Never in the history of the United States has the U.S. Capitol been invaded and ransacked by its own citizens. Never in the history of this nation was there a violent attempt to prevent the Constitutional process of certifying the election of a new President. It happened on January 6, 2021.
The fact that this unprecedented insurrection was encouraged and abetted by the sitting President is also remarkable.
So much about this day was and is unprecedented. Republican leaders called the White House and pleaded with the President to call off the mob. He waited for hours to do so, telling his violent friends, “Go home. I love you. You are special.”
Republican leaders were briefly outraged but soon realized that they dare not offend Trump, whose mob it was. Their outrage soon dissipated, and they agreed that January 6 was nothing out of the ordinary. They blocked a bipartisan investigation of the day’s events. They fell in line with Trump’s Big Lie that the election was stolen from him. They joined Trump’s campaign to rewrite history and purge any Republican who dissented.
A year after the insurrection, the Washington Post reported the results of a poll conducted by the University of Maryland. The Post wrote:
The percentage of Americans who say violent action against the government is justified at times stands at 34 percent, which is considerably higher than in past polls by The Post or other major news organizations dating back more than two decades. Again, the view is partisan: The new survey finds 40 percent of Republicans, 41 percent of independents and 23 percent of Democrats saying violence is sometimes justified.…
Overall, 60 percent of Americans say Trump bears either a “great deal” or a “good amount” of responsibility for the insurrection, but 72 percent of Republicans and 83 percent of Trump voters say he bears “just some” responsibility or “none at all.”
Trump’s attacks on the legitimacy of the election have spawned ongoing efforts in some states to revisit the results. No such inquiry has turned up anything to suggest that the certified results were inaccurate. That has not blunted a persistent belief by most of his supporters that the election was somehow rigged.
Overall, the Post-UMD survey finds that 68 percent of Americans say there is no solid evidence of widespread fraud but 30 percent say there is.
Big majorities of Democrats (88 percent) and independents (74 percent) say there is no evidence of such irregularities, but 62 percent of Republicans say there is such evidence. That is almost identical to the percentage of Republicans who agreed with Trump’s claims of voter fraud a week after that Capitol attack, based on a Washington Post-ABC News poll at the time.
About 7 in 10 Americans say Biden’s election as president was legitimate, but that leaves almost 3 in 10 who say it was not, including 58 percent of Republicans and 27 percent of independents. The 58 percent of Republicans who say Biden was not legitimately elected as president is down somewhat from 70 percent in a Post-ABC poll conducted in January shortly after the Capitol attack.
Among those who say they voted for Trump in 2020, 69 percent now say Biden was not legitimately elected, while 97 percent of Biden voters say the current president was legitimately elected.
The poll is here.

A year since the Treasonous Insurrection and we find ourselve faced with the Absurd Spectacle of the FBI poring through security videos with farcial-recognition siftware while the Traitor In Chief roams at large, free to wreak havoc again …
LikeLike
That’s because he wasn’t there in the photos and videos to be identified by farcical recognition, even though he had promised his supporters (who were taking great personal risk) that he would be.
It’s hard to get someone’s photo when they are hiding in a dark closet.
LikeLike
Even someone with luminescent orange hair.
LikeLike
I don’t understand why Trump has not been arrested. His incitement to insurrection and violence is public. We all saw him call for his mob to fight like hell or lose the country. He told them to March to the Capitol. Free speech does not protect sedition.
LikeLike
Republican leaders called the White House and pleaded with the President to call off the mob.”
Some, maybe, but there’s lots of evidence that other Republican members of Congress supported the insurectionists.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/exclusive-jan-6-organizers-met-congress-white-house-1245289/
Jan. 6 Protest Organizers Say They Participated in ‘Dozens’ of Planning Meetings With Members of Congress and White House Staff
LikeLike
Fact: The riot was planned in advance and known by all relevant intelligence agencies.
Fact: The Capitol Police nonetheless chose to understaff officers that day (if it had been a planned BLM protest there would have been thousands of officers in full riot gear).
Fact: The Capitol Police themselves opened the barricade that allowed the protesters into the Capitol Building.
Fact: The protesters left voluntarily when asked with plenty of time to certify the vote.
I will leave you to conjecture what those facts mean, except that I will direct your attention to what’s happened since: Just like 9/11, the American people immediately accepted (in fact, demanded) increased draconian “security” crackdowns against our basic civil rights, such as the right to free speech and assembly.
Cui bono?
LikeLike
Quote – Fact: The Capitol Police themselves opened the barricade that allowed the protesters into the Capitol Building.
Fact: The protesters left voluntarily when asked with plenty of time to certify the vote. end quote
The Capitol Police did not open the barricades in the videos I saw. The rioters picked up the barricades and threw them at the police. The police did their best to replace the barricades but they were outnumbered and overwhelmed.
The rioters and thugs left voluntarily?!? Huh? Is that a joke, they damn well did not leave voluntarily.
LikeLike
It was all a False Flag operation, you see, so American Pat-riots and Capitol Tourrorists will be faced with draconian impositions like wearing transparent backpacks when they “tour” Congress — kind of like the kids in Oxford, Michigan now have to do when they go to school … hey! it’s the Price of Liberty …
LikeLike
I was watching on live TV that day and yes, I watched in horror as a Capitol police officer opened the barricade on a terrace and let the rioters pass. I was shocked! I have NEVER again seen footage of this since. The rest of the “facts”…..I’m not so sure that they are facts.
