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RSN: FOCUS: The Boogaloo Bois Prepare for Civil War

 


 

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15 January 21

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FOCUS: The Boogaloo Bois Prepare for Civil War
Member of far-right Boogaloo Bois. (photo: Robert Fillips/Lansing State Journal)
Michael J. Mooney, The Atlantic
Mooney writes: "As the FBI warns of violence, anti-government extremists are ready to get in on the chaos."

 n the menagerie of right-wing populist groups, the boogaloo bois stand out for their fashion, for their great love of memes, and, to put it plainly, for the incoherence of their ideology. Which is saying a lot, considering that the riot at the Capitol last Wednesday featured partisans of the long-gone country of South Vietnam, Falun Gong adherents, end-times Christians, neo-Nazis, QAnon believers, a handful of Orthodox Jews, and Daniel Boone impersonators.

The boogaloos weren’t a huge presence in that mob. But according to federal officials, the attack on the Capitol has galvanized them and could inspire boogaloo violence in D.C. and around the country between now and Inauguration Day. The FBI warned earlier that boogaloos could launch attacks in state capitols this Sunday, January 17.

The boogaloos don’t appear interested in fighting for Donald Trump—they tend to despise him, mostly because they think he panders to the police. But for the past year, boogaloo bois all over the United States have been cheering on the country’s breakdown, waiting for the moment when their nihilistic memes would come to life and the country would devolve into bloody chaos.

It’s hard to know how seriously to take the boogaloo threat. Some are likely just joking when they “shit-post” about shooting cops or “yeeting alphabet boys”—killing government law-enforcement agents. But others seem serious. They’ve already shown up heavily armed (and in their signature Hawaiian shirts) at protests and at state capitols. They’ve allegedly killed law-enforcement officers, talked about throwing Molotov cocktails at cops during the racial-justice protests this summer, and plotted to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer. They say they want a total reset of society, even if they haven’t thought very hard about what, exactly, should come next.

Who are the boogaloo bois? And why do they want to start a civil war? I’ve spent the past few months trying to figure that out.

Let’s start with what boogaloo isn’t. It isn’t, mainly, a white-supremacist organization, though there are some white-supremacist boogaloo bois. It isn’t a collection of Trump supporters ready to fight for the president, like, say, the Proud Boys. And despite the various attacks—planned or carried out—against police officers and government officials, boogaloo also isn’t a militia in any traditional sense of the word. It isn’t even really a movement.

It’s more like an absurdist internet culture propagated by libertarian-leaning gun enthusiasts on 4chan—the anonymous, Wild West version of Reddit—that has somehow moved into the real world. It’s jargon and memes and jokes and a sometimes-serious desire to bring about a violent revolution to overthrow the U.S. government.

Like nearly everything about boogaloo, the ideas and terminology are simultaneously ridiculous and terrifying.

The term boogaloo, for example, can refer to the purveyors of this culture or to an event: a violent revolution some of them hope to hasten, dubbed Civil War 2: Electric Boogaloo. The name itself is a takeoff on a pervasive internet joke, an allusion to a 1980s dance movie, Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo. (Take a moment to pity historians, centuries from now, as they try to understand how the name of a dance-movie sequel turned into the name of a proposed nationwide insurrection.)

JJ MacNab has studied anti-government extremist groups for more than 20 years. As a fellow with the Program on Extremism at George Washington University, she’s tracked the boogaloo bois online since last fall, when she saw an uptick in memes calling—in a jokey way—for a civil war.

Some of the boogaloo bois, she told me, are “accelerationists,” meaning they’re looking for any provocation—be it proposed gun-control measures, Black Lives Matter protests, or the presidential inauguration—to spark a violent conflict. Other boogalooers believe that the “boogaloo” will be brought to them by the opposing side, by measures like gun confiscation, or some other perceived overstepping of authority.

Over the past two years, the terminology moved from 4chan to Facebook, where a few groups quickly grew to thousands of members. MacNab says she tries to identify what she calls the “social butterflies” of the online groups: young men who seem to intuitively understand what’s cool and funny to their peers, and what isn’t. Once she finds a few, she follows them from group to group, across the internet, as a way of accessing their world.

The word boogaloo morphed into big igloo, which brought about a deluge of igloo imagery, and also into big luau, which is what prompted some boogaloo bois to wear Hawaiian shirts under their body armor. One boogaloo meme shows the “Don’t Tread on Me” Gadsden snake set against a turquoise-and-pink floral pattern above the words ALOHA FUCKFACE.

