Conflicts and frustrations abound in Internet forums where extremists who are supporters of former US President Donald Trump talk since the failure of the storming of the Capitol building in Washington on January 6, and after the inauguration of Joe Biden as President of the United States.

The American extreme right appears angry at Biden and Trump, and even at the predictions of the QAnon movement, and angry at itself as well, according to a report published by the French Press Agency.

Supporters of the "Kyo Anon" movement, which believes in a conspiracy theory, are desperate because their predictions of chaos with the arrival of the democratic president to power have not yet materialized at least.

And the extremist groups, the new Nazis and those who believe in white supremacy, are moving in secret after the campaign of arrests that affected their followers who participated in the storming of the Capitol.

More extreme

Specialists in extremist movements and domestic terrorism in the United States believe that the end of Trump's presidential term constituted a setback for these groups, and they assert, in return, that they will not stop their movements, but rather have become more inclined to commit acts of violence.

Experts say the more extreme groups are turning to the recruitment network represented by the disillusioned Qiu Anon supporters.

"The rhetoric is still hostile, and people are not satisfied with the Biden presidency," says Michael Addison Hayden of the Southern Bounty Law Center research group on extremism.

"The energy and dynamism of the extreme right is stronger than at any time in contemporary history," says Colin P. Clark of The Sofan Group, a security and intelligence research group.

Many of them feel anger at Trump's decision not to defend the 120 arrested demonstrators (Reuters)

Anger unites them

The end of Trump's term and the ban on extremists on social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook have fueled feelings of anger, and Hayden adds that the ban on social media in itself "has become a unifying factor" for far-right groups.

Many have turned to the rare platforms that are still available, especially the Telegram application that is used by thousands of supporters of "Qunun" and the extremist group "Proud Boys", and continues that "the infrastructure is still in place for the extreme right to organize its ranks."

The Qun movement began appearing at the end of 2017 with encrypted posts from a mysterious user under the name "Q" on the "8Con" website.

The identity of "Q" was unknown, but his publications rallied Trump supporters behind a conspiracy theory devised by the American extreme right, detailing the alleged secret plan of the so-called "deep state of the United States" against Trump and his supporters, hatched by the Democrats.

After the defeat of Trump, they represented a large portion of the "Stop the Steal" movement, asserting that Biden stole the election result with widespread fraud.

Today, many of them are angry at Trump's decision not to defend the 120 protesters who were arrested and hundreds of others under investigation following the storming of the Capitol building on the sixth of this month, but apparently, "the extreme right accepted the idea of ​​Trump's departure and consolidated its ranks without him," as Hayden says, but they They took a hard hit.

Violent acts

And last Wednesday, Ron Watkins, whose father controls 8Con, announced his withdrawal from the movement, deleting the entire Qunun archive from 8Con.

"We gave everything we had, now we have to keep our heads up and get back to our lives in the best possible way," Watkins - who many believe is a Q - declared on Telegram.

"This constituted a severe blow to the movement," said Karim Zaidan, an investigator at Right Wing Watch who monitors the extreme right, considering on the other hand that the movement had already proven that it was able to continue its activities without "Q".

The movement's "influencers" and thousands of their supporters, as well as the personalities who led Trump's "Stop the Steel" campaign, are encouraging the movement to continue its activity.

Zidan adds that one of the influencers, lawyer Lyn Wood, for example, managed to attract more than 592,000 subscribers in a week after moving to Telegram.

Clark believes that the violent extremist groups need to recruit a weak percentage of "Q-Anon" movements to build networks capable of committing destructive acts of violence.