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Month: January 2021

“Operation Occupy the Capitol”

How could they not have seen this coming? The mob was planning this for weeks:

A digital flyer made public on Instagram and Facebook in December made little secret of the ambitions of some of the people planning to visit Washington on Jan. 6: “Operation Occupy the Capitol.”

That call to arms is just one of the many warning signs on extremist sites and mainstream social media platforms that extremism experts say were easy to spot but ultimately disregarded by law enforcement in the runup to Wednesday’s riot at the Capitol, which led to the deaths of five people, including Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, 42, who was reportedly hit with a fire extinguisher during the melee.

Washington, D.C., Attorney General Karl A. Racine told MSNBC on Friday that “there were no surprises there” when it came to what extremists prepared to do before Wednesday’s siege.

“Everyone who was a law enforcement officer or a reporter knew exactly what these hate groups were planning,” Racine said. “They were planning to descend on Washington, D.C., ground center was the Capitol, and they were planning to charge and, as Rudy Giuliani indicated, to do combat justice at the Capitol,”

On the fringe message board 8kun, which is popular with QAnon followers, for example, users talked for weeks about a siege of the Capitol, some talking about it like a foregone conclusion. Others simply debated how violent the uprising should be, and if police should be exempt.

“You can go to Washington on Jan 6 and help storm the Capital,” said one 8kun user a day before the siege. “As many Patriots as can be. We will storm the government buildings, kill cops, kill security guards, kill federal employees and agents, and demand a recount.”

Some users pushed back. “Why kill cops and security guards? I was under the impression the enemies were the high government officials and the rest are uninformed masses?” The Network Contagion Research Institute, a nonprofit that tracks disinformation trends, cataloged some of the threats before the rally. They said there was a substantial uptick in insurrectionist hashtags both on extremist sites and on the open web, specifically a large bump in traffic around the hashtags “1776” and “Occupy” in the night before the rally.

“When you have tens of thousands of attendees convinced they are a part of a plan to imprison or overthrow lawmakers, however, this possibility, even at a low noise, becomes a plausible threat,” said Alex Goldenberg, the institute’s lead intelligence analyst.

On Thursday, Washington Police Chief Robert Contee said at a news conference that there was “no intelligence that suggested there would be a breach of the U.S. Capitol.”

Users on extremist sites have continued to urge armed insurrection even after Wednesday’s siege.

Denver Riggleman, a former Republican congressman from Virginia who has been warning for months about potential violence from QAnon supporters, said he is particularly worried about extremist groups in the 12 days remaining in President Donald Trump’s presidency.

“I think we better be ready for Jan. 20, and I mean at every state Capitol that was contested, also,” Riggleman said. “We need a coordinated effort to detect groups planning now for Inauguration Day — a whole-of-government approach with public trust, data companies and research universities.”

Reports from numerous news organizations warned that online forums were being flooded with calls for mayhem.

A day before the rally, the investigative journalism website Bellingcat published an article detailing the online convergence of radical conservative groups with QAnon and white supremecist groups leading up to what the president promised would be a “wild protest,” specifically mentioning their online discussion about storming and burning the Capitol and specific threats directed at D.C. government officials and police.

The Washington Post published a similar article, citing specific posts on the encrypted app Telegram and Parler, a Twitter alternative, about sneaking illegal weapons into the rally. NBC News also published an article highlighting the threats, using research from Advance DemocracyInc., a global research organization that studies disinformation and extremism.

“Proud Boys and Hardcore Trump Supporters Are Turning Their Backs on Cops,” was the headline at Vice News on Tuesday, reporting that the arrest of the Proud Boys leader Henry “Enrique” Tarrio, 36, by D.C. police had resulted in online threats from members to “burn down” the Capitol.

Trump urged his supporters to join his rally in the days before the event. Once at the rally, he urged his supporters to march on the Capitol.

This article from Slate from inside the Capitol during the insurrection shows that many of the people there are simply stupid, brainwashed morons who think they are above the law because they are Trump voters:

The mood was giddy, but it was chaos. Everyone was excited. People were chanting, “This is our America,” and “Whose house? Our house!” They were having fun, entertaining themselves. The priority seemed to be to have their friends take selfies with them inside the Capitol.

The people I managed to speak to didn’t seem to understand the gravity of what they had done. Inside a building they had broken into, they described themselves as “peaceful” to me. I talked to a kid from Florida, who must have been no more than 17 or 18. He told me, “This is nothing compared to what antifa does.” I said, “Look, they’re breaking the glass.” He answered, “Yeah, but at least they’re not destroying the things.” I showed him pictures of things destroyed. It didn’t register. On the way up, there was a woman holding a sign saying, “If we were leftists, we would be rioting.”