If none of this makes much sense, that’s the point. “They really want to create their own in-world so the rest of us won’t get their jokes,” MacNab told me.

“It’s tribal,” she added. “These are tribal markings: the shirts they wear, the jargon they speak, even the types of guns they like.”

Boogaloo culture stepped out of social media and into the real world in January 2020, at a giant pro-gun rally in Richmond, Virginia. The gathering, a response to proposed gun-control laws in Virginia’s state legislature, drew a reported 22,000 Second Amendment supporters. Several came wearing floral-print shirts—which stuck out in the crowd and got people wondering who they were.

MacNab says that as the boogaloo bois drew attention, white-supremacist groups, mostly on the messaging app Telegram, co-opted the luau aesthetic. But in the Facebook groups—where the number of boogaloo was huge compared with the number on Telegram—racism wasn’t tolerated. Instead, the men who gathered there were united by a love of guns and a hatred of cops and the government.

In March, a man in Potomac, Maryland, named Duncan Lemp who was being investigated for firearms violations was killed by police during a no-knock raid of his parents’ house. Lemp was shot one day before Breonna Taylor, and he became a martyr to boogaloo bois. His name was turned into a hashtag and a rallying cry, much like Taylor’s.

Aaron Swenson, a 36-year-old from Texas, appears to have been especially moved by Lemp’s death. He reportedly posted about the killing the next day, and changed his profile picture to a photo of a torso wearing a Hawaiian shirt and armored vest, with a hashtag: #HisNameWasDuncan.

In April, Swenson posted on Facebook—reportedly using the name “Arnold Derpingston”—that he felt “like hunting the hunters.” Translation: looking for police officers to kill. According to authorities, he then live-streamed himself driving around for about an hour with two pistols, a shotgun, and a bulletproof vest. After a 25-minute standoff on the side of a highway, he surrendered to police. (Swenson’s defense attorney has said that he was actually trying to “commit suicide by cop.”)

In a recording of the live-stream that later surfaced on YouTube, some of Swenson’s boogaloo brethren warned that he’d be disavowed by the group because he’d gotten the timing wrong. The insurrection hadn’t arrived yet.

Others seem to have thought that the time for an uprising had come this summer, when marches and protests broke out across the country following the murder of George Floyd. Because boogaloos generally hate cops, they debated whether to support the Black Lives Matter movement. Some joined the marches, but plenty of others dismissed the idea: They equate Black Lives Matter with Marxism, or don’t see police overreach as a racial issue.

Still others appear to have believed they could use the protests to ignite violence. In May, a 32-year-old Air Force staff sergeant named Steven Carrillo allegedly fired on a federal courthouse in Oakland, California, killing one security officer and wounding another.

A week later, Carrillo allegedly shot and killed a sheriff’s deputy. Wounded and on the run, he hijacked a car and, before his arrest, wrote “boog” in blood on the hood. (Carrillo has pleaded not guilty to multiple charges, including carjacking, murder, and attempted murder.)

According to an FBI affidavit, on the night of the first shooting, Carrillo was in communication with Ivan Hunter, a 26-year-old from Texas who had driven to Minneapolis apparently to incite violence during the protests there. Wearing a skull mask and tactical gear, Hunter allegedly fired an AK-47-style rifle 13 times at the Minneapolis Police Third Precinct while the building was set ablaze.

Hunter messaged Carrillo: “Go for police buildings.”

Carrillo replied: “I did better lol.”

Whether they’re employed or not and live at home or not, many boogaloo bois own thousands of dollars’ worth of guns and gear. They like to post photos with their weapons. Sometimes the men who show up to rallies or protests or statehouses wearing military-grade night-vision goggles or floral shirts with Gucci belts are actually dressing like memes. They are literally internet jokes come to life.

How many simply enjoy the gun memes and the juvenile jokes and maybe vaguely agree with some of the political concepts—and how many seriously want to start a war with the cops? It’s impossible to say. Even experts like MacNab, who study this sort of thing full-time, haven’t figured out how to tell who’s just joking and who might be more inclined to real-world violence.

In early October, as I was talking to MacNab for this story, a man in Madison Heights, Michigan, was killed in a shoot-out with FBI agents. She got a tip that the man was associated with the boogaloo bois. “His online persona was Colonel Shithead 7.0,” she said.

