Stephanie McCrummen wrote this story in the Washington Post about what happened when Kevin Van Ausdal ran against a member of QAnon in a Congressional district in Georgia.
There was a time when Kevin Van Ausdal had not yet been called a “loser” and “a disgrace” and hustled out of Georgia. He had not yet punched a wall, or been labeled a “communist,” or a person “who’d probably cry like a baby if you put a gun in his face.” He did not yet know who was going to be the Republican nominee for Congress in his conservative district in northwestern Georgia: the well-known local neurosurgeon, or the woman he knew vaguely as a person who had openly promoted conspiracies including something about a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles.
Anything still seemed possible in the spring of 2020, including the notion that he, Kevin Van Ausdal, a 35-year-old political novice who wanted to “bring civility back to Washington” might have a shot at becoming a U.S. congressman.
So one day in March, he drove his Honda to the gold-domed state capitol in Atlanta, used his IRS refund to pay the $5,220 filing fee and became the only Democrat running for a House seat in Georgia’s 14th Congressional District, which Donald Trump won by 27 points in the 2016 presidential election.
He hired a local campaign manager named Vinny Olsziewski, who had handled school board races and a couple of congressionals.
He came up with a slogan — “Save the American Dream” — and posted his first campaign ad, a one-minute slide show of snapshots with voters set to colonial fife-and-drum music.
He gave one of the first public interviews he had ever given in his life, about anything, on a YouTube show called Destiny, and when the host asked, “How do you appeal to these people while still holding onto what you believe in?” Kevin answered, “It’s all about common sense and reaching across the aisle. That’s what politics is supposed to be like.”
All of that was before August, when Republican primary voters chose the candidate with the history of promoting conspiracies, and President Trump in a tweet called her a “future Republican Star” and Kevin began learning more about Marjorie Taylor Greene, whose first major ad featured her roaring across a field in a Humvee, pulling out an AR-15 rifle and blasting targets labeled “open borders” and “socialism.”
He read that she was wealthy, had rented a condo in the district earlier in the year to run for Congress, and that before running she had built an online following by promoting baseless, fringe right-wing conspiracies — that Bill and Hillary Clinton have been involved in murders, that President Obama is a Muslim, and more recently, about the alternate universe known as QAnon.
“I’ve seen some mention of lizard people?” Kevin said, going through news articles to learn more about QAnon. “And JFK’s ghost? Or maybe he’s still alive? And QAnon is working with Trump to fight the deep state? I’m not sure I understand.”
He plunged deeper, reading about a world in which a cryptic online figure called Q is fighting to take down a network of Democrats, Hollywood actors and global elites who engage in child-trafficking and drink a life-extending chemical harvested from the blood of their victims. He read about an FBI memo warning that QAnon followers could pose a domestic terrorism threat, and the reality sank in that the only thing standing between Marjorie Taylor Greene and the halls of Congress was him. Kevin.
“I’m the one,” he said. “I’m it.”
That was how the campaign began. Thirty-one days later it was over, and within those 31 days is a chronicle of how one candidate representing the most extreme version of American politics is heading to Congress with no opposition, and the other is, in his words, “broken.”
It is an outcome that was in some ways years in the making, as all but the most committed Democrats in northwestern Georgia had long become Republican, or abandoned hope of winning the mostly White, mostly rural district of gun shops and churches, leaving the Democratic Party so weak that in 2018, the nominee for Congress was a man who had run a nudist retreat.
But as Greene gave a victory speech railing against the “hate-America left” and calling House Speaker Nancy Pelosi a “b—-,” Kevin sensed an opening. He would counter her extremism with moderation. He would talk about jobs and health care. He would double down on civility. As he told Vinny soon after hiring him as campaign manager, “People say I’m a nice guy, and I am. I think that’s the best approach.”
His team urged him to become more forceful, to respond with anger and outrage to her charges against him. He wasn’t used to that tone. Greene launched a fierce attack on Kevin.
“We have had enough,” she began, launching a tirade against “the radical left” and “Marxist BLM” and “these thugs, these domestic terrorists, these anarchists, these insurrectionists” and the Democrats’ “globalist plans, their open-border plans, their take your guns away plans, their abortion kill babies up to birth and maybe even afterwards plans.” She urged people to enter a raffle to win the AR-15 she’d used in her campaign ad because “socialism does not belong in America” and “we need to blow it away.” And then, for the first time, she addressed Kevin.
“I’m running against a radical Democrat. A Democrat socialist. He’s an AOC progressive — that really means communist — candidate,” Green said, referring to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), “who absolutely loves AOC and Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden, you know, king of the basement dwellers. So, help me beat this Democrat in November. Help me go on to Congress.”
Below the video, her supporters began posting comments.
“WWG1WGA,” one wrote, using QAnon code for “Where we go one, we go all.”
“Gloves are off,” another wrote.
The comments kept coming, and Kevin, trying to calm his nerves, went into a spare bedroom, shut the door, and stayed there long enough that his wife finally texted him from another part of the house to see if he was okay.