Lead in the water? I just don’t know … But this woman speaks for that group, I think:

But among this group of idiotic “revolutionaries” were those guys with zip-ties.

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Democracy Commission

It’s clear that one more task for the Democratic majority will be to investigate the putsch on Wednesday. There were just too many security failures and some serious questions about who was involved and why. Todd Gitlin has some good ideas about how to go about that:

Congress must quickly convene an investigative commission to get answers to questions including the following:

► Which officials in the FBI, Homeland Security, and other agencies were aware of violent preparations in the run-up to the congressional vote yesterday to count and affirm the states’ election results?

► Which white supremacist groups were under surveillance after the FBI and Homeland Security warned of “high lethality”? What precautions were taken against paramilitary preparations?

► When the FBI and DHS learned of these threats, did they relay them to the Capitol Police, who by law are charged with protecting federal property in the District of Columbia? If they did notify law enforcement officials, which ones precisely, and when?

► When the president repeatedly called for demonstrations to overturn the election, which officials of which law enforcement agencies were and were not notified?Get the Opinion newsletter in your inbox.

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► After Trump “angrily vowed” Wednesday, before a large crowd at the White House, never to concede to President-elect Joe Biden, groundlessly asserted that the election results were fraudulent, and said, “We will never give up. We will never concede. You don’t concede when there is theft involved,” what did law enforcement agencies do? 

► Who in the Capitol Police decided Wednesday to let demonstrators breach the guarded periphery around the Capitol without conducting weapons searches, as video evidence of such flagrant malpractice shows? 

► At least two improvised explosive devices were found in the Capitol by the FBI, while two more were seized at the headquarters of the Republican National Committee and the Democratic National Committee. In recent weeks, was the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives on alert for such developments? If so, what did they do?

► Have there been internal investigations of pro-Trump paramilitary infiltration of law enforcement? If so, what do they report? If not, why not?

► Given ample evidence of malfeasance and rank incompetence throughout law enforcement ranks, in the face of widespread and widely reported instances of violations of federal, state, and local law, has there been connivance between intelligence agencies and law enforcement to permit insurrectionary demonstrators to threaten violence and otherwise violate the law with impunity?

► If the rioters breaking into the Capitol had been supporters of the Movement for Black Lives, how would they have been treated? Have standing orders been issued by law enforcement authorities in case of security breaches of government buildings by Black Lives Matter demonstrators?

A republic whose institutions cannot answer these questions is no republic at all.

The committees are going to have to initiate many investigations. The assault on democracy by Trump and his henchmen must be at the top of the list. This one requires a commission with subpoena power. The lies that were told about the election by Trump, right wing media and his Republican collaborators need to be documented and rebutted in an official proceeding.

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GOP traitors try to edge away from their Dear Leader

Look at these cowardly traitors now questioning their self-serving deal with the devil to get their judges and their tax cuts no matter what Donald Trump did to destroy this country. Look at these sniveling weasels:

Republican senators say they feel a sense of growing regret over not standing up to President Trump sooner — a day after a violent mob ransacked the Capitol building in one of the darkest and most humiliating days in U.S. history.

One Republican senator who requested anonymity to discuss his conversations with GOP colleagues acknowledged GOP lawmakers should have served as a stronger check on the president over the past four years.

“We should have done more to push back, both against his rhetoric and some of the things he did legislatively,” said the lawmaker. “The mistake we made is that we always thought he was going to get better. We thought that once he got the nomination, and then once he got a Cabinet he was going to get better, he was going to be more presidential.”

Many Republicans are shell-shocked over the horrific scenes at the Capitol, and seem to be trying to come to grips with their role in the disaster.

The mob that hit the Capitol was filled with people who believed Trump’s claims of a rigged election despite a lack of any serious evidence. It served as a symbol of the fact that many Americans are now moving through a reality no longer based on real facts — or the truth.

The GOP senator said he and his colleagues expected Trump would eventually accept the results of the election after courts ruled against his legal team’s challenges, which were resoundingly dismissed by Republican- and Democratic-appointed judges alike.

But Trump never did, and most Republicans — including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) — held back any sharp criticism.

This was largely because Republicans calculated they needed Trump to get out the vote in two runoff races to decide the Senate majority in Georgia.

[…]

Republicans were worried Trump’s rhetoric was too focused on his unsubstantiated claims of fraud and feared it could backfire, but criticism of the president was muted — as it was for much of the last four years…

“The Republican leadership explained repeatedly that we’d need Trump to help get votes out,” said the lawmaker, who added that colleagues worried the president would find a way to sabotage them in Georgia runoff races if they quickly acknowledged Joe Biden as president-elect or forcefully dismissed claims of widespread voter fraud.