Looking through his Facebook page, MacNab said, she found nothing that made him seem especially likely to act out in the real world. But according to the Detroit Free Press, he was also a convicted felon who had previously shot at police officers, had a childhood connection to Ruby Ridge, and was being tracked by the FBI.

Even if an overwhelming majority of boogaloo bois are just shitposting, at least a few are clearly ready to follow through. I asked MacNab why she thought these men would want to bring about a violent revolution in this country.

“They want Rome to fall,” she said. “They want chaos to bring it down.”

And what do they want to replace it, after the anarchy?

“If you ask them,” she told me, “they can’t really give you an answer.”

Watching hordes of armed people storming the doors of Congress, facing off with any cop who offered resistance, killing a Capitol Police officer, and chasing another through the halls of a government building, I couldn’t help thinking: These are the fantasies that boogaloo bois have been posting about for months. The riot may have captured their imagination.

The FBI warning, which was dated December 29, describes nationwide rallies planned for January 17. The bulletin refers to boogaloo bois who have shown a “willingness to commit violence in support of their ideology,” and says that boogaloo bois in Minnesota went to the statehouse “to perform reconnaissance.” They reportedly discussed blowing up a building that police might be able to use as a sniper location “in the event of a gun battle.”

Just before the FBI bulletin became public, I’d come across a boogaloo website that was promoting the January 17 rallies, and wasn’t sure what to make of it. A tweet from a boogaloo-linked account mentioning the rallies includes a hashtag of the name of the woman shot at the U.S. Capitol.

“Remember what happened today,” the tweet reads. “Learn from it, bring the same energy.” It claims that people will be at “every American capital” as part of “the largest armed protest to ever take place on American soil.” In the background, behind the text, is the faint image of the kind of flower you’d see on a Hawaiian-print shirt.

Maybe it’s a joke. But nobody should be surprised if it’s not.

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RSN: FOCUS: Bill McKibben | Gandhi, History, and the Lessons of the Events at the Capitol

 

 

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15 January 21


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FOCUS: Bill McKibben | Gandhi, History, and the Lessons of the Events at the Capitol
In 1948, India's prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, used the occasion of Gandhi's funeral, in the wake of Partition, to call for an end to sectarianism. (photo: Max Desfor/AP)
Bill McKibben, The New Yorker
McKibben writes: "The rapid decline of American newspapers is robbing us of, among many other things, classic headlines."

It took the Times of India—in what remains the world’s great newspaper nation—to really capture the events at the U.S. Capitol last week: “Coup Klux Klan,” it blazed across its front page, communicating the sense of giddy white entitlement, like a picnic at a lynching, that gave the event its distinctive and disgusting tone.

Maybe it’s just easier to see reality from a distance. We’re so used to the background noise of racism in this country that erecting a gallows with a noose on the West Front of the Capitol or carrying a Confederate battle flag through the halls of Congress doesn’t register as alarming as it should. Revulsion at the Capitol siege should be, in large measure, revulsion at the bigotry that underlies it—it was, after all, carried out in the service of absurd claims about election fraud, most of which depend on disenfranchising huge blocs of Black voters. And it’s possible that this could be one of those moments that helps us come to terms with that past: the shock of people storming Congress, killing one police officer and wounding several others as they hunted for elected officials, might be a catalyst for really dealing with the ugliness that defines too much of American history.

Or it might slide slowly into joining that history. I’m thinking of India again. In a few years, that country will mark the seventy-fifth anniversary of the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, arguably the most important political leader of the twentieth century. He not only led the subcontinent to freedom against the most powerful empire that the world has ever known; he helped awaken Indians to the evils of caste and developed a theory and practice of nonviolent civil disobedience that has since become one of the world’s most precious possessions. His funeral, the day after his death, was attended by an estimated two million people. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru used the occasion, which came in the wake of the horrific violence of Partition, to call for an end to sectarianism. At the ceremony for the immersion of Gandhi’s ashes in the Ganges, Nehru said, “Our country gave birth to a mighty one, and he shone like a beacon not only for India but for the whole world. And yet he was done to death by one of our own brothers and compatriots. How did this happen? You might think that it was an act of madness, but that does not explain this tragedy. It could only occur because the seed for it was sown in the poison of hatred and enmity that spread throughout the country and affected so many of our people. Out of that seed grew this poisonous plant. It is the duty of all of us to fight this poison of hatred and ill will.”

