Archive for the ‘Ann Coulter’ Category

Vivek Ramaswamy Is Happy to Be Talked About, Even if His Name … – The New York Times

To former Vice President Mike Pence, hes Vih-veck. To a Fox and Friends panelist on Thursday morning, he was Vee-veck. And to some Iowa voters, its Vy-vick if they said his name at all.

Vivek Ramaswamy, a tech entrepreneur running for president who has climbed the polls in recent weeks, has branded himself as a political newcomer who, despite participating in his first Republican debate Wednesday night, seemed at ease bringing the event to near-chaos several times as he sparred with the likes of Mr. Pence and Chris Christie, the former New Jersey governor.

A different hurdle he may face, however, is getting others to say his name correctly.

The son of Indian Americans, Mr. Ramaswamy has both leaned into and away from his racial background. He has often expressed gratitude that his parents immigrated to the greatest nation on Earth, and on Wednesday, he echoed a line from former President Barack Obamas speech onstage when he introduced himself as a skinny guy with a funny last name. (Mr. Ramaswamy has said that Vivek rhymes with cake and pronounces his last name Rah-muh-swah-mee.)

When Sean Hannity, the Fox News host, asked after the debate why Mr. Ramaswamy hadnt corrected the mispronunciation sooner, the candidate laughed and said, I appreciate best efforts.

Karthick Ramakrishnan, the director of AAPI Data, said that because Mr. Ramaswamy is running as an insurgent candidate with radical ideas, it wouldnt make sense for him to start policing, or suggesting how others should be pronouncing his name. (One of the 10 commandments in Mr. Ramaswamys platform asserts that reverse racism is racism.)

Its a recognition that different people may be at different stages along the way in terms of even knowing who he is and how to pronounce his name, Mr. Ramakrishnan said. He is trying to activate a generational kind of debate and divide in America that needs to be addressed and to move away from racial identity politics.

Nicole Holliday, a linguistics professor at Pomona College, attributed the struggle for some to pronounce names correctly to a number of factors, including a sentiment that English speakers in general expect to be accommodated everywhere in the world and a lack of foreign language training in the United States from an early age.

Past presidential candidates from diverse racial backgrounds have faced racist insults related to their names. In 2020, David Perdue, then a senator from Georgia, faced a backlash after he appeared to make fun of Kamala Harriss name at a rally just before the November election: Ka-ma-la, Ka-ma-la, Kamala-mala-mala, I dont know, whatever. And some critics of Mr. Obama often invoked his middle name Hussein to falsely claim that he was Muslim.

Of the few prominent South Asians in G.O.P. politics, many have used names friendly to a less-diverse voter base. Bobby Jindal, the former Republican governor of Louisiana, changed his name from Piyush to Bobby when he was young. And Nikki Haley, another Indian American in the 2024 presidential race, has long used Nikki, her middle name, instead of her first name, Nimarata.

While the overwhelming majority of Indian Americans are Democrats, a 2020 survey of Indian American voters found that almost 60 percent said they would be open to supporting an Indian American candidate regardless of their party affiliation.

Mr. Ramaswamys name mispronunciations are all too familiar for South Asian Americans, said Sara Sadhwani, a political science professor at Pomona College. But, she noted, the acknowledgment of such mispronunciations by Mr. Hannity and others may point to a slow recognition among Republicans that not only do we need to diversify, but well have to be respectful to some extent of the folks who were able to bring to the table.

Beyond his name, Mr. Ramaswamy may hit a ceiling as a result of his Hindu faith, predicted Mr. Ramakrishnan, the AAPI Data founder.

On Wednesday, the conservative commentator Ann Coulter made a comment largely condemned as racist, on X, the site formerly known as Twitter, that Nikki and Vivek are involved in some Hindu business, it seems. Not our fight. (Ms. Haley was raised Sikh but later converted to Christianity.)

Ann can tweet whatever she wants to, Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Ramaswamy campaign, said of the comment. Vivek has traveled this country and is very grateful for the warm support he has received from Christian voters across the country.

