The tired and already debunked myth that white people support Trump because they are economically anxious is being dug up again to help rationalize the vile actions of the Capitol insurrectionists.
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On Wednesday, the Washington Post published a detailed dive into the apparently incomprehensible motivations of the Jan. 6 insurgents,and came to a conclusion thatโs so ridiculous itโs almost offensive.
Hereโs how it opens:
Jenna Ryan seemed like an unlikely participant in the mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. She was a real estate agent from Texas. She flew into Washington on a private jet. And she was dressed that day in clothes better suited for a winter tailgate than a war.๏ปฟ
โBut in a different way, she fit right in,โ the story continues.
Ah, you might think, theyโre acknowledging the characteristic of whiteness that typifies the defining majority of Trump supportersโas seen in the sea of them that gleefully descended on the U.S. Capitol to throw a violent tantrum because their man didnโt win.
Youโd be wrong. Instead, the lede is actually teeing up readers to find some understanding for Jenna Ryanโs decision to take a private jet to Washington D.C. to join the storming of the Capitol. Why? Because sheโs paying off $37,000 in unpaid taxes.
Really.
โNearly 60 percent of the people facing charges related to the Capitol riot showed signs of prior money troubles, including bankruptcies, notices of eviction or foreclosure, bad debts, or unpaid taxes over the past two decades,โ the story goes on to say.
That may be true, but that doesnโt make the insurgents unique among other Americans. More than 63 percent of people in this country live paycheck to paycheck, 68 million Americans have debt in collections, and 60 percent of Black Americans have reported facing serious financial problems during the ongoing pandemicโincluding suffering from a depletion of savings, an inability to pay their rent and mortgage as well as credit cards and other debt, losing their jobs and being unable to afford medical careโwhile only 36 percent of white households say the same.
Researchers have also found that many of the Capitol insurgents were CEOs, business owners, doctors, lawyers, IT specialists and people who hold other white-collar jobs. Many of the insurgents were also members or ex-members of the military and law enforcement.
But the Washington Post shines the spotlight on the supposed financial woes of people like Jenna Ryan, Georgia lawyer William Calhoun who had a $26,000 tax lien in 2019 and a member of the Proud Boys named Dominic Pezzola who owes state taxes, to helpย explain why those folks engaged in the unprecedented violence that took place in the nationโs capital on Jan. 6.
โThe financial missteps by defendants in the attempted insurrection ranged from small debts of a few thousand dollars more than a decade ago to unpaid tax bills of $400,000 and homes facing foreclosure in recent years,โ reads the article, failing to note that owing over 400 grand in taxes is a problem only a specific segment of the population can even identify withโI certainly canโt.
โSome of these people seemed to have regained their financial footing,โ the article continues. โBut many of them once stood close to the edge.โ
I assume the repugnant โclose to the edgeโ justification is meant to describe people like 22-year-old Riley June Williams, who the article makes sure to point out has parents who โfiled for bankruptcy when she was a child.โ
I guess weโre supposed to believe Williams felt so stung more than two decades later that she was driven to steal Nancy Pelosiโs laptop with reported plans to sell it to Russian spies.
Meanwhile, Ryan, who proudly posted photos next to broken windows at the Capitol, where she promised news stations to โcome after their studios nextโ as well as a video screaming she was โarmed and dangerousโ because America is apparently turning into Venezuela, is now worrying about having to face time behind bars for her treasonous activities.
She told the Post sheโs concerned about what will happen to her two mini-goldendoodle dogs if she goes to prison.
Ryan may not have to worry. With the media producing laudatory profiles of the unrepentant attackers who took part in an insurrection that left five people dead, and a court system that has already allowed a suspect to vacation in Mexicoย for a company retreat, white privilege is likely to work just as it always hasโto protect certain people from the consequences, and even an honest acknowledgement, of their base, entitled motivations.
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