Over time, however, that resolve dissipated. One of the right-wing Hindu-nationalist groups to which Gandhi’s assassin, Nathuram Godse, had belonged, the R.S.S., was banned for only a year before its leaders—the Josh Hawleys and Ted Cruzes of their day—managed to have the moratorium overturned. The current Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, is a graduate of the group, and his Bharatiya Janata Party has governed as bigots, partaking of the same anti-Islam hatred that animated Gandhi’s killer. Muslims have faced the loss of citizenship; those suspected of eating beef have been murdered; Godse is being steadily rehabilitated. In 2017, the B.J.P. named Yogi Adityanath, an extremist Hindu monk, to run the giant state of Uttar Pradesh, in what one political observer called a “final rejection” of Nehru. Adityanath has called for building a temple to the Hindu god Ram on top of a mosque destroyed by a mob, and has proposed renaming one of Uttar Pradesh’s cities in Godse’s memory.

All of which is to say that impeaching Trump will not be enough, nor will prosecuting his followers who invaded the Capitol. Joe Biden has endorsed “unity,” but meaningful change is going to require that the whole nation do what it’s never really done before: grapple definitively with its past. The reaction to George Floyd’s murder—a wave of support for Black Lives Matter—and the increasing shock and revulsion over the events that Trump has provoked are both signs that we might possibly be ready for something akin to a “truth and reconciliation” process that puts solutions like reparations on the table, where they belong. That conversation will be hard, and, obviously, it will provide a chance for demagogues to regroup. But, if it doesn’t happen, we will be back here, eventually. And it will only happen if we take our precarious situation with the utmost seriousness. The ugly infection that has always sapped America’s strength burst to the surface last week. Simply bandaging it will be a mistake—history doesn’t offer many moments when a more thorough cure might be possible.

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POLITICO NIGHTLY: How to deal with Trump in the Biden era

 



 
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BY RENUKA RAYASAM AND MYAH WARD

FIRST ON POLITICO: TRUMP CONSIDERS PARDONING BANNON  President Donald Trump is considering granting a pardon to Steve Bannon , his former White House chief strategist and top campaign aide, who was charged with swindling donors to a private crowdsourcing effort to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, two sources familiar with the matter tell POLITICO.

The potential pardon would follow a wave of reprieves the president has recently granted to political allies who have been convicted, charged or reportedly under federal investigation. Two additional batches of pardons are expected — one later tonight and one Wednesday morning before President-elect Joe Biden is sworn into office, according to one of the people.

TRUMP’S FUTURE — Welcome to the last weekend of Trump’s presidency. His future remains deeply uncertain. A Senate trial looms. Regardless of the verdict, a host of legal and financial issues are presumed to await him in his post-presidency. So Nightly asked some high-profile people from across the political spectrum for their thoughts on what Trump’s post-presidential fate should be.

Specifically we asked: Should Donald Trump face any consequences, after he leaves office, from the Congress or the legal system for his actions as president?

Everyone we reached out to agreed that perpetrators of last week’s Capitol Hill riot should be held accountable, but not everyone agreed about Trump’s role in the violence. Here are their edited answers:

“In August 1974, Richard Nixon resigned the presidency, a step ahead of impeachment. A month later, President Gerald Ford offered Nixon a full pardon for his crimes.

“Acceptance of the pardon, Ford noted, was an admission of guilt. But Democrats, liberals, and some Republicans, were outraged. Many had hoped to see Nixon in the dock — not as vengeance, they insisted, but as a warning to future presidents.

“A week later, Ford offered amnesty to Vietnam War draft dodgers and deserters. Now it was the Right’s turn to voice its outrage. Ford stood firm, but his actions that fall were factors in his loss to Democrat Jimmy Carter in 1976.

“By 2001, there was an historic correction. Ford’s decision was applauded. He received the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage award, a prize presented to statesmen who follow their conscience no matter the cost. In presenting the award Senator Edward Kennedy noted: ‘I was one of those who spoke out against his action then. But time has a way of clarifying past events, and now we see that President Ford was right. His courage and dedication to our country made it possible for us to begin the process of healing.’

“Joe Biden faces circumstances far different from that which confronted Ford, but we have a similarly compelling need to put a disgraced president out with the trash and get on with national revival. It is hard to conceive of a political package like the one that Ford put together back then. A pardon, or censure for Donald Trump — in conjunction with amnesty for undocumented immigrants? Well, there’s poetic justice there.

