Spent another day at People’s Convoy camp and noticed some changes from our first visit. Two weeks in there were fewer trucks, cars, and outside visitors. The dancing at the live bands was painful to watch.

But that’s not the story.

(w/@_Noelle_Cook)

Here are our four most important observations:
1) The encampment has an ever-changing population. There are plenty of stalwarts who have been there from the start. But most of the camp is filled with people who stay for a few days or a week and then head home.
Most people we talked to had arrived last week and were leaving soon. Some were on their second or even third stays. Many of these people came, left for work, returned, and are leaving for work again.
One trucker we spoke to hauled liquid natural gas from NY to NH between stays. Four cars from NY toured the camping area as they left, honking and yelling through little bullhorns that they'd be back next week. These strangers had met in Hagerstown and left as a group.
Most of the people there for long stays seem to be either truckers or retired baby boomers. Dark-money donors pay truck-fuel bills but individuals are on their own. Most of the big-name truckers have social media funding, payment apps, gifts from followers, and sell swag online.
2) The people there are happy, energized, and excited for more. People keep coming back (and new people arrive daily) because they want to be a part of something bigger than themselves and this protest and encampment gives them a sense of community and purpose.
Nearly everyone expressed some kind of loneliness and isolation back home. Some as a result of the pandemic. Some from losing jobs. Some because their politics were too extreme for their local communities. QAnon folk talked about friends and family no longer speaking to them.
As a result, people there were eager to talk. Everyone we spoke to wanted to share the powerful feelings of belonging and connection they experienced at the People's Convoy. It was like they were testifying at church. They wanted to share the good news with everyone they could.
A women from Indiana said she no longer felt alone. Two different men said this was the first time they had been happy since losing spouses to cancer. An iron-worker from OH in his 70s got choked up talking about being depressed for years & this place being "home" and "family."
The live band was not well attended because it was Sunday, and many were leaving for the work week and they wanted to spend the last day talking with their new-found friends. We were told, "Don't go before you sign my car!" It was like kids leaving summer camp.
3) This is a well-organized communal village. These people may be against socialism but they are all about communal living. Everything runs with volunteer labor and is scheduled and coordinated. The kitchen is headed by a chef from DE who used to run the restaurant at a Marriott.
Packaged food donations are stacked high on tables, organized by type and kind. When they run low, a truck pulls up filled with donations and people pitch in to unload it. We were told there were several trucks filled with more. Lots of new dry goods donations arrive daily.
Individual donors also supply fresh food. A local farmer donated 2,000 eggs. One man showed up, asked what was needed, and when they said, "fresh food," he went to Walmart and came back with hundreds of dollars worth of fruits and vegetables. (The scraps are collected for pigs).
There's a shower truck with 12 stalls. A medic and volunteer barber on site. If you need laundry done you put it in a bag with your phone number on it and it comes back clean, dry, and folded. No one we spoke to knew if it was done by a service or by local volunteers. All free.
There's a rack of donated clothes and coats and a section with toys. One woman forgot to bring a towel for the shower truck. Soon after a donated one appeared on the hood of her car. A local benefactor dropped off a truck load of seasoned split wood for all the many campfires.
The truckers are in charge and control the $ but they sometimes spread it around. A man from TN told us he bought a heater for his tent & was surprised to get reimbursed. He and a few other car-campers said they were given gas cards donated to the truckers by online followers.
4) Despite the niceties, this is extremism. People talked about the Convoy being "open to all religions, races, and political parties." But once you got to talking, they started identifying their enemies as Democrats, liberals, Black Lives Matters, ANTIFA, "Illegals," etc.
We heard how liberals had no souls & were disposable to God, & Democrats are evil and Satanic. Lots of QAnon and anti-vaxx conspiracy madness. Lots of anti-immigrant talk. Anti-CRT Moms for Liberty. A security guy casually dropped the N-word and no one even flinched.
This is Christian community for white Christian nationalists and their QAnon brothers and sisters. Organizers have tried to keep the rhetoric inclusive and urged followers to refrain from expressing extremism when media is around. Later, they let it rip in campfire conversations.
Later this week, racing season starts and the Convoy has to move. Rumors have it heading to a large RV park or state park in VA. There was also talk of 1,000s of bikers arriving this week from different biker convoys.

The worst may be yet to come.