But now there’s a sense among a growing number of GOP lawmakers that Trump may have inflicted long-term damage on their party, an anxiety heightened by the debacle of a pro-Trump mob storming and occupying the U.S. Capitol building Wednesday as Congress was meeting to finalize Biden’s election as the nation’s 46th president.

“There’s more concern about the long-term damage to the party than losing two Senate seats in Georgia,” the GOP senator said.

A second Republican senator who requested anonymity said Trump had inflicted serious damage on his party.

“Every time you think the president has done everything he could possibly do to fuck things up then he comes out with a tweet, like the election was invalid and the one in Georgia would be invalid,” said the lawmaker, referring to Trump’s tweets Friday declaring the runoff elections to be “illegal and invalid.”

The feelings of remorse are only now being expressed privately after Republican senators spent much of the past four years dodging questions about Trump’s controversial tweets, statements and decisions.

While Republicans did chide Trump from time to time, such as when the president declined to condemn groups such as the Proud Boys, who were linked to Wednesday’s violence, they often did so without direct and forceful criticism.

There were exceptions though, such as when Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), said Trump appeared “unsympathetic” after peaceful protesters were pepper sprayed in front of the White House in June so the president could pose with a Bible in front of St. John’s Episcopal Church.

Graham on Thursday said Trump had “tarnished” his legacy by not condemning Wednesday’s “debacle” at the Capitol.

Graham defended his support for Trump over the past four years as being driven by constituents at home who wanted him to work with the president.

“The reason I’ve been close to the president is I think he’s done tremendous things for this country. I think the judges he’s nominated have been outstanding choices,’ he said.

But he said “it breaks my heart that my friend, a president of consequence, were to allow yesterday to happen and it will be a major part of his presidency”

“It was a self-inflicted wound, it was going too far,” he added.

Asked if he should have spoken out more when Trump crossed the line during his four years in office, Graham acknowledged he could have but also deflected blame on the media for not covering the president more fairly.

“I have spoken up,” he said. “All I can say is that I have shared my thoughts with the president. I have spoken up when I thought I should.

“Could have I done better? Yes. The question: Could you have done better? Could those of you who cover the White House done better? You need to ask yourself that,” he told reporters.

Some Republican senators are now wringing their hands over the agonizing thought that had they shutdown Trump’s baseless voter-fraud claims in November, they might not have derailed Republican turnout in Georgia.

Senate Republican Whip John Thune (S.D.) on Wednesday said Trump’s rhetoric created a political headwind for Sens. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.) and David Perdue (R-Ga.), who both lost races that GOP senators had expected them to win.

“There were really mixed messages being sent, which is not helpful, because you had a lot of voters who were confused about whether or not their vote was going to matter,” he said.

“When your most effective argument is you’re going to be a check and balance against a Biden/Pelosi/Schumer agenda but you can’t acknowledge that Biden won, it puts you in a really difficult position,” he later explained.

Thune also said Trump’s veto of the annual defense bill, which passed overwhelmingly in both chambers, and his threat to veto a year-end coronavirus relief bill made it difficult for Loeffler and Perdue.

Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), an outspoken Trump critic and the only GOP senator to vote to convict him on an article of impeachment in February, on Wednesday accused Trump of inciting an insurrection and warned that Republicans such as Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), who are publicly sympathetic to the president’s claims of widespread voter fraud are participating in “a dangerous gambit.”

He warned that “they will be remembered for their role in this shameful episode in American history.”

In an essay for Deseret Magazine, Romney lamented public figures stoking divisiveness and anger to help themselves politically. 

“Most disappointing of all, too many political figures have stoked these divisions,” he wrote.

Only six Republican senators ultimately voted to sustain an objection raised by Cruz to Arizona’s electoral slate on Wednesday after 13 Republicans signaled before the polls closed in Georgia Tuesday that they would support such an objection. Only seven GOP senators supported a second objection raised by Hawley to Pennsylvania’s election results.

The drop-off in support was a reflection of Trump’s plummeting political stock after the loss of the Senate majority and his response to the rioting in the Capitol.

Many Republicans are scrambling to distance themselves from Trump after he publicly pressured Vice President Mike Pence to unilaterally attempt to overturn the results of the presidential election at a joint session of Congress on Wednesday and then kept silent after a pro-Trump mobbed swarmed the Capitol and Senate chamber, sending lawmakers to secure rooms while police locked down the campus.

When Trump finally did speak, he expressed affection and support for the rioters while reiterated debunked claims of widespread election fraud.

Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.), who has been a strong Trump ally during his first term, late on Wednesday said “I do think the president bears some responsibility” for the violence and chaos on Capitol Hill, which disrupted the Electoral College vote count.

“I do think the president bears some responsibility. Certainly, he bears responsibility for his own actions and his own words and today in watching his speech, I have to admit I gasped,” Cramer said.

Cramer said Trump’s treatment of Pence was “unjustified, wrong and is really, really unfortunate.”

Trump declared in a tweet since deleted that “Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution” in tweet that he since deleted.

Repeated widely dismissed claims of voter fraud, Trump said Pence could have given “States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify.”

Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), another staunch Trump ally, said he later spoke with Pence, whom he described as furious over the president’s treatment.

“I’ve known Mike Pence forever,” Inhofe told the Tulsa World. “I’ve never seen Pence as angry as he was today.”

Inhofe also said that Trump should have done more to stop the rioting.

“He’s only put out one statement that I’m aware of,” he said. “This was really a riot. He should have shown more disdain for the rioters. I don’t want to say he should have apologized — that’s not exactly accurate — but he should have expressed more disdain.”

A little too little, a little too late, I’m afraid. They will all be forever tainted by their collaboration with this monster.

Last night he said this:

“My focus now turns to ensuring a smooth, orderly and seamless transition of power. This moment calls for healing and reconciliation.”

Here he is today.

These Republicans created this monster. Now they have to be held accountable for it. They are as responsible for what Trump did on Wednesday as he is.

This is what Trump’s lies and Graham’s collaboration have wrought:

Donald Trump’s only talents failed him this time

Donald Trump has two basic talents. The first is for self-promotion and the second is a strong, feral survival instinct. Those two things were really all it took for him to rise to become the most famous man in the world with the most important job on the planet. (That should tell you something about American culture but it’s too depressing to contemplate.)

The talent for self-promotion has snowed everyone from sophisticated investment bankers, who kept loaning him money year after year despite repeated business failures, to small-town business owners who thought that he was a great real estate developer and later a great president just because he told them so. They all believed his lies.

The survival instinct is probably the more important characteristic because it spared him repercussions for failure after failure. It didn’t hurt, of course, that for most of his life he had a rich father he could tap whenever things got rough. Nonetheless, for someone who isn’t very smart, charming or interesting, Donald Trump has shown amazing resilience. His surviva instinct got him to the White House and it sustained him through four years in a very difficult job for which he was uniquely unfit. Any one of the dozen scandals that have engulfed him since he started running for the presidency in 2015 would have finished off any other politician. But Trump survived all of them, just moving like a shark through the water from one self-induced crisis to another.

I had assumed that his survival instinct would kick in with this electoral defeat and he would see it for the opportunity it was. He could leave office whining that the election was stolen from him but use it as a springboard to make more money by promising a big rematch in 2024. He would leave office gracelessly, of course, because it would make better TV to stand on the White House steps making a Douglas MacArthur style “I shall return!” promise before flying off in Marine One for the last time. Who wouldn’t tune in to that spectacle?

But something went wrong. His instinct failed him and he believed his own hype. Maybe it was the pomp and the power of the office overwhelming him or the addiction to his ecstatic crowds but, for the first time, he couldn’t see how to turn his failure into a win and his personality fractured under the weight of his frustration. I don’t know if he came to believe the absurd conspiracy theories he spun about the election or if they were just a frantic web of lies he wove to keep himself from coming apart. But his only two talents have let him down and it’s led him to a moment of ignominy from which I don’t think he’ll be able to recover.

Trump’s manic insistence that he could persuade, strongarm and coerce various Republican officials around the country to reverse the election results in his favor seemed to be based upon the idea that if he just wanted it enough it would happen. Perhaps that’s how he’s talked to himself all his life and good timing and fortunate circumstances made it so. But his luck has run out. The people he needed to buy his line of bullshit just didn’t buy it this time.

By the time he was reduced to cajoling and threatening the Georgia secretary of state to “find” the votes he needed to win the state, he was so unglued he didn’t seem to realize that it wouldn’t make a difference even if he managed to persuade the man to do it. This week’s last-ditch fantasy that Vice President Mike Pence and some of his congressional henchmen could magically hand Trump the second term and make everything alright finally took him to the dark place where he incited thousands of his delirious followers to a full-fledged violent insurrection.

To be clear, such events had been in the back of his mind already.

