To make sense of the pro-Trump attack on the Capitol, many folks have analogized to military conflicts like the War of 1812. A better analogy is rooted in our long history of racial authoritarianism. This wasn’t war, this was a lynch mob. 1/ 👇🏽
Reuters News Pictures Editor @jimbourg tweeted “at least 3 different rioters at the Capitol say they hoped to find Vice President Mike Pence and execute him by hanging him from a Capitol Hill tree as a traitor.” 2/ mediaite.com/news/trump-rio…
Elements of the mob were also clearly targeting Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer. 3/
A gallows with a noose was erected. Even if you think it was purely symbolic, like the Ku Klux Klan’s use of burning crosses, the symbol alone is meant to intimidate and terrorize. 4/
As CNN notes, along with Trump 2020 banners and American flags, other symbols signaled allegiance to ”white supremacist and extremist groups.” 5/ cnn.com/2021/01/09/us/…
This was mob justice, an extralegal attempt to enforce a particular social order through terror and violence. Yes, the attack was remarkable in trying to overturn a presidential election but similar tactics of collective violence are not rare in America. 6/
As activists like Ida B Wells, the NAACP and the Equal Justice Initiative have documented, there were thousands of racial terror lynchings. 7/ eji.org/reports/lynchi…
As a side note, the celebratory aspects of the attack on the Capitol are also not uncommon. Lynchings were also often festivals of violence. 8/ bookshop.org/books/a-festiv…
Why resort to collective violence? In The Roots of Rough Justice, Michael Pfeifer argues in the mid-1800s, ”white Americans seized upon lethal group violence unsanctioned by law—particularly hangings—to enforce mandates of racial and class hierarchy…” 9/ bookshop.org/books/the-root…
Other forms of mob justice also have deep roots in the US. One hundred years ago during the Tulsa Race Massacre, white vigilantes killed dozens and razed the wealthiest black community in the US. 10/ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulsa_rac…
In Buried in the Bitter Waters, Elliot Jasper documents hundreds of similar incidents in which white vigilantes targeted Black communities with collective violence to try and execute ”racial cleansings.” 11/ bookshop.org/books/buried-i…
What lessons can we learn from the past about how to counter mob justice? Pfeifer argues there was once a kind of culture war in America between two models of order: rough justice and due process. 12/
We’re in a culture war now, too. One survey found 45% of GOP voters back the attack on the Capitol. Calls for ”unity” distract from the essential challenge: systems of due process, flawed as they are, must defeat rough justice. In short, sedition must have consequences. /fin
.@DrGeniece notes an important case: ”In 1898, a group of white vigilantes—angry & fearful at newly elected biracial local government—joined forces with area militias to rain terror on Wilmington, NC, then the South’s most progressive Black-majority city.” history.com/news/wilmingto…
.@MrJohnson1942 flags an insightful thread. Author’s fifth point: ”These people are serious & they are going to keep escalating the violence until they are stopped by the force of law. There were many, many people there who were excited by the violence…”
.@bellingcat notes ”On ‘free speech’-focused social media apps like Phoenix Social Network, Parler and Spreely, there have been repeated calls for armed violence and the execution of elected political leaders over recent months.” bellingcat.com/news/americas/…
.@Delavegalaw offers a helpful legal interpretation:
For more historical context, see this piece I wrote for the Washington Post: ”Un-American? Actually, the Capitol riot was quintessentially American” washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/0…
.@unhillbilly recommends this podcast from the superb investigative team at @reveal in which they ”look back to the nearly forgotten election of 1898 in Wilmington, NC, where a coup d’etat gave birth to much of the structural racism that exists today.” revealnews.org/episodes/remem…
Trump’s zeal for rough justice over due process is a defining feature of his presidency. He’s egged on repression against legal protests. He’s cheered police abuse. He’s pardoned war criminals & last night his administration executed a mentally ill woman. thecut.com/2021/01/lisa-m…
New reporting finds mob justice nearly caught Pence.
