One month later, there’s still a part of #CapitolSiegeReligion I think needs more attention. Some religious media & evangelical leaders no doubt share a measure of the blame. But we can't lose sight of the fact that the attack was the result of thousands of individual choices...
To understand those choices I've been reading FBI charges, looking for mention of religious motives. That's how I found Mike Sparks, accused of being the first to enter the Capitol through a broken window. After the attack he declared Trump would remain president "in Jesus name." ImageImageImage
The day charges against him were announced, I had a look at Sparks’ Facebook page, which has now gone dark. What I saw there was fascinating: a record of one man's transformation into an unlikely insurgent. A single chronicle of radicalization that may shed light on others.
Sparks was of course taken in by all the election lies. But what we need to understand is that his transformation started long before that. Last summer he posted a long video testimonial wrestling with a new anger he feared was rising in him & clearly naming its source: Facebook. Image
“I consider myself a devout Christian,” he said, but he knew he hadn't been sharing “godly things” on Facebook. “I’ve even said I’d shoot that person in the head, I’d shoot this person in the head… I’m not showing the love of Christ.” Friends began to worry; many unfriended him.
As he saw it, the problem for him began with Black Lives Matter. Images of protests across the country had pushed him over the edge. Framed by conservative media on Facebook, those images convinced him the time for spiritual war was at hand. “It’s good versus evil now," he said.
It wasn't just the images, it was that they felt inescapable. The same platform his family used to share photos was now driving him mad. "Facebook is where they’re feeding this anger and hatred," he said. "They’ll find out what you are for or against & they’re gonna feed anger.”
Social media in Sparks’ description is a tormentor: an active, personified force that may do some good, but mostly means you harm. Facebook became for him the site of a clash with himself, relentlessly giving him dire warnings of threats posed to his family and his country.
“I’ve noticed that my phone has been in my hand more than my Bible,” Sparks confessed. “I’ve been locked in on my Facebook watching all this stuff play out and I get angrier and angrier.” He apologized & promised to do better, wondering if he should quit social media altogether.
“I’m not going to let my anger overtake me anymore," he said. "I’m going to get in the word of God like I should be doing anyway, and get back to the me that smiles more. Because I got wrapped up. I got wrapped up in Facebook.”
In the end, he did not quit Facebook. His posts about BLM soon gave way to posts about the election and his refusal to accept the results. When Trump himself posted “JANUARY SIXTH, SEE YOU IN DC!”, Sparks shared it to his page, adding “I’ll be there.” ImageImageImage
According to the FBI, not only was Sparks there, he took part in one of the day's most notorious incidents: when rioters chased Capitol Police Officer Eugene Goodman. Image
At Sparks' arrest, he wore a t-shirt citing Ephesians 6:11: "Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes." It's worth asking how much being "wrapped up in Facebook" led him see the Capitol attack in those terms. wdrb.com/news/elizabeth…
Understanding January 6 on an individual level is not easy. Yet it's an important part of making sense of the problem we face: Trump is gone, but how many angry men are still staring at their phones, wondering when the battle raging inside them will break out into the world? /END
Postscript: Folks are sharing this thread again as we near the 1/6 anniversary. Important context and further detail is included in this piece I wrote for the @washingtonpost which began with the tweets above. washingtonpost.com/religion/2021/…

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Peter Manseau

Peter Manseau Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @plmanseau

May 29
Here’s the story to read on religion and Daniel Defense, maker of the Uvalde shooter’s weapon. It’s from 2017, when the Christian gun company was *also* involved in mass murder.
ajc.com/news/crime--la…
“We are in business, we believe, to be a supporter of the gospel,” Daniel Defense’s founder said in 2017. “And, therefore, a supporter of the Second Amendment. In other words, not only do we have those Second Amendment rights because God gives them to us, but also the Gospel.”
In 2017 Breitbart also did a story on Daniel Defense, praising it for supporting “the freedom of the gospel by supporting the Second Amendment.”
breitbart.com/2nd-amendment/…
Read 9 tweets
May 28
The idea that guns make us safer is yet another Big Lie.
A few years back I published a book about historical gun mishaps called Melancholy Accidents. Throughout much of American history, stories about people blowing holes in themselves were so common that regular newspaper columns were devoted to sharing their excruciating details.
An example from 1789: “A melancholy accident happened on Monday last; a lad was in the kitchen with a servant-girl when he placed his musket close to the girl. It immediately went off; the contents of which were lodged in the poor creature’s head; she instantly expired.”
Read 5 tweets
May 27
"Defending my family" is among the most common reasons given for gun ownership.

But a gun in the home is far more likely to injure family members than protect them.
A five-year study of 14000+ crime incidents found just 127 cases of self-defense gun use.

Meanwhile more than 1800 kids die each year by gunshot -- including suicides, accidents, and domestic violence, all of which are facilitated by guns in the home.
Part of the challenge with "gun control" messaging is that too many people believe that not being able to keep certain types of guns in their home prevents them from protecting their family. But the statistics disagree.

Keeping guns out of your home *is* protecting your family.
Read 10 tweets
Jan 26
According to the transcript of the board’s discussion, this ban seems to be about the book’s use of “objectionable language”. History disappears not only through lies about what happened but through discomfort with the ways survivors and their families describe their experiences.
How long until they ban Night or the Diary of Anne Frank? Lots of things to make parents uncomfortable in both.
My God. Here's the school board that banned Maus describing Pulitzer Prize winner Art Spiegelman: "This guy that created the artwork used to do the graphics for Playboy. You can look at his history, and we're letting him do graphics in books for students in elementary school."
Read 6 tweets
Dec 21, 2021
There's an alternate reality in which Trump accepted defeat and since January has been using Twitter to take credit for the vaccine, which his followers receive gladly.
So much of the mess we're in goes back to one man. He did not singlehandedly politicize Covid, but we would be in a very different place had he not believed taking the virus seriously was going to hurt him politically.
"Republicans & Republican leaning independents, who represent 41% of adults, now make up 60% of the adult unvaccinated population... political partisanship is a stronger predictor of whether someone is vaccinated than any demographic factor measured."
kff.org/coronavirus-co…
Read 4 tweets
Dec 4, 2021
Can’t really make sense of our decades-long failure with school shootings without reckoning with the grotesque martyrdom narratives that emerged from Columbine.
The stories told about Christian kids facing school shooters with affirmations of faith sought to sanctify horrific events, fitting them into a spiritual warfare framework rather than treating them as the tragic result of the ready availability of guns.
A generation raised on those stories was never taught to ask if the takeaway from Columbine and other mass shootings should be a questioning of gun laws or gun culture. They were taught instead what they should do when gunmen came for them. It wasn’t a tragedy but an opportunity.
Read 11 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(