Trump posted that the “protest” scheduled for the day Congress was going to finally certify the election would be “wild.” He expected them to be confrontational and he egged them on at the rally just before the vote was to take place. He’d been reassured that a substantial number of collaborators in Congress, led by his MAGA maniacs in the House and Josh Hawley, R-Mo, and Ted Cruz, R-Tx, in the Senate, might just pull off the miracle and he clearly believed that a big crowd of angry Trump supporters in the Capitol would help the cause.

He sent them there to start a riot during a joint session of Congress presided over by Pence and that is what they did. People everywhere watched in horror as pictures of this violent insurrection were beamed live all over the world.

Congress rightly decided to reconvene that night and finish the Constitutionally mandated job that had been interrupted by Trump’s mob. You might have thought the level of terror they’d experienced, along with the global disapprobation, would have dissuaded the Republicans from following through on their plot to object to the vote based upon lies about voter fraud. But they inexplicably kept to their plan, apparently believing that appeasing Trump and his violent supporters was still their ticket to higher office.

Their survival instincts failed them too. None other than George Will said of Hawley and Cruz, “everything they say or do or advocate should be disregarded as patent attempts to distract attention from the lurid fact of what they have become. Each will wear a scarlet “S” as a seditionist.” By late Thursday even the oleaginous Ted Cruz was backtracking as fast as he could while Hawley whined on Twitter about his book on Big Tech being canceled due to his actions.

The Democrats are demanding that Mike Pence evoke the 25th Amendment or they will make Trump the first president to be impeached twice. Members of Trump’s cabinet and top staff are resigning and even the Wall St. Journal opinion page is demanding that Trump resign or be removed. Prosecutors are suggesting that Trump could be criminally liable for some of the violence that took place and talk of self-pardon and pardons of his family and inner circle are reportedly becoming more serious.

Whether Trump leaves before the inauguration is unknown, but his post-presidency is looking less like a shadow presidency and more like permanent exile. The Republican party is collapsing. The MAGA insurrectionists blame Republicans as much as Democrats for Trump’s loss and the establishment is being forced by these events to repudiate their own base. It is likely that this schism is going to divide the GOP for some time to come.

Until now, Trump was the hands-down front-runner for the nomination if he wanted it in 2024. And even if he decided not to follow through he had years of lucrative grifting on the possibility. But he couldn’t accept that he would have to admit he lost, even if he could say it wasn’t legitimate. His narcissism finally defeated his survival instinct and it has brought him low. It’s brought the country even lower.

The fictional “American Carnage” of Trump’s inaugural address four years ago is now reality with hundreds of thousands of Americans dead, an economic catastrophe for millions more and a violent political faction so addled with lies and conspiracy theories that this week they attacked the US Capitol to intimidate lawmakers into reversing a free and fair election. The knowledge that Donald Trump may have destroyed himself in the process is hardly comforting. He’s left America in shambles.

No belief too outlandish

Image
Photo by Dave Weigel, Washington Post.

“Storm the Capitol!” someone shouted.

Dave Weigel of the Washington Post regularly covers political activist events. He attends the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) and other conservative conclaves. He reports on Netroots Nation conferences and live-tweets DNC platform meetings (god help him). But Wednesday’s storming of the U.S. Capitol complex caught him off guard. Weigel expected more bold talk from one-eyed fat men, the kind he has heard for years.

This time was different. This time instead of internet comments there were enough true believers in person to make a mob. The conspiracy-theorist-in-chief egged them on. When the Proud Boys marched past, the leader shouted through a bullhorn, “They can’t stop us!” and “I say we storm the Capitol!”

Weigel shakes his head:

It took 90 more minutes for me to grasp the significance of that. A career covering politics, much of it spent on the conservative movement, had conditioned me to revolutionary rhetoric that nobody acts on. Yet here they were, acting out the plan they’d screamed into reality, walking right past me.

Weigel found little time for live-tweeting once the attack got rolling. Things were moving too fast and there was too much ground to cover. Rioters were attempting to overthrow the government, Weigel writes, because that is what they thought they were doing,

“Chris” told him, “If they don’t start [expletive] arresting people and hanging people real soon, they’re going to be burning and hanging off these [expletive] trees out here.”

A woman accosted a BBC reporter. Weigel attempted to come to his aid. She screamed at them both.

“He has a right to be here, as do you,” I said.

“No,” she said. “You’re communists. You’re bought by China. Get out.” 

When things went sideways, it happened fast.

Everything I heard, from the threats to murder members of the government to the snarls meant to scare reporters away, was familiar from the rhetoric I’d seen online. I’d been conditioned to see it all as hyperbole, intentionally provocative trolling.

