"In white supremacist and neo-Nazi Telegram groups, discussions have centered around strategies to infiltrate pro-Trump chats and 'red pill' what they have termed as 'Parler refugees' with carefully constructed narratives and propaganda," Criezis wrote in a recent report. Meili Criezis, who studies white supremacist radicalization at the Global Network on Extremism & Technology, part of a nonprofit organization that works to prevent extremists from using online platforms, said she noticed explicit recruiting by white supremacist militias of what she called "normie," or previously nonradical, Trump supporters on Telegram after Parler's removal. Twitter also banned 70,000 QAnon accounts this month.
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Parler has been offline since early January after internet service companies cut ties with it. Most of the accounts have expressed a belief that Trump will declare martial law and execute Democrats on Inauguration Day as part of the cult's long-awaited doomsday.Įxtremism researchers are calling some of the accounts "Parler refugees," named for the conservative social media network whose users are stumbling upon increasingly militant and radical information streams on smaller, unmoderated messaging apps and online forums.
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NBC News reviewed the social media accounts of Norris' brother, part of a sea of QAnon accounts that have become increasingly divorced from reality since the Capitol riot.