“The lesson of the tale is not in the specifics, but in how Ford’s actions, pleasing no one at the time, came to be valued. As Kennedy said, time has a way of clarifying past events. The right deal might one day be looked on as wisdom.” — John A. Farrell, author of biographies of Tip O’Neill, Clarence Darrow and Richard Nixon, and an upcoming book about the life of Ted Kennedy

“The framers of the Constitution knew they were creating a powerful presidency with the potential to become tyrannical, so they created the impeachment process as a check on abuses of presidential power — including by trying to stay in office unconstitutionally. Our current president has been impeached twice — a historical first — for trying to cheat in an election.

“President Ford was praised for ending the ‘long national nightmare’ by pardoning his predecessor. However, there needs to be accountability to prevent this from happening again. This president has utterly abused his power. He has become perhaps the most urgent threat to national security. It’s no accident that there are now more troops in Washington, D.C., than in Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria combined.

“If power isn’t taken away from him and consequences aren’t imposed, he will keep trying in his time remaining to foment violence and insurrection. His successors might learn from his mistakes and perfect his method of tyranny. We can’t go through this again. Remove him. Disqualify him from office. And, if there’s probable cause he committed crimes, indict him. The laws apply equally to everyone — don’t they?” — Olivia Troye, homeland security and counterterrorism adviser to Vice President Mike Pence until her departure in August 2020 over the administration’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

“Alexander Hamilton wrote in the Federalist Papers that the most necessary quality for a president is energy, which he argued is needed to bring forth the enthusiasm of the people.

“President Trump did not incite a riot. He gave a speech. Every responsible American along with President Trump has condemned the storming of the United States Capitol and the violence caused by the mob. Overzealous crazy people acted recklessly and stupidly. They should and will be held accountable for their actions.

“President Trump should not be impeached or face any consequences from the legal system after he leaves office. Instead, he should be granted the Medal of Freedom from President Biden for giving voice to millions of law-abiding citizens who have a right to have their voices heard and to peacefully protest their government. Anytime a president or political leader can mobilize public support behind a worthy cause he or she deserves praise not condemnation.

“The cheapening of the impeachment process, the weaponization of criminal prosecutors, and the criminalizing of the necessary, routine and legal practices of government and politics threatens the separation of powers and the freedoms of the people.”  Rod Blagojevich, the governor of Illinois from 2003 to 2009, as told to Shia KaposTrump commuted Blagojevich’s 14-year felony sentence for corruption last year.

“I absolutely think that Donald Trump should face serious consequences for what he has done. This applies to many actions, but particularly those since Nov. 3 when he relentlessly promoted the lie that the election was stolen, and then encouraged a mob to storm Congress. The Senate should try and convict him, and clearly bar him from ever running for President again.

“The reason this is important concerns less Trump himself than future presidents and national leaders — the Josh Hawleys and Ted Cruzes who may wish to follow in his footsteps. We have to slam the Overton window shut and make clear that certain actions will never be acceptable on the part of a president, and that their historical legacy will be one of infamy.” — Francis Fukuyama, political scientist at Stanford and author of “The End of History and the Last Man”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Congrats to the new Playbook team ! Keeping my fingers crossed for a crossover episode! Nightly will be off Monday, Jan. 18. We’ll be back and better than ever Tuesday. Reach out at rrayasam@politico.com and mward@politico.com or on Twitter at @renurayasam and @myahward.

 

A NEW YEAR, A NEW CONGRESS, A NEW HUDDLE: It was an ugly and heartbreaking week inside the Capitol, particularly for all of those who work on the Hill. How are lawmakers planning to move forward? How will security change? How will a new Senate majority impact the legislative agenda? With so much at stake, our new Huddle author Olivia Beavers brings you the most important news and critical insight from Capitol Hill with help from POLITICO's deeply sourced Congress team. Subscribe to Huddle, the essential guide to understanding Congress. It has never been more important. SUBSCRIBE NOW.

 
 
FIRST IN NIGHTLY

THE TRUMPS’ FUTURE — When Trump incited a mob riot on Capitol Hill last week, he didn’t just complicate his own political future — he scrambled the political career arcs of his kids as well . At least three Trump family members are either considering runs for office or being urged to do so, according to well-connected GOP operatives and Trump family allies, write Meridith McGrawSam Stein and Marc Caputo.