“She is calling for a civil war!” he texted back, referring to Greene. “And I am expected to call her out tomorrow!”
Greene ratcheted up her attacks by posting a photo on Facebook, this one showing her in sunglasses and holding an AR-15 rifle next to a photo of three of the four Democratic congresswomen known as “The Squad,” titled “Squad’s Worst Nightmare.”
The race gained national attention but Kevin’s life began to fall apart. He made a video to respond to Greene. Donations began flowing in. The national media was watching the race. But his wife asked for a divorce. She couldn’t deal with the stress anymore. On Day 28 of the campaign, a sheriff’s deputy served him with divorce papers and told him he had to leave the house.
Kevin was homeless. He headed to his parents’ home in Indiana and moved into the basement. He gave up the campaign.
Marjorie Green ran unopposed.
A week later, Marjorie Taylor Greene was arriving in her Humvee for a pro-gun rally at a rural amphitheater not far from where Kevin once lived.
Alongside county sheriff’s deputies, the Georgia III% Martyrs provided security: a dozen or so men and a few women equipped with AR-15s, earpieces, camouflage and bulletproof vests. One man had a battle ax dangling from his belt. They fanned out around the fenced perimeter of the park while a hundred or so Greene supporters milled around, a few wearing little patches that read “WWG1WGA” or “Q Army” and others who said they didn’t know or care about QAnon but just knew that Greene “shares our values.”
“Marjorie was all there for us, one hundred percent,” said Ray Blankenship, who had in August started a new gun group called the Catoosa County Civil Defense League to guard against everything he believed Democrats stood for, including gun confiscation, rioting and socialism. “People will step up when it’s time,” he said.
Onstage, a guest speaker was talking about “a time when you will be asked to shed another man’s blood because he is a threat to your very way of life.” Another talked about “the communist Democrats.” Another said that vice-presidential candidate Kamala D. Harris “wants to come to your house and take your guns away.” Another began his speech by yelling into the microphone, “FREEDOM!!!!” and out in the audience, a man wearing a hat with a “Q Army” patch was listening.
“I think people are waking up,” said the man, Butch Lapp.
“The silent majority is silent no more,” said his wife, Rebecca, and now the Martyrs were radioing each other for “backup,” and forming a protective huddle around Greene as she made her way to the stage with no opposition anywhere in sight.
“I am so proud and so excited to represent northwest Georgia!” she began.
Back in Indiana, Kevin reflected on what happened:
“I wanted to be the voice of reason against fear. I wanted to draw attention to big issues in the district,” he said during a walk one afternoon, thinking back to the beginning.
“My opponent, unfortunately, embraced QAnon beliefs. I saw her disgusting comments. I thought, ‘She is basically talking like a terrorist,’ ” Kevin said.
“When I had to do that statement, I was scared,” he said. “I’m being told I need to make a direct attack on groups who respond to people with violence. Who glorify violence.”
“My staff had monitored backchannels and seen where Q people were making threats, and we talked about what to do about death threats,” he said.
“I felt out of control. I had no control. I felt unreal. I didn’t know what to do with myself in the quiet. I felt uneasy. I felt I was on the rails and floating through,” he said.
“I was breaking down,” he said. “I was just broken.”
But now all of that was over, and he was walking down a street in Indiana describing the person he had become in the fall of 2020.
“I’ve not really been eating. I’ve been sleeping a lot. Avoiding news. I blocked anyone talking ill about me. One or two said they want to punch me in the face,” Kevin said.
“I’m worried the political situation is not going to get better. I worry we may not be able to turn it around. I knew Trump was a fascist, and I knew he was going to destroy this country, but I didn’t know how much. And Marjorie’s only going to make it worse.”
In the Trump era, voices of reason became targets.

Wow. What a story!!! It’s a freaking only-in-America novel. Bravo to the writer. Shame on the people of this benighted district.
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If only this informative story was fiction. It is not. The domestic terrorists want to be in total control, and Trump with his fans and Republican supporters are enabling the QAnon’s, Proud Boys, and other anarchists.
Like Trump, these blowhards want to criminalize political opponents. The hero for these want-to-be’s is Trump and explicitly so for the followers of QAnon. Unfortunately this kind of extremism is not limited to North Georgia.It originates with Trump.
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QAnon is spreading to Europe, particularly Germany where vandals sprayed oil on painting in a museum that allegedly holds the throne of Satan. Trump has given these fringe characters license to come out of the woodwork.https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/11/world/europe/qanon-is-thriving-in-germany-the-extreme-right-is-delighted.html
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I never really thought about it before, but I would just have assumed th at the throne of Satan was in Hell.
How did it end up in a museum in Germany?
Did they buy it from Satan? Was he short on cash or something?
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Maybe he pawned it with the idea he could buy it back later?
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An American tragedy and maybe a glimpse into our collective futures.