But when these rioters said “storm the Capitol,” they meant that they would storm the Capitol. When they said “Hillary for prison,” they meant that they wanted to jail the president’s 2016 opponent. When they said “Biden’s a pedophile,” they meant that they thought the president-elect was either a member of an international ring of child rapists, or a freelancer with the same predilections. When they said “1776,” they meant that the incoming government was illegitimate and tyrannical, and should be overthrown by force.

These were desperate acts by people who had marinated their brains in lies for years. No conspiracy theory was too outlandish to believe. If Trump left office, if the Democrats and the Deep State stole the election, as Trump told them repeeatedly they had, their world would end.

Weigel finishes:

They’d been told that Democratic victories meant not just gun control, but a national registry and door-to-door confiscation. They’d seen ads warning that a Democratic sweep of Congress would lead to the defunding of police departments, putting their lives at the mercy of Antifa. Some of their news sources, in sync with the president, told them that there was a way to prevent Biden from taking office. 

Naturally, they believed it. And, Weigel observes, “they believed the justice system would protect them, and they would get away with it.”

They were true patriots. They were the Real Americans™. All others are lessers, sheeple, Communists, or worse. “Nothing will stop us….they can try and try and try but the storm is here …” Faced with living in a world run by Satan-worshipping pedophiles, no act of violence is unjustified.

Five died, including a 35-year-old woman shot by a U.S. Capitol Police officer, and a U.S. Capitol Police officer, the suspected victim of a homicide. D.C. Metropolitan Police already have 16 pages of suspects wanted for everything from curfew violation to assault, property destruction, possession of weapons, explosive devices and Molotov cocktails, and felony riot.

You might be a head case

A green storefront with a large orange and yellow logo that reads "Comet" in all capital letters.
Photo by Farragutful via CC BY-SA 4.0.

If Hillary Clinton running a child sex ring out of a Washington, D.C. pizza parlor sounds believable to you, you might be a head case.

If you think the world is run by a secret cabal of Satan-worshipping, blood-drinking, cannibal-pedophile Democrats and Hollywood elites because an anonymous internet “whistleblower” told you, you might be a head case.

QAnon chant: “Where we go one, we go all!” (WWGIWGA)

If you think the woman who died storming the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday sounds normal and well-adjusted, you might be a head case.

If you think Tammy the QAnon evangelist sounds normal and well-adjusted, you might be a head case.

If you are this insurrectionist who took time for a breather while storming the Capitol, you might be a head case.

https://twitter.com/felicitymuth/status/1347193085244051464?s=20

If you are an aging white male who thinks it is unfair to be manhandled by police for storming the Capitol, you might be a head case.

https://twitter.com/PissOffTrumpkin/status/1347046009298366464?s=20

If you think being a white business owner and a veteran means law enforcement should grant you special deference or fuck all y’all, you might be a head case.

If your interpersonal skills are limited to foul-mouthed shouting and punching inanimate objects, you might be a head case.

https://twitter.com/chadloder/status/1346690557825875969?s=20
“Pedophilia’s okay with you … fucking little kids?!” (QAnon + Proud Boys)

If you think after streaming your assault on the Capitol you should be allowed to practice law in any state (even Texas), you might be a head case.

https://twitter.com/SollenbergerRC/status/1346982504088154113?s=20
Paul MacNeal Davis has been fired.

If you think West Virginia state lawmaker Derrick Evans’s (or any lawmaker’s) storming of the Capitol was justified, you might be a head case.

If Rep. Matt Gaetz’s claim that it was Antifa (not MAGA/Proud Boys) who stormed the Capitol sounds believable to you, you might be a head case.

(And if your name is Rep. Matt Gaetz, you are a head case.)

Gaetz claims Capitol breach perpetrated by Antifa, citing false facial recognition story later retracted by The Washington Times.

And finally, if Donald J. Trump’s behavior is your idea of all-American, if his years’ worth of lies and his conspiracy mongering about stolen elections sound believable to you, well … you two have something in common.

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These are not isolated cases anymore. We are experiencing a national mental-health crisis as well as a crisis of democracy.

UPDATE: Just found this video from Wednesday of Dr. Tammy the Q-vangelist.

https://twitter.com/Cleavon_MD/status/1347598242809139208?s=20

UPDATE 2: West Virginia state legislator Derrick Evans has been charged with illegally entering the Capitol.

The fever swamp organized this

WASHINGTON, DC – JANUARY 06: Protesters gather on the U.S. Capitol Building on January 06, 2021 in Washington, DC. Pro-Trump protesters entered the U.S. Capitol building after mass demonstrations in the nation’s capital during a joint session Congress to ratify President-elect Joe Biden’s 306-232 Electoral College win over President Donald Trump. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

The attempted putsch yesterday was largely organized online. And they’re mad at … Donald Trump:

Just after 1 p.m., when President Trump ended his speech to protesters in Washington by calling for them to march on Congress, hundreds of echoing calls to storm the building were made by his supporters online.

