Kids Shipped in Armoires? The Person Who Started the Wayfair Conspiracy Speaks
new conspiracy theory surrounding products advertised by the home
goods and furniture seller Wayfair now joins previous unsubstantiated
allegations like Pizzagate regarding worldwide pedophilic sex
trafficking among the economic elite.
The Wayfair conspiracy
theory that became a social media sensation on Friday began with a post
to the Conspiracy subreddit, which promotes user-submitted conspiracy
theories, many thinly evidenced or unevidenced, to more than a million
subscribers.
"Is it possible Wayfair involved in Human trafficking with
their WFX Utility collection? Or are these just extremely overpriced
cabinets? (Note the names of the cabinets) this makes me sick to my
stomach if it's true," redditor PrincessPeach1987 posted on Thursday,
alongside a screenshot from Wayfair's mobile website featuring four
storage cabinets—products named Neriah, Yaritza, Samiyah and Alyvia—that
cost between $12,699.99 and $14,499.99.
Newsweek reached out to Wayfair regarding the human trafficking
conspiracy theories, including a request for an explanation of the
high-priced items. The company provided this statement in response:
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"There
is, of course, no truth to these claims. The products in question are
industrial grade cabinets that are accurately priced. Recognizing that
the photos and descriptions provided by the supplier did not adequately
explain the high price point, we have temporarily removed the products
from site to rename them and to provide a more in-depth description and
photos that accurately depict the product to clarify the price point."
The
conspiracy theory has been elaborated on other social media platforms,
particularly Twitter, expanding on the original post and its assertion
that very expensive or overpriced cabinets with human names is in itself
evidence of human trafficking conducted more or less in the open, with
Wayfair offering humans for sale under the guise of selling cabinetry.
In chat conversations with Newsweek,
PrincessPeach1987 described seeking out garage storage with their
husband when they came across the expensive cabinet listings. While they
at first surmised that they may have stumbled across unlisted drop
shipping sales, Facebook posts also suspicious of the pricey listings
made them more inclined to listen to their suspicions that there may be
something more to the listings.
PrincessPeach1987, who declined to
reveal their non-redditor identity, described themselves as "involved
in a local organization that helps victims of human trafficking," which
has led her to be "suspicious most of the time now." They characterized
their Reddit post as less of a direct accusation and more of an effort
to "see if anyone else had more details."
Prominent arrests—like
that of Jeffrey Epstein for the alleged trafficking and sexual assault
of underage girls—have shown that extensive pedophilia networks do
exist, but the "details" of the Wayfair theory do not make a credible
case.
Protestors hold up images of Jeffrey Epstein outside
of a federal courthouse in New York City after his 2019 arrest. Before
his death in federal detention, Epstein was charged with one count of
sex trafficking of minors and one count of conspiracy to engage in sex
trafficking of minors.Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images
Subsequent elaborations on the theory included a user review
on the Wayfair website for a previously unrelated, $5,000 fireproof
filing cabinet, which included a 2016 user review from someone in Walnut
Creek, California. The San Francisco exurb, with a population of more
than 70,000, was also the location of a February arrest for human
trafficking, child pornography and attempted kidnapping, which was
allegedly connected to a wider child sex trafficking ring. "Walnut
Sauce" is also an alleged code word central to Pizzagate conspiracy
theories.
Supporters of the theory have also urged skeptics to use
a Russian search engine to search for the stock keeping unit number
(SKU) associated with various Wayfair products, which returns image
results full of children in bathing suits. However, none of the SKU
searches return images of a single child, which would seem to run
counter to the implication that the Wayfair SKUs secretly provide data
regarding the specific child to be purchased. In addition: following the
search engine instructions with any random string of numbers returns
the exact same results.
Supporters of the theory have also drawn
connections to June 2019 protests by Wayfair employees, which objected
to the company selling furnishings to a Texas detention facility for
migrant children. The facility subsequently closed. However, protesting
Wayfair employees never mentioned setting up public listings for humans.
Still,
the Wayfair conspiracy theory has begun to take on a life of its own on
social media and will likely become a part of the extensive mythology
regarding child sex trafficking brought to national prominence in 2016
with Pizzagate.
Pizzagate alleged that a child sex and human trafficking
ring operated by high-ranking Democratic Party officials was run, in
part or completely, through the non-existent basement of a Washington
D.C. area pizza shop. While easily debunked "evidence" began to pile up—Newsweek previously documented
how transgressive public art, including footage from concerts, was
falsely recontextualized as secret Satanic rituals—the crux of the
claims relied on emails stolen from the personal account of Hillary
Clinton campaign manager John Podesta and published by WikiLeaks in
2016.
While the so-called "Podesta emails" contained multiple newsworthyrevelations—including the content of speeches Clinton delivered to
Goldman Sachs and the leak of questions to the Clinton campaign in
advance of a CNN town hall with 2016 Democratic primary opponent Bernie
Sanders—Pizzagate was built on the unsubstantiated claim that certain
words within the emails were in fact coded allusions to child sex
trafficking. In the arbitrary associations developed by conspiracy
theorists, various food words, including "cheese," "map," "walnut sauce"
and, of course, "pizza," were actually coded indications of people's
preferred child victims.The Wayfair conspiracy theory shares a similar pattern, drawing arbitrary inferences without any evidence.
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