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The maniac fringe has gone mainstream and a QAnon thug is in Congress along with the GOP libertarians, Tea Partiers, Ayn Randists and other assorted wing-nuts, fascists and Neo-Nazis. What could possibly go wrong. Trump aids and abets these vicious goons who are just itching to weaponize their AR-15s on the “socialists” who want to enact universal health care and a decent social safety net on the US public. There is a big difference between the parties and a yawning chasm between Trump and Biden. To sit on the sidelines and not vote for Biden is almost criminal given what is at stake.
Kevin Van Ausdal is a neurosurgeon, hopefully he will be able to regain his life as a highly specialized medical professional.
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Given my familiarity with that particular Georgia district, the services of a skilled neurosurgeon would have been wasted on its residents anyway.
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“Lunatic Fringe”
Lunatic fringe
I know you’re out there
You’re in hiding
And you hold your meetings
I can hear you coming
I know what you’re after
We’re wise to you this time (wise to you this time)
We won’t let you kill the laughter
Lunatic fringe
In the twilight’s last gleaming
But this is open season
But you won’t get too far
‘Cause you’ve got to blame someone
For your own confusion
We’re on guard this time (on guard this time)
Against your final solution
We can hear you coming (we can hear you coming)
No, you’re not going to win this time (not gonna win)
We can hear the footsteps (we can hear the footsteps)
Hey, out along the walkway (out along the walkway)
Lunatic fringe
We all know you’re out there
Can you feel the resistance
Can you feel the thunder
Song by Red Rider from the early 80’s…funny how youth was warning us back then and the adults/politicians refused to listen. Now we pay dearly for not heeding the warnings.
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Wonderful, Lisa!
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His wife left him?
Sounds like she did not deserve him anyway.
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She sounds like quite the coward. Just when fighting got tough, she kicked him in the groin for the knock-out move.
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Maybe she road off in a pickup with a gun toting Qanoner.
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I agree. I can’t believe she divorced him during all of that. I feel so bad for Kevin.
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These people–i.e. Q-anon–are patently insane.
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Crazy, even!
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I believe it’s spelled Qwazy, as in “Qwazy wabbit”
“Theys something awflee sQwey going on awound here”
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In other news, the venerable news publication Newsweek has now become a shill organization for extremist right-wing nutcases, who are leveraging the legacy of the name and putting this to extremist uses.
https://newrepublic.com/article/158968/newsweek-rise-zombie-magazine
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Or, as Trump, with his Toddler English, puts it, “levering.” LOL
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I thought Trump’s preferred method was leveling everything.
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Make America Level Again
He leveled all our agencies
And leveled our physicians
He leveled all the Fauci pleas
With chloroquine positions
He leveled the economy
And leveled EPA
Leveled tax, for rich, we see
And leveled USA
He leveled you, and leveled me
And leveled all the world
If leveler, he meant to be
Then mission was fulfilled
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The Republican Party now has a Trump replacement to run for president once Trump is really gone, and her name is Marjorie Taylor Greene., the future of the GOP.
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A bit greene, perhaps, but she’s taylor made for the position.
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Together with the NPR story on Eric Parker, the terrorist who was a part of the Malheur NWR occupation is running as a Republican in Idaho, this story makes me sad for my country. What have we come to?
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Death throes?
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If the Rapturites are right about anything, it’s this
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SDP, since you mentioned the Rapture, I recommend to you a very funny, R-rated movie called “Rapture-Palooza.” I saw it on HBO or Amazing Prime.
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Sounds funny. I’ll have to check it out.
On a more serious note, I have always been interested in the technical aspects of the Rapture. Presumably it must involve the use of something like the StarTrek transporter, but I have never been able to locate details of the actual mechanism.
Believer: “Beam me up, Scotty”
God: “Energize, Scotty”
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SDP, if you see the film, you will see how the Rapture actually works. And you will also meet The Beast. The cursing crows are the best, but they use language I don’t print here.
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And what happens if there is a problem during the upload?
” Rupture in the Rapture”
A Rupture
In the Rapture
Disrupter
In the capture
Is bound to bring
Disquiet
Or even spring
A riot
Among the Rapture folk
Who fail to see the joke
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Does the Rapture mechanism include a provision for resending people packets when they are dropped, like the internet protocol TCP/IP?
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And how does God prevent hacking? Are the people packets encrypted?
Of course the dead are already encrypted, so that would only apply to the living who are Raptured.
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Terrifying times indeed.
No good deed goes unpunished.
I do not recognize the country we
have become.
Truth becomes obsolete.
Lies are accepted as truth.
HOW can any country survive that?
If this continues our enemies will have won
without ever firing a shot.
Live together in peace or
die together in hatred and animosity.
WHERE are all the good “Christian” virtues
of love your neighbor etc?
All men are created equal?
Our country has such great ideals
or had them
We have never lived up to them and
now that loss could very well create
such division that we could emulate
Syria and the other countries being
torn apart by their own tyranny.
Look at them and see what MIGHT
happen here.
For me: terrifying.
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Our not-beloved President does not know what Christian virtues are.
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