New study finds “strong evidence that BLM protests were associated with an increased likelihood of voting for the 2020 Democratic candidate.” Further, this effect was “concentrated among less contentious protest events (with arrests, injury, or violence).” tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.10…
Study of BLM also uses weather and commute times to address possible unobserved factors as protests more likely “when weather is good and built environment favors local gatherings… factors likely to impact variation in protests but not Democratic voting.” tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.108…
At both county- and individual-level, study finds “strong support for hypothesis BLM protest intensity was associated with greater support for Biden. Evidence on contentious protest is mixed, with a significant negative effect in county analysis but no relationship in survey.”
A strange and ahistorical op-ed on SF's ills that spends a precious paragraph on dangers of ranked choice voting but has nothing to say about what policy changes are needed to build more housing, an issue that long precedes current “one party rule.” nytimes.com/2023/02/26/opi…
A century ago, Bay Area was ground zero for the development of single family zoning as a method to enforce racial segregation in housing.
California’s housing crisis is the result of bad policy over decades on both left and right but counter-mobilization against integrated neighborhoods and fair housing laws was not championed by liberals.
Has any region offered a Pay-to-NIMBY option? Like a surtax for non-development?
“The privilege of vetoing virtually any housing in rich neighborhoods is so ingrained in American culture that many people believe it is one of their inalienable rights.” sfchronicle.com/opinion/openfo…
Idea is to shift NIMBYism debates from “rights” to privileges. Imagine upzoning a whole city but with option for any neighborhood to pay an ongoing lower-upzone surtax. Wealthier neighborhoods then pay price for NIMBYism in a way that might also subsidize more affordable housing.
Shifting from property taxes to land value tax would be simpler and more efficient than “NIMBYism surtax” but I’m trying to imagine what might reduce conflict within current system and between city-level pushes to upzone and neighborhood-level opposition. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_valu…
“It seemed absolutely crazy. The idea that an Iowa housewife, equipped with the cutting-edge medical tool known as Google Images, would make a medical discovery about a pro athlete who sees doctors and athletic trainers as part of her job?” propublica.org/article/muscul…
Also, if you liked this piece, I recommend following @DavidEpstein.
For more on sports and genetics, nature versus nurture and other hot debates on the science of performance (10,000 hours?), see @DavidEpstein’s book The Sports Gene. The Guardian called it “dazzling and illuminating.” amazon.com/Sports-Gene-Ma…
Our immune systems are not so much like armies as traffic cops. When we’re well, past infections often linger but are kept in check. As thread shows, chronic illnesses—like ME/CFS and Long Covid—are plausibly persistent, harmful infections that remain hard to detect and suppress.
Long term infections can also result in damage to tissues which may then be diagnosed as a new illness like cervical instability. @jenbrea notes “infection is actually one risk factor of cervical damage that has the most support in the medical literature.” jenbrea.medium.com/how-infection-…
“Compression, stretch, or deformation of nerve tissue can cause low blood flow to the brain and spinal cord that results in a host of downstream metabolic consequences like low oxygen, a switch to anaerobic metabolism, increased lactate, and inflammation.” jenbrea.medium.com/how-infection-…
Just successfully converted a pdf and OCR’d two paper book chapters to machine readable plain text. Then fed text to Amazon’s Polly service and now have good-enough “audiobooks.” Did it for myself but realize one day could be offered to class like podcast with weekly “episodes.”
Listen to Narrative in Political Science by Molly Patterson and Kristen Renwick Monroe as read by one of Amazon Polly’s British female voices (I’m not sure if British voices are actually better than US or if foreign dialectic just seems less robotic). dropbox.com/s/uwpikkyzz3cg…
Pre-processing pdf or OCR’d text is time consuming and doesn’t really save time. For text-to-voice reading to be pleasant, it’s helpful to clean things like hyphens vs m-dashes, remove footnote numbers, correct some garbled text, etc. Some of this can be automated but not all.