The president’s eldest son, Don Jr., is eyeing a future in politics, though allies say it’s unclear when or what office he’d seek after he passed on running for the Senate in Wyoming this last cycle. He and his girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle have also been scoping out real estate in Florida.

Top party officials say that Lara Trump, wife of the president’s son Eric, is actively contemplating a run for the Senate in North Carolina, where an open seat awaits in 2022. A person close to Lara said that she has not made any decisions on entering the race in North Carolina, although consultants have been “poking around” for her in the state. “With Lara,” said the operative, “I get the vibe she is ready to go.”

The newest and most-buzzed about possibility surrounds the president’s daughter Ivanka. The senior White House adviser is set to decamp to Florida after her father’s presidency comes to a close. And though talk of her launching a primary challenge to Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) has given off the faint whiff of political fanfic, in reality, Trump officials say, there have been machinations behind the scenes. Most tellingly, in the last week, Bannon, as he was renewing his contacts with Trump himself, began talking up Ivanka’s political resume.

AROUND THE NATION

STORM CLOUDS — The FBI arrested a Florida Army veteran today on charges of plotting to violently disrupt protests at the state Capitol leading up to Biden’s inauguration on Wednesday, writes Bruce Ritchie from Tallahassee. Daniel Baker, 33, wanted to encircle protesters at the state Capitol and confine them with guns, U.S. Attorney Lawrence Keefe and the FBI said. Baker, a former U.S. Army Airborne infantryman who was kicked out of the service in 2007, had issued “a call to arms” seeking others to join him on Sunday, according to a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court. Armed protests in opposition to the election results are planned for all 50 state capitals this weekend.

 

KEEP UP WITH THE FIRST 100 DAYS OF THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION WITH TRANSITION PLAYBOOK: It was a dark week in American history, and a new administration will have to pick up the pieces. Transition Playbook brings you inside the last days of this crucial transfer of power, tracking the latest from President-elect Biden and his growing administration. Written for political insiders, this scoop-filled newsletter breaks big news and analyzes the appointments, people, and the emerging power centers of the new administration. Track the transition and the first 100 days of the incoming Biden administration. Subscribe today.

 
 
FROM THE HEALTH DESK

FAR AND WIDE — The U.K. Covid variant could become the main form of the virus in the U.S. by March, according to a CDC report published today . The agency reported 76 cases of the variant, known as B.1.1.7, across 10 states as of Jan. 12.

But it’s probably safe to assume a far wider spread nationwide, Akiko Iwasaki, a professor of immunology at Yale School of Medicine, told Myah.

“If we had more surveillance, we would know better, exactly where the variants are,” she said.

People are more likely to catch the virus variant because it’s able to replicate at higher levels in the upper respiratory tract. This means that every time a person breathes, coughs or talks, more virus is emitted.

The good news: The variant doesn’t seem to be evading the vaccine. But the bad news, Iwasaki said, is that vaccine rollout is slow, so the only protective measure most people have right now is to avoid exposure — something she knows everyone is “sick of.”

For essential tasks like grocery shopping, that means staying in the store for the shortest time possible, or having your food delivered if possible. And it would probably be wise to wait on other nonessential tasks, like getting a haircut. (Iwasaki is cutting her own hair.)

Right now, there’s a huge wave going on in many parts of the country,” Iwasaki said. “Right now is not the time to be thinking about getting color in your hair, or whatever. I know it’s very important for mental health, absolutely. I’m not saying don’t ever do it, but it’s bad timing.”

Researchers are working with limited data to learn about new — and potentially more contagious — variants popping up across the globe. There’s the South African variant, which is also more contagious and shares mutations with the U.K. variant. And now researchers are studying a variant from Brazil, which is suspected to have similar characteristics, though they can’t say yet whether it’s more contagious.

“It’s a matter of time we find out we have more of these things,” Iwasaki said. “People have this comfort, ‘Oh well, it’s not more severe, it’s just going to kill as many people as the normal variant that’s out there.’ But if it spreads faster, it’s going to cause more death and severe disease.”

Work crews install razor wire on top of the fencing surrounding the U.S. Capitol ahead of the inauguration in Washington.

Work crews install razor wire on top of the fencing surrounding the U.S. Capitol ahead of the inauguration in Washington. | Getty Images

ON THE HILL

CONSEQUENCES CONTINUE  Democrats stepping into the Senate majority this month are weighing stiff penalties for Republican Sens. Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz over their objections to the 2020 presidential election results, Andrew Desiderio writes.