On social media sites used by the far-right, such as Gab and Parler, directions on which streets to take to avoid the police and which tools to bring to help pry open doors were exchanged in comments. At least a dozen people posted about carrying guns into the halls of Congress.

Calls for violence against members of Congress and for pro-Trump movements to retake the Capitol building have been circulating online for months. Bolstered by Mr. Trump, who has courted fringe movements like QAnon and the Proud Boys, groups have openly organized on social media networks and recruited others to their cause.

On Wednesday, their online activism became real-world violence, leading to unprecedented scenes of mobs freely strolling through the halls of Congress and uploading celebratory photographs of themselves, encouraging others to join them.

On Gab, they documented going into the offices of members of Congress, including that of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Dozens posted about searching for Vice President Mike Pence, who had been the target of Mr. Trump’s ire earlier in the day.

At 2:24 p.m., after Mr. Trump tweeted that Mr. Pence “didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done,” dozens of messages on Gab called for those inside the Capitol building to hunt down the vice president. In videos uploaded to the channel, protesters could be heard chanting “Where is Pence?”

As Facebook and Twitter began to crack down groups like QAnon and the Proud Boys over the summer, they slowly migrated to other sites that allowed them to openly call for violence.

Renee DiResta, a researcher at the Stanford Internet Observatory who studies online movements, said the violence Wednesday was the result of online movements operating in closed social media networks where people believed the claims of voter fraud and of the election being stolen from Mr. Trump.

He sicced them on Pence. Can you believe it? And Pence is reportedly balking at the 25th Amendment. Does he think Trump’s cult will forgive him?

It’s clear that DHS and the FBI didn’t really take any of this seriously. These people were posting this stuff for weeks, publicly making plans, and yet nobody seemed to think anything would come of it — or they thought it was a-ok.

This requires yet another investigation into Trump era lunacy. The police agencies all dropped the ball. Conveniently.

Life in the wingnut bubble

These brainwashed Trump cultists are probably good examples of how deeply the propaganda and lies have penetrated:

I don’t think most of those people would have endorsed this kind of violence before Trump. But they were being prepared for it for many years by the evolving extremism of the modern GOP.

I don’t know how many of them are reachable. The snap polling shows that 45% of Republicans think the violence yesterday was perfectly acceptable. That’s a lot of people. But it represents only about 21% of all Americans. Sadly, they have among them some very, very dangerous gun nuts, radicals and crazies.

I also don’t know many elected Republicans are among those crazies. Judging by their behavior last night at least 131 US Congressman and 8 or so Senators are right there with them, among them some very ambitious presidential aspirants.

There haven’t been a lot of Republican statesmen among this crowd over the last four years, despite some belated rushes to the exit in the last couple of days. In fact, I think there has only been one. As much as I don’t like his politics or his policies, with some notable exceptions and cowardly moments, I think Mitt Romney is the only one who escapes from this tawdry descent into ignominy with even a shred of integrity intact:

Note the sustained applause at 1:16 when Romney says, “the best way we can show respect to the voters who are upset is by telling them the truth.” What a concept.

Doubts? No. Delusions, fed by people like Marco Rubio for his own political reasons.

As I said, Romney’s not my favorite guy. But he’s not a craven weasel like Rubio. Throughout this nightmare he’s been the only one who even resembles what used to be the mainstream Republican sort of “Ward Cleaver” figure who believed in God, mother and apple pie. People like that look at Donald Trump and just say no. Judging by the election returns there are still some out in the country (who voted for Joe Biden) and a few Never Trumpers in media and political circles. But Romney is the only elected Republican I can think of, aside from Justin Amash in the House and a few others who either lost their elections or quit, who stood on the floor before yesterday and denounced this monster beyond “being concerned.” They have all been happy to kiss his ring for judges and tax cuts along with money and votes from the brainwashed people who think Trump is a God.

This is the thanks Romney get for having a modicum of integrity:

https://youtu.be/-O1j4sJIFzg

The last I heard it’s a crime for a business owner to ask a Republican to leave their restaurant after only having a free cheese board. But this? Perfectly ok.

Dispatch from the Death Cult

There is no bottom:

Meanwhile out here in America:

As Americans were transfixed by the spectacle of the Capitol under siege, the coronavirus continued to sweep across the United States.

Officials reported at least 3,964 new coronavirus deaths in the United States on Wednesday, a new single-day record, though delayed recording because of the holidays might have played a role. The daily death toll in New Hampshire, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania also set records.

