Koei Tecmo Facebook page. Iā€™ve decided to drop that because I feel that my time and efforts are wasted trying to convince a bunch of sheep to support dual audio when Koei Tecmo doesnā€™t make any effort towards dubbing their games. Iā€™ll admit that Iā€™ve lost interest in Dynasty Warriors and other Koei Warriors games recently because of this and other commitments. Iā€™ve expanded to talking about English dub in general over the past few years, but right now, I just feel like posting news about games that have been dubbed or not. If that helps the English dub fanbase, then Iā€™m happy with it.
I had plans to revive the Sea Princesses cartoon in order to complete the Sea Princesses Wiki, but Iā€™ve decided to put that on hiatus because Iā€™ve heard nothing regarding reruns or fansubs over the past year. I was going to post details about my proposed fansub project, but Iā€™ve decided to put that on hold as well because Iā€™ve been very busy (and not because no one would be interested in it, in case people are pointing that out). The vandalism of pages on the wiki is also continuing, but Iā€™ve decided that it would be a waste of time to continue undoing random changes made by stupid people who have no idea about the cartoon (and rightly so).
Obviously, weā€™ve had a few conflicts with some people over the years and out of all of them, I think weā€™ve only had one or two that have escalated. Despite everything that has happened, I think that the main reason as to why the Network has continued to survive to this day is because we stood tall and maintained the high ground in the face of adversity. People have tried to discredit us over the years, but they failed because of various factors - they may have made points that were missing the point, they may not fully understand the topic in question, or they were just being petty (because I already proved that they were morally worse than me). Iā€™m actually tempted to generalise all my naysayers in a negative light, but in the end, all I can count on is the satisfaction of being on the moral high ground.Ā If you want to win an argument with me, your best bet is to just have a polite and civilised discussion, otherwise, itā€™ll just end up in a conflict with stupid people fighting stupid with stupid.
Iā€™ve stopped actively looking for people to admin my Facebook pages as Iā€™ve found that there hasnā€™t been a lot of interest in it over the past few years. Itā€™s really sad when youā€™ve already hired admins to post on your pages and they donā€™t do anything, which makes you think that they probably shouldnā€™t have applied to be an admin in the first place. Personally, I think the way Iā€™m running my pages is going good so far, even if the growth is a bit slow because I donā€™t use dishonest methods to promote my pages.
Speaking of pages, the rumour about non-business pages being deleted is still going on. Even though the timing of the rumour coincides with recent events that caused me to be postblocked three times in a month, I still think that it is bullshit. I wonā€™t elaborate any further on this, but I hope that the people responsible for the reports thinks about the irreversible damage they have caused just for being petty on social media.
Rumours have been spread about me being anĀ ā€œattention-seeking dork with no friendsā€ in relation to the #NoDubNoBuy page and the Dub Logistics series, or me using my niche status on the internet to promote hate and harassment in relation to the political posts on Hong Kong news that a page related to the Network has posted.Ā Firstly, I like to keep my personal life separate from my online life, so what right have you to make judgements about me based on my opinions? Secondly, Iā€™m not the type of person who wants to be perceived that way (in fact, who does?). I like to see myself as an insightful person who likes to speak their mind about things. Obviously, Iā€™ve kept myself informed regarding current affairs in Hong Kong and Mainland China and like other people, I have negative opinions regarding the current situation over there, particularly when it comes to governance and law enforcement (criminal activities). Granted, some offensive language may have been used, but chances are that other people have the same thoughts I have, even if they would have worded it differently.
(UPDATE: 3 January 2018 - Looking back, Iā€™m not even sure what effect the other party was trying to achieve with the events of the feud. HimĀ ā€˜flexingā€™ over my posts being reported was definitely a ruse to attract my attention, but it didnā€™t work well because I didnā€™t hear about it until three weeks after the first post was reported. As I mentioned, some of his actions did nothing to redeem himself, yet it didnā€™t seem to mean much to other people since they didnā€™t pay much attention to it. Personally, I still think that he is either trolling or being paranoid about his reputation. He can say that Iā€™ve been wrong about him and I can say that heā€™s been wrong about me, but I think that both of us should be grateful in at least one aspect, including the fact that the feud hasnā€™t escalated to drama the likes of YouTube, 4chan, Reddit, or even Encyclopedia Dramatica, where other people could start taking sides and blowing things way out of proportion. Iā€™d like to reiterate thatĀ all views and opinions of the feud have been left to each partyā€™s own interpretation - this is just my side of it. Both of us have moved on from all this, so hopefully in time, itā€™ll all become a forgotten afterimage.)
Given that Iā€™ve kept the Hong Kong page separate from the rest of the Network, the thing Iā€™m trying to say here isĀ ā€œdonā€™t believe the rumoursā€. I can only say this because I have a niche fanbase; if I was famous like Keemstar, Leafy or RiceGum, that statement wouldnā€™t stick with everyone. This is my way of telling you all to focus on the positives and not the negatives.
So, despite what others may say about my fanbase, Iā€™d like to thank my fans for their continued support. You donā€™t need to be flattered or anything because I know who you are. I wish you all the best for 2018.
1 note Ā· View note