Original post:
Vivek Ramaswamy Is Happy to Be Talked About, Even if His Name ... - The New York Times

Ann Coulter: The truth about legacies | Opinion … – Marshall News Messenger

After an initial burst of indignation at the Supreme Court for taking on the unpleasant task of informing college admissions offices that race discrimination is unconstitutional, the medias main focus quickly shifted to their favorite topic: blaming white men.

True, it was going to be difficult to turn a case finally ending 50 years of discrimination against whites into a story about how whites are oppressing Blacks, but you dont know our media. The fact that the plaintiffs in this case were Asian didnt even slow them down.

Within hours, everybody was talking about legacies. The children of alumni are apparently the ne plus ultra of whiteness. The New York Times called them white, wealthy and well-connected. And thats how legacy entered the vocabulary as an epithet for white men, joining frat boys, rich, privileged, Chads and lacrosse players.

Unfortunately, much like #BlackLivesMatter, this latest orgy of hatred for whites is going to end up hurting Black people the most.

We have been assured that preferences for the children of alumni are exactly like racial preferences for Blacks and Hispanics except given to whites. Thus, Kenny Xu, one of the plaintiffs in the affirmative action case, sneered that preferences for legacies disproportionately privilege white applicants. (These arent your allies, white people.)

Then, days after the decision was announced, race activists filed a complaint against Harvard for giving preference to the children of alumni, saying that legacy admissions have nothing to do with an applicants merit and were an unfair and unearned benefit.

Lets look at how big a benefit being a legacy actually is.

Comparing three preferences given to college applicants legacies, athletes and Blacks/Hispanics the children of alumni got the smallest boost, according to a 2007 Princeton study of 4,000 students entering 28 selective colleges in 1999. A majority of legacy admissions had SATs above their colleges average. Even those below the average were only slightly below it, 47 points out of a possible 1,600.

By contrast, 77 percent of Blacks and Hispanics had scores below their colleges average, and 70 percent of athletes did. Combined, their average gap was 108 points.

A 2009 Harvard study found that legacy applicants to the top 30 most selective colleges had a mean score 10 points higher on the reading SAT than non-legacy applicants and six points higher on the math SAT.

About a decade later, Naviance, a college software provider, examined 15,402 legacy applications from 2014-17 and found that 82 percent of legacy applicants have SAT or ACT scores at or above their colleges average for accepted students.

Apparently, the dumb kids of alumni dont bother applying to their parents schools, and the smart kids are pressured into applying, even if their academic qualifications are good enough to get them into a better school.

The Harvard study also found that the legacy preference is strongest for applicants with perfect SAT scores. (In 2007, Harvard rejected more than a thousand applicants with perfect math SAT scores; Princeton rejected thousands of students with perfect GPAs.)

For the past week, the media have bombarded us with data claiming exactly the opposite that being a legacy confers a huge advantage, comparable to that given to Blacks and Hispanics simply for being Black or Hispanic. You will notice that these claims never refer to the children of alumni in isolation. Legacies are invariably thrown in with other, completely different categories, like whose parents donated money, athletes or children of university employees.

E.g.:

Most colleges have long resisted eliminating a much-criticized admission practice: giving a boost to the children of alumni, donors and faculty. The New York Times, June 30, 2023

[One] analysis found that 43% of Harvards white admits in 2019 were legacy students, recruited athletes, children of faculty and staff or were applicants affiliated with donors. USA Today Online, July 3, 2023

The records revealed that 70% of Harvards donor-related and legacy applicants are white. The Associated Press, July 3, 2023

Grouping dissimilar things together can give you any statistic you want. Dozens of humans are killed every year by grizzly bears and Dachshunds.

The grizzly bear in these lists is donor-related.

I hold no brief for legacies, but I do know that I.Q. is heritable, and the kids of alumni are in a wholly different category from the kids of big donors. One is Aage Bohr, who won the Nobel Prize for Physics 53 years after his father, Niels, did. (They are among seven parent/child Nobel winners in the sciences.)

The other is Jared Kushner, whose father bought his kids way into Harvard, despite his not being remotely qualified, as a track 3 high school student. (By the way, Republicans, your outrage at Hunter Bidens criminality would be more credible if you ever mentioned the $2 billion Jared got from the Saudis.)