Some states also reported single-day case records, while Illinois became one of five states that have now recorded their millionth case since the pandemic began.

In Arizona, which is beginning the new year with a higher rate of new cases than any other state, hospitalizations and deaths set records in the past few days. Over the past week, the state has averaged more than 8,000 cases a day, more than double the summer peak.

Yet, some Arizona health care leaders lamented, they are still not seeing the kind of public vigilance that might bring the outbreak under control.

“Most Americans don’t want to know, don’t want to acknowledge, don’t really want to recognize, and certainly — even as it’s descending upon us — do not appear to understand the dire circumstances that we are facing,” said Dr. Marjorie Bessel, the chief clinical officer at Banner Health, a major hospital network in Arizona.

The outlook is especially alarming in Southern California. In just two weeks, more than 240,000 cases have been identified in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. That is more cases than at least 19 entire states have identified over the entire pandemic.

As the unexpectedly slow vaccine drive began to pick up pace, the federal government moved to start a program to inoculate members of high-risk groups at pharmacies, among them older people and frontline workers.

Some health officials urged flexibility in distributing the vaccines.

Dr. Jerome Adams, the surgeon general, said states need not adhere too rigidly to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines about whom to vaccinate first. If fewer health care workers agree to be vaccinated, he said, states should “move quickly to other priority groups.”

But even as the work continued to get more shots in arms, health officials were racing against a fast-moving variant of the coronavirus that has the potential to change the disease-fighting landscape in the United States, as it has in Britain. And with no good system in place to identify genetic variations of the virus, experts warn, the government will be hard pressed to track the variant, leaving health officials in the dark.

Those people who refused to wear masks are despicable. Even if they’ve been vaccinated it’s highly unlikely that they have gotten their second shot by now. And it really isn’t too much to ask that in a tightly enclosed space like the one they were all in once they got moved out of danger they would agree to put on a mask. These people are immoral.

Unbalanced and unafraid

Apparently, nobody can stop him:

Four people were dead. The Capitol was in shambles. Several members of his team had resigned. His allies were fast abandoning him.

Naturally, President Donald Trump was livid. About being locked out of his Twitter feed, that is.

Twitter and Facebook locked Trump’s accounts on Wednesday and he had used his social channels to incite a riot of his supporters at the U.S. Capitol. Not long after, the outgoing, increasingly authoritarian Republican president grew increasingly upset about the social media giants robbing him of his online voice, according to two people familiar with the matter.

One of the sources said that since Wednesday, President Trump has specifically complained that he was trying to send a tweet during his Twitter lockout, and that he was furious that he couldn’t. The other person familiar with the situation said the president privately claimed this was another instance of Big Tech silencing conservatives and trying to help cover up the “crime” of the century that occurred during the 2020 presidential election.

The imagined “crime” here is that he decisively lost the election to Democratic President-elect Joe Biden, a victory that Trump, his legal team, and swaths of the GOP have attempted, based on pure lies, for months to overturn.

Trump’s fixation on this underscores, yet again, a president hellbent on obsessing over his own petty grievances and personal desires for power and influence, even as his words and actions helped spur a widely-condemned storming of the Capitol, contributed to the Republican Party’s loss of Senate control, and already led to multiple resignations from his administration. This is all happening against a backdrop of a tanked U.S. economy and a still-raging coronavirus pandemic that Trump has continued to show no interest in helping to mitigate.

Multiple sources with knowledge of the matter and who have been in contact with Trump since Wednesday say he continues to insist he did absolutely nothing wrong, that senior officials and party leaders backing away from him are cowards, and that he also wants people to look into baseless rumors that antifa radicals infiltrated the MAGA protest and riot this week.

That is simply crazy. He seems to be so lost in his delusion that he didn’t win that he’s finally gone completely over the edge. Remember, he did this:

That morning he tweeted, “Get smart Republicans. Fight!”

Yesterday he told his crowd that he was going to lead them to the capitol:

We’re going to walk down to the Capitol. And we’re gonna cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women. And we’re probably not going to be cheering, so much for some of them, because you’ll never take back our country with weakness, you have to show strength and you have to be strong.

And he wasn’t alone:

Speaking ahead of Trump, allies such as Rudy Giuliani and Trump’s adult sons fanned the false allegations of voter fraud. Giuliani urged the President’s supporters wage “trial by combat,” while Donald Trump Jr. railed against congressional Republicans who declined to support Trump’s attempts to overthrow the election results.”The people who did nothing to stop the steal — this gathering should send a message to them,” said the President’s eldest son.