Hawley (R-Mo.) and Cruz (R-Texas) spearheaded objections to Pennsylvania’s Electoral College votes even after a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol demanding that the election be overturned, prompting Democrats to accuse them of inciting violence for political gain — claims the senators have vigorously denied.

The House impeached Trump earlier this week for inciting the deadly insurrection at the Capitol, and Democrats argue that Hawley and Cruz should face similar consequences. Some have called on them to resign or be expelled from the Senate altogether, which is unlikely to happen; but others are coalescing around an official rebuke in the form of a censure.

FROM THE TECHNOLOGY DESK

IN THE WORDS OF BARENAKED LADIES — It’s been one week since Trump’s last tweet, after Twitter and several other tech giants banned the president because of the fallout from last week’s insurrection. In the latest POLITICO Dispatch, senior technology reporter Nancy Scola takes us inside Big Tech’s decision to dump Trump — and looks at how Silicon Valley’s influence in politics could come under sharper scrutiny in the coming years.

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ASK THE AUDIENCE

Nightly asked you: What are you most hopeful about in 2021? Select, lightly edited responses are below:

“That the Biden administration will be successful in quickly and efficiently vaccinating everyone who wants a vaccination, and that our lives will get back to ‘normal.’” — David Herta, retired, Burton, Mich.

“This might sound pollyannaish, but I hope for a return to a modicum of civility in our discourse. Or maybe just the ability to have discourse. I long for the return of the small kindnesses sometimes found in human interactions.” — Mary Happ, law firm administrator, Winnetka, Ill.

“Getting vaccinated and getting out of my man cave. I’m incredibly fortunate being able to work from home since last March, but really want to get out of here and resume some semblance of a ‘normal’ life.” — Scott Rost, insurance sales, Sedona, Ariz.

“Live music, baseball fans in the stands, wide vaccine distribution, acceptance and forgiveness.” — Richard Piombino, small business owner, Atlanta

“I just want to be able to go to a coffee shop, get a cup of coffee, and sit there for an hour reading my book. If that happens in 2021, I will consider my year a success.” — Susie Margaret Ross, retired, Franklin, Tenn.

“Relaxing on vacation with a book that has nothing to do with current events or politics. And that’s coming from a civics teacher.” — Tim Woods, high school teacher, Philadelphia

“I’m hopeful at age 78 with many pre-existing conditions that I will be able to get the vaccine and resume my life as a swing dancer with my partner. We haven’t danced since last February and miss the socializing, the exercise and the wonderful bands we followed.” — Diane Fjelstad, retired, Chetek, Wis.

“Grassroots strength. Communities are rediscovering that they are neighbors, and that neighbors can do a lot to make life better for themselves and others. While civic life may look bleak from the Washington point of view, I believe we are starting to see its revitalization at the very local level. I’m also optimistic that we are ready to tackle racism at a deeper level than we ever have been.” — Susan Kuhn, marketing strategist, Falls Church, Va.

PUNCHLINES

‘THIS AIN’T AMUSING ANYMORE’ — Matt Wuerker delivers another weekend wrap, in the latest episode of Punchlines.

Nightly video player of Matt Wuerker on Punchlines Weekend Wrap

THE GLOBAL FIGHT

ENTSCHEIDUNG 2021 — The three candidates vying to lead Germany’s main governing party have a lot in common — but they’re not as similar as they may seem. And they’ll face their moment of truth at an online-only party congress on Saturday. Securing the party chair would give them a good shot at succeeding Angela Merkel as chancellor later this year.

Armin Laschet, Friedrich Merz and Norbert Röttgen are all white, male baby boomers from the same state, North Rhine-Westphalia. But they are making distinctly different pitches to lead the center-right Christian Democratic Union. Laurenz Gehrke takes you through what you need to know about the top contenders.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

6

The number of days before the inauguration that Vice President Mike Pence called Vice President-elect Kamala Harris to congratulate her and to assist the transition.

PARTING WORDS

NEVER TOO EARLY — Trump’s would-be Republican successors see an opening. As the politically diminished president prepares to leave office following a deadly pro-Trump riot at the Capitol and an impeachment vote backed by 10 GOP House members, ambitious Republicans are taking steps to burnish their own profiles and present themselves as future leaders of the party, Alex Isenstadt writes.

