1. Except for race, the crowd is incredibly diverse -- age, education, far-right subculture, region, even gender (although less so those inside the Capitol).
2. The media does a disservice to understanding of far right and its threat by primarily using pictures of faceless mobs or of exceptional people -- notably the "QAnon Shaman". Many are people like your (and definitely my) neighbors and students (or their parents).
3. Christianity is MAJOR part of this! Religious Right has further radicalized in past decades and has become closely intertwined with Trump and even QAnon (not really new, as RR and white supremacy have long history together). Needs much more attention and discussion.
4. Even the "QAnon Shaman", whose bodies is inked with pagan symbols, seems very well steeped in Christianity.
5. Crowd is divided over the police. Undoubtedly related to how much they consider themselves part of mainstream or not and how often they have demonstrated. But make no mistake, support for "the blue" is only on THEIR terms.
6. This was a clear example of mob frenzy, in which many people have done and shouted things they would never (dare or want to) do and shout by themselves or in small groups. Many will probably have never done anything so brazen and well never do it again.
7. This is not to excuse or minimize it, but the vast majority are not Trump's "Stormtroopers". They felt safe, protected, entitled, above the law. Not too many will be willingly paying the price for their activism (see below)
8. The police performance is absolutely shocking. Clearly, US Capitol Police has little to no experience with riots and serious crowd control. Many officers are way out of their depth and should be mall cops (in high-end areas).
9. Many rioters feel superior in terms of knowledge, but are poorly informed about day-to-day events and politics, and mainly act on emotion and instinct rather than ideology.
10. Many within the American (far) right have a very capitalist understanding of democracy. We pay taxes therefore we OWN the institutions, politicians, etc.
11. White supremacy is so ingrained and normalized that it does not have to be expressed explicitly. It is striking how little open reference there is to race, but the underlying assumption is that "we" are white.
12. There is NO doubt that nearly all feel that they are doing Trump's work and that they have friends inside (Cruz & Hawley). They are not "anti-government" or even "anti-state", this was a "partisan" attack (with Trump/ism being the party).
13. I have no allegiance to this country, or particularly warm feelings to it and its democratic institutions (like my US wife), but even for me this was an incredible and uncomfortable watch. This attack should NEVER be minimized, let alone normalized.
14. While similar processes play out in Europe, and far-right attacks and threats against state institutions and representatives are now commonplace in many countries, the US is in a far worse spot than any European country (bar Hungary and Poland).
15. This is, of course, because of the weapons laws here but also because of decades of ignoring or minimizing far-right threat under pressure from Republicans.
16. This all notwithstanding, things can change fundamentally, and relatively fast, IF the Biden administration make this a priority and will not be intimidated by Republicans.
17. Yes, US law enforcement and military have a serious far-right problem (few countries do not) but DHS and FBI have long been aware of far-right threat and have, by and large, taken it serious.
18. But without political cover and support, few in law enforcement and military will risk their neck going after the far-right -- except for the politically and socially isolated, like Klansmen and neo-Nazis.
19. Which brings me back to the "QAnon Shaman". By externalizing the far right, and linking it (visually) to freaks and marginal people and phenomena, the far-right mainstream, because that's what it has become, is normalized and white-washed.
20. But real far-right threat does not come from "QAnon Shaman", it comes from within mainstream of society. And it is strengthened by our often cowardly and opportunistic lack of opposition and resistance to their claims and complaints (myself included). #TheEnd
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I'm going with the experts. #Georgia did it... again!
I'm not an expert on Georgia politics, but simply living here for almost 10 years makes me more of an expert than 95% of pundits in national media, so here is quick #thread
1. This is a victory for African American grassroots campaigning. Sure, @staceyabrams has been amazing, but many, many others have been too.
2. African Americans have come through big for Georgia, and thereby the US. They finally deserve the credit, not just as "followers" but as LEADERS of Democratic politics.
There are lot of received wisdoms about #FarRight (often wrongly referred to as #populism ) and #COVID19 so @JakubWondreys and I looked into it. Turns out, shocker, most are wrong.
Below is link to Open Access article. Main points in #thread
1. We focused exclusively on main far right parties in Europe and on the first wave. However, recent update shows that little has changed.
2. First, we looked into stereotype that "populists" (i.e. far right) ignores or minimizes COVID-19. This is almost exclusively based on Bolsonaro and Trump, who turn out to be exceptions rather than rule.
1. Even before Biden was crowned "president-elect" the different sides opened up the power struggle. Progressives mainly through social media, centrists mainly through traditional media.
2. Progressives argued that they had increased turnout, including in swing states (eg Omar in MN), and thereby won Biden the election.
As we are starting to analyze and assess the Trump presidency, we should also start analyzing our own coverage of it, both academic and journalistic.
Much was predicted that didn't come true and much came true that wasn't predicted.
And, yes, I said "we". 👈
For example, until COVID-19 really hit, I thought Trump was going to be re-elected (again lose popular vote but win EC). Until November 3 I thought Biden would win in landslide but worried Trump would sneak out an EC win. 1/2
It's three-year anniversary of deadly "Unite the Right" rally. Some quick observations. #Thread
1. The "Right" is as "united" as it was three years ago, i.e. not at all.
2. The "alt-right" was a hype, both as a concept and as a movement. It was yet another example of how most media were (unintentionally?) acted as booster of far right messaging.