Before Candace Owens became known as a conservative firebrand and commentator, she was a leftist. And as a leftist, she started a very small online publication called Degree180. And under that brand started a Kickstarter campaign for an online platform called Social Autopsy.
The project was panned from all sides. Owens and her company became public enemy #1 overnight.
So what was Social Autopsy? It was a platform for doxing and deanonymizing people en masse. The devastation such a platform would have wrought on the world, had it actually gotten off the ground, cannot be understated. I’ll let her own FAQ video shed light on this:
Surprisingly that video is still live – at least as of the time this article went public. It was released March 22, 2016. Keep that date in mind.
The Kickstarter went live on April 12, 2016, and… didn’t last long. In launching the campaign, Owens and her company did the smart thing and tried to create something… But if a later post by Owens was any indication, the site wasn’t supposed to be publicly available. But whoever was coding the site didn’t bother setting up even simple HTTP authentication to prevent that from happening. What little was there was collected by The Wayback Machine.
Part of the backlash against her came from both an expected and unexpected direction: Zoe Quinn. If you know anything about Gamergate, you know that name very well.
For the uninitiated, I’ll try to be brief.
Back in 2014, one of Zoe Quinn’s ex’s published a scathing article about her that became known colloquially as the “Five Guys” controversy as that is how many men the ex alleged Zoe Quinn had… engaged at various times. One such person was Nathan Grayson, a gaming journalist. At the time, Quinn had created a game called “Depression Quest” (still available on Steam) and was trying to get attention on it, so her affair with a gaming journalist became a focal point, even though her game hadn’t yet been completed at the time of the affair.
Prior to that article being published, massive collusion between game developers and media publications had long been alleged.
And what happened on August 28, 2014, certainly didn’t help any claims to the contrary.
Twelve (12) gaming publications published the same article, known as the “Gamers are Dead” article, on the same day. That is seen as the colloquial start of what became known as “Gamergate”. Actor Adam Baldwin – i.e., Jayne from Firefly – is credited as coining the term and starting the hashtag on Twitter.
One discovery that solidified just how right Gamergate was about the gaming media was the GameJourosPros mailing list.
The gaming media moved swiftly to control the narrative – and mostly succeeded, given the Wikipedia article on the topic – and reframed “Gamergate” as a hate campaign against women in gaming, eventually women in general, and, specifically, Zoe Quinn. Trying to dodge the allegations coming from Gamergate by acting like they were now trying to protect women and minorities in gaming or acting on their behalf, which led to the start of the NotYourShield hashtag.
Now the one thing that needs to be highlighted is how compressed the timeline for this actually was. The time between “Five Guys” article and the “Gamers are Dead” articles going live was… less than three (3) weeks. The long-standing allegations against the gaming media and developers, along with Quinn going after another group called The Fine Young Capitalists, a women-centric gaming development organization, led to this blowing up quick and violent.
YouTuber ShortFatOtaku (a.k.a., “Dev”) has a very good overview of the entire controversy:
And a pretty good timeline of the whole thing is available on Tiki-Toki. Yeah, there’s a LOT more to this than those trying to control the narrative want you to know.
I’d be lying if I said there was no harassment toward Zoe Quinn or any of the other prominent women in gaming – e.g., Anita Sarkeesian. But contrary to a very popular belief – again, just look at the Wikipedia article on it – the vast majority of the attention of Gamergate was directed at the gaming media. Calling for greater transparency and an end to the massive conflicts of interest that were uncovered. Zoe Quinn was a tiny blip on Gamergate’s radar and practically non-existent on their list of targets.
But she used her victimhood from that to form a non-profit called “Crash Override Network” aimed at providing resources for those experiencing online bullying.
Anyway…
So what does Gamergate have to do with this? Because Quinn reached out to Owens while the Kickstarter was still live, and Quinn alleged that “Gamergate” would go after Owens. And it’s Candace’s response to Quinn that reveals that Candace Owens has… always been a conspiracy theorist.
Quinn’s one-off allegation did end up being true, but also incomplete. No one wanted Social Autopsy – except those hoping to use it for nefarious purposes. Everyone could see what Social Autopsy could turn into.
Everyone except… Candace Owens.
And she puts her penchant for conspiracy theorist thinking on display, along with her abject ignorance of the online space, in crafting one hell of a narrative, both in that post and on Twitter, in which Zoe Quinn and Randi Lee Harper turned to and led the Gamergate calvary to get Social Autopsy shut down.
Yeah, it’s… bizarre in the kindest terms.
So after all of that, Owens went dark online. Her above-linked response to Quinn & Co. was taken down sometime between September 14 and 17, 2016.
Her last post to Degree180 was on November 13, 2016. An article called “Dear Liberals… Love, Former Liberals,” which kind of hints at her… transition. Degree180 itself went offline sometime in 2017 when their hosting expired and wasn’t renewed. SocialAutopsy.com eventually went down as well, also sometime in 2017 when their hosting expired.
Sadly, though, the idea of a doxing site like Social Autopsy didn’t die with Social Autopsy as we saw with the high-profile leaks from the very insecure servers for an online platform called Tea. And contrary to labels, it wasn’t a hack. They just had the critical servers publicly exposed with no authentication, meaning anyone who could find the endpoints had access. And finding that information was pretty simple to anyone familiar with “developer mode” in a desktop browser.
Moving on…
July 9, 2017. Owens reappeared with a new YouTube channel called “Red Pill Black” and a new video called “Mom, Dad…I’m a conservative”:
Now was her… transition into a conservative genuine? Given the aforementioned article, I think so. Since it’s either that or she’s playing one hell of a long con. And she did say “Social Autopsy is why I’m a conservative.” So the conspiracy theory she manufactured to explain the backlash against Social Autopsy led her to becoming a conservative… Anyone seeing red flags on that?
Despite attempts to get her to do such, such as by Blaire White in an open debate on The Rubin Report on November 7, 2017, Owens has, as far as I’m aware, never openly and unambiguously denounced or disavowed Social Autopsy – and I welcome correction if someone has it. I mean, at least there’s video of Trump unequivocally denouncing white supremacists despite repeated claims he never did so.
So taking the above, it should be no surprise that Candace Owens has a history of running with wild theories. It’s one of the reasons Brigitte Macron, the First Lady of France, has filed suit against Owens for the outlandish theory that Macron is… Male-to-Female Trans. The lawsuit was filed in Delaware and is docketed as Case No. N25C-07-194.
And then there are all the wild accusations Owens has been throwing around regarding Charlie Kirk’s assassination on the scale of the kind of theories that the JFK assassination couldn’t possibly have been just a one-man operation. Now there is evidence suggesting that the person who carried out Kirk’s assassination had conspired or colluded with others before the fact but otherwise acted alone in carrying it out.
But Owens, for some reason, doesn’t seem to think the reality behind it is that simple. That the assassination plot extends well beyond the person who carried it out and a few other individuals close to the assassin. And Social Autopsy and the conspiracy theory Owens manufactured to explain the backlash to it shows that her penchant for conspiracy theorist thinking isn’t new or unordinary.
The bigger problem is how far her conspiracy thinking is now going.



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