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More from @TerryBoutonHist

Mar 20
Think the People's Convoy is going away? Think again. They have busy been mainstreaming and movement-building. You probably heard that they met with Senators Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Ron Johnson (R-WI). But there's been a lot more going on. 🧵
On 3/17, a Montana trucker broke away from circling the beltway, drove to the Capitol, and demanded to meet with his representatives in Congress. Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT), Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-MT) obliged, and Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) joined in for a tour of the Capitol Building.
The next day at the morning meeting, a speaker announced that the Convoy was going to Black Lives Matter Plaza in DC to take it back: "all that paint’s getting off that street.” The crowd cheered. “Then we’re gunna tar & feather our delegates.”

Read 8 tweets
Mar 6
We spent four hours walking around the “Peoples Convoy” Trucker encampment at the Hagerstown Speedway in MD. Anyone dismissing this as a failed event by the crazy fringe is missing the big picture.

Here are five important take-aways. 🧵

(Photos by @_Noelle_Cook).
1) There were thousands of people there. About a hundred semi-trailer cabs and hundreds of convoy pick-up trucks and SUVs filled nearly every spot in the huge Speedway parking lot. Tents were everywhere. On top of this, thousands of locals came for the day from MD, PA, WV, VA.
2) There was a clear attempt to appear more mainstream. The focus was a big-tent ideology of “Freedom.” Although started by anti-vaxxers, it was re-framed as “protecting our liberties” in ways that allowed for diverse beliefs. Christian Nationalism mixed with QAnon spiritualism.
Read 14 tweets
Mar 5
The stalled Russian convoy reminds me of British General John Burgoyne's army on the way to the Battle of Saratoga in 1777. Both past and present feature huge slow-moving convoys, constant harassment, logistical nightmares, and fatal underestimates of local resistance. 🧵
Like the Russian convoy, Burgoyne led a massive wagon train overland that was slowed by heavy rains, muddy roads, unwieldy artillery, and constant attacks and sabotage by Patriot militias that felled trees across roads and blew up bridges to slow Burgoyne's march.
Like the Russian convoy, Burgoyne's poor planning created a logistical nightmare as the delays caused his army to run out of food and supplies, compelling him to divert plans and stall his army's progress so he could resupply his slow-moving forces.
Read 6 tweets
Jan 8
The fixes suggested here for healing the racial divide offer no real solutions because they ignore how entrenched racism stands at the core of the split. White supremacy never gives up without a fight. You don't solve the crisis of democracy by ignoring it's central problems. 1/
In “Cease-Fire in the Culture Wars,” Yascha Mounk blames "the elite" for endangering democracy by putting Trump voters "on the receiving end of a culture war in which the most powerful elements of their own societies look down on them.”
His solution?
Liberal democracies "need to embrace a more ambitious vision of diversity by promising all citizens—majority and minority—social respect and a place at the table." In other words, we need more respect for bigotry, sexism, anti-science ignorance, and gaslighting authoritarianism.
Read 8 tweets
Aug 27, 2021
Lt. Michael Byrd did more than he knows. I was at the Capitol Insurrection observing on the east (non-mall) side and witnessed the difference his actions made. Shooting Ashli Babbitt stopped another wave of violent insurrectionists from entering the Capitol.
Just before Lt. Byrd shot Babbitt, insurrectionists inside the Capitol had managed to open a door on the House side. At the time, the crowd on east side was almost all on the center stairs, having no luck trying to (re)break into the doors that led into the Rotunda.
With few people on the House stairs, the insurrectionists who had opened the door started shouting, "Door on the House side is open! Come on over!" But the crowd didn't move. I don't think many of them knew which was the House side.
Read 8 tweets
Jul 6, 2021
Six months ago I witnessed the Capitol Insurrection firsthand and reported the open embrace of authoritarianism--not just by the hardcore extremists who stormed the building--but also by the crowd outside who called themselves "Patriots" and said this was "Our 1776." 1/6
Hearing a diverse mass of ordinary looking, middle-class white people discussing violence in calm, matter-of-fact tones was more chilling than the organized militias and proud white supremacists because it revealed authoritarianism's grip on a large minority of the US. 2/6
Since 1/6 that grip has tightened and spread. Republican leaders who condemned both the Insurrection and Donald Trump have nearly all backtracked. They blocked impeachment and then a bipartisan investigation into 1/6. Now they increasingly deny the Insurrection even happened. 3/6
Read 6 tweets

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