LikeLike
LikeLike
LikeLike
LikeLike
Why no audio?
LikeLike
LikeLike
Trump?
LikeLike
Dienne,
You ask “Cui bono?”
The answer is clear: Trump and Putin.
LikeLike
Fact:
These “facts” are coming from the very same person who said that there was no difference at all between Biden and Trump’s response to the pandemic. Just like there is no difference between Trumpist Republican Ron DeSantis’ response to the pandemic in Florida and Democrat Gov. Jay Inslee’s response in Washington state.
And I think we should all stipulate that everyone who believes her about the pandemic should believe every word of this brilliantly argued comment.
Look, it’s very hard for this person today when her people are getting raked over the coals for their attempt to violently overthrow democracy. It’s now impossible to say it didn’t happen when the evidence shows it did. So now it happened but it was a plot by the Democrats and Republicans (other than Trump) to take away everyone’s civil rights, so she begs you not to blame Trump, Bannon, or anyone else that Putin propaganda says should not be blamed. But it’s okay to blame Democrats and some vague unnamed “intelligence agencies” controlled by Trump but who work against Trump, like the FBI where the NY office and Giuliani worked so hard to defeat Trump in 2016. In her mind.
Remember, this person is not outraged that the Republicans are passing laws to disenfranchise traditionally progressive voters and make traditionally right wing supporting white people’s votes count more.
This person is not outraged that the Republicans held up the nomination of a moderate Supreme Court Justice and rushed through the confirmation of 3 far right Supreme Court Justices.
She’s a real fighter for progressive causes, and that’s why she reserves her outrage for anyone being too critical of the Capitol insurrectionists who just wanted to keep poor, honest, “orange-haired” Trump in power after all those bad guys she hates conspired against the guy with “orange hair”. “Orange-haired” was pretty much as derogatory about Trump that this poster could get. Apparently stronger condemnation of Trump is not allowed.
LikeLike
What did you think of Biden’s speech. I thought it was excellent. Walter “Sandy” Silvers
LikeLike
Agree!
LikeLike
I have the feeling the country is going to experience more of these ‘unprecedented’ happenings. There is a very ugly mood permeating the atmosphere.
LikeLike
Low level pawns have been arrested, but the bigger fish including the whale will have to wait until the Jan. 6th committee is finished. I listened to both Harris and Biden’s speeches this morning. They are getting close to catching the whale. The President directly blamed Trump for the events of Jan.6th. It was the first time I saw Biden directly point a finger at Trump for his part in the insurrection. Things are about to get interesting.
LikeLike
There will be a perfectly legal coup in the November midterm elections unless Senate Democrats end the filibuster and pass the Voting Rights Act — but the majority of Senate Democrats don’t want to end the filibuster because:
They fear that if they do, there will be a voter backlash against them in their state and they won’t be re-elected — PROBLEM IS, unless they end the filibuster and pass the Voting Rights Act, they won’t be re-elected anyway. Their best chance of being re-elected is to end the filibuster and pass the Voting Rights Act.
They see themselves as being the minority after the 2022 midterm elections and want to keep the filibuster so that they can use it — PROBLEM IS, because there will be no Voting Rights Act to stop them, the Republicans will gain overwhelming control of the Senate and will suspend the filibuster at-will, preventing the Democrats from using it.
SO: The only survival choice for the Senate Democrats is to end the filibuster immediately and to pass the Voting Rights Act. Otherwise, they are doomed to become political has-beens and never-mores.
Will the self-defeating Democrats dither until their doom — or will they recognize reality and find the courage to act? Specifically, are Senators Manchin and Sinema willing and able to put the preservation of our republic ahead of their own interests?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jan/04/next-us-civil-war-already-here-we-refuse-to-see-it
LikeLike
The Democrats can’t end the filibuster unless they have 51 votes, meaning Manchin and Sinema.
LikeLike
This is an existential election–one I think and desperately hope I’m wrong about–and not one to waste a lot of time with details in messaging. This is a Frankin-esque “if you can keep it” moment.
One issue might well be too late to address: the core racism in our system. I just read Teaching Black History to White People by Leonard Moore, who is obviously a gifted teacher. His arguments, how to frame them, are simple brilliance, a way to get to the point that addresses the odd coalition of racists on the right and liberals on the left who think this is all overblown and race relations are not as bad as all that, we have other issues to tackle. To which Patterson Hood had the best response, “well I guess that means that you ain’t Black, it means that you ain’t Black.”
And it’s all about race. The core motivation of many of our laws has race or a response to racial injustice at its core. One pattern we see over and over again in our history is a backlash accompanied by quiet acquiescence against the perception of “too much equality” and “too much opportunity.” It’s all fine until I think it threatens me. Then that issue becomes important and big issues get pushed aside. The PROBLEM IS comments verify that.
LikeLike
The ultimate Republican goal has been power. In service of that, democracy has come to be expendable, if not an obstacle, for them. They have come to realize that the wealth protection they represent is unpopular. As a result the only way to remain in power is with a demagogue and through fear and divisiveness. They realize that also means interfering with anything Democrats try to do that will benefit people. So, with that there is no option of compromise or appeal to greater common good morality. Defeat at the polls through community organizing is the only option.
LikeLike