While some are gradually separating themselves from the president, others are publicizing plans to bolster the party as it heads into the post-Trump era. Some are even sparring with other potential 2024 rivals in plain sight, marking a strikingly early start to public presidential maneuvering.

In the last week, Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse said that Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley’s objection to certifying the Electoral College was “dumbass.” Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton went after Hawley and Cruz for fundraising at the same moment the insurrection was happening. And Secretary of State Mike Pompeo upbraided former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley for criticizing the president.

The jockeying illustrates how potential future candidates are beginning to look past Trump, who’s been banned by Twitter, has seen his approval numbers drop and faces the prospect of a Senate conviction process that would legally bar him from running again. After operating in a Trump-owned-and-operated GOP for the past four years, Republicans are calculating that the outgoing president is leaving a vacuum — and that there’s room to fill it without waiting to see if Trump mounts a 2024 comeback.

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MIKE ST. PIERRE, OWNER OF FAMILY FOODS GROCERY OUTLET: 'Caught up in the moment': Fall River store owner regrets his actions at Capitol riots



'Caught up in the moment': Fall River store owner regrets his actions at Capitol riots


Jo C Goode
Published Jan 14, 2021

FALL RIVER — There is no doubt that city business owner Mike St. Pierre was in the crowd when rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 — he shared a video of himself on social media. The images of St. Pierre went viral, at least locally, and caught the attention of the FBI. 

After a speech by President Donald Trump that continued his unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud in the presidential election, and just as a vote in joint session was about to certify the election of Joe Biden, St. Pierre and his partner, Destinie Cabral, joined thousands of other Trump supporters in marching toward the Capitol building. St. Pierre, in a video posted to his Facebook page, is wearing head gear and a flak jacket, saying he wants to grab House Speaker Nancy Pelosi by the hair and twirl her around.  

Mike St. Pierre of Fall River is seen here in a still frame from a TikTok video after hurling an object into the building during the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C.


In another Facebook post, St. Pierre, owner of the Family Foods Grocery Outlet on William Canning Boulevard, can be heard saying as the crowd got closer to the Capitol, "That’s where the meeting ground is, hopefully they’ll bust through and I’ll join them." 

A Tik-Tok video of less than two seconds shows St. Pierre lobbing an object into the building at a Capitol door with other rioters as they violently worked to storm the entrance. 

Mike St. Pierre appears in a still frame of a video he recorded himself and live-streamed to Facebook in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6, 2021, where he said he was going to march to the Capitol and break in. St. Pierre was later recorded on video hurling an object into the building.

St. Pierre said what he threw at the closed Capitol door was not a smoke bomb, as some on social media have claimed, but rather a piece of flag that someone handed him. He said he never breached the building. 

In the video, the outer door to the Capitol building is open and St. Pierre appears to throw an object inside.












A week after the insurrection, St. Pierre expressed regret for his actions. 

“The FBI already came to my house yesterday,” said the Swansea resident. “I told them everything that happened.” 

He said he doesn’t know what will come of the federal investigation. 

“But I’m not a violent guy, but I did get caught up in the moment,” he said. 

St. Pierre admits he got angry when he and the people he was with were standing on the lawn with other protesters, when police started throwing tear gas at people who he says were not rioting, including an elderly veteran standing nearby. 

“Most of the people that were there, were there just to have their voices heard. But there were people there just to rile everybody up,” said St. Pierre. “I felt like crap the next day, I still feel like crap over the incident. It was supposed to be chanting and having our voices heard, but it turned into a girl dying and an officer dying. It got out of hand.” 

St. Pierre said he’s “kind of mad at Trump,” and that he believes the president should have known he was inciting his supporters to violence. 

“I kind of wish I’d never gone and I’m done with politics. It’s not worth it,” said St. Pierre, who admits that he believed the election was rigged. He said he shared those beliefs on social media, but then saw no proof. 

He said Biden should be “in and we’re going to have to deal with it.” 

Of the remarks he made that went viral on social media — and of accusations that he committed treason and is a domestic terrorist — St. Pierre indicated he was “trying to be funny.” 

“But it didn’t turn out that way and look what happened. Something that was supposed to be patriotic turned out to be chaotic.”

St. Pierre said he's not sure if the negative social media notoriety will affect his grocery business. 

“I guess I’ll know in a couple of weeks.” 


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