If Harvard didnt discriminate on the basis of race, instead of a student body that is about 43 percent white, 19 percent Asian, 11 percent Black and 10 percent Hispanic, it would be 43 percent Asian, 38 percent white, 0.7 percent Black, and 2.4 percent Hispanic, a 2013 study by the university found.

If Harvard didnt discriminate in favor of legacies, the average SAT score of its undergrads would be lower, as some perfect-scoring alum kids go elsewhere.

As much fun as youre having bashing whites, media, the boost given to legacies is not in the same universe as the preferences given to Black and Hispanic students. On the other hand, judging by Jared Kushner, the preference given to the kids of big donors is every bit as humongous as the affirmative action plus factor, but it would take the U.S. Marines to get colleges to cough up that information.

Ironically, getting rid of preferences for legacies will hurt Black applicants the most. Recall that colleges have been giving gigantic racial preferences to Black applicants since the 1960s, which means we have more than half a century of Black graduates whose children and grandchildren are ... guess what? Legacies!

Children of alums who got in to college on the basis of anything other than merit, as a group, will tend to be less qualified than the children of alums who got in on merit.

Get rid of the legacy preference, and its the kids of affirmative action alums who wont get in.

Read the rest here:
Ann Coulter: The truth about legacies | Opinion ... - Marshall News Messenger

Ann Coulter: No biggie, just the end of civilization – Northwest Georgia News

Country

United States of AmericaUS Virgin IslandsUnited States Minor Outlying IslandsCanadaMexico, United Mexican StatesBahamas, Commonwealth of theCuba, Republic ofDominican RepublicHaiti, Republic ofJamaicaAfghanistanAlbania, People's Socialist Republic ofAlgeria, People's Democratic Republic ofAmerican SamoaAndorra, Principality ofAngola, Republic ofAnguillaAntarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S)Antigua and BarbudaArgentina, Argentine RepublicArmeniaArubaAustralia, Commonwealth ofAustria, Republic ofAzerbaijan, Republic ofBahrain, Kingdom ofBangladesh, People's Republic ofBarbadosBelarusBelgium, Kingdom ofBelizeBenin, People's Republic ofBermudaBhutan, Kingdom ofBolivia, Republic ofBosnia and HerzegovinaBotswana, Republic ofBouvet Island (Bouvetoya)Brazil, Federative Republic ofBritish Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago)British Virgin IslandsBrunei DarussalamBulgaria, People's Republic ofBurkina FasoBurundi, Republic ofCambodia, Kingdom ofCameroon, United Republic ofCape Verde, Republic ofCayman IslandsCentral African RepublicChad, Republic ofChile, Republic ofChina, People's Republic ofChristmas IslandCocos (Keeling) IslandsColombia, Republic ofComoros, Union of theCongo, Democratic Republic ofCongo, People's Republic ofCook IslandsCosta Rica, Republic ofCote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of theCyprus, Republic ofCzech RepublicDenmark, Kingdom ofDjibouti, Republic ofDominica, Commonwealth ofEcuador, Republic ofEgypt, Arab Republic ofEl Salvador, Republic ofEquatorial Guinea, Republic ofEritreaEstoniaEthiopiaFaeroe IslandsFalkland Islands (Malvinas)Fiji, Republic of the Fiji IslandsFinland, Republic ofFrance, French RepublicFrench GuianaFrench PolynesiaFrench Southern TerritoriesGabon, Gabonese RepublicGambia, Republic of theGeorgiaGermanyGhana, Republic ofGibraltarGreece, Hellenic RepublicGreenlandGrenadaGuadaloupeGuamGuatemala, Republic ofGuinea, RevolutionaryPeople's Rep'c ofGuinea-Bissau, Republic ofGuyana, Republic ofHeard and McDonald IslandsHoly See (Vatican City State)Honduras, Republic ofHong Kong, Special Administrative Region of ChinaHrvatska (Croatia)Hungary, Hungarian People's RepublicIceland, Republic ofIndia, Republic ofIndonesia, Republic ofIran, Islamic Republic ofIraq, Republic ofIrelandIsrael, State ofItaly, Italian RepublicJapanJordan, Hashemite Kingdom ofKazakhstan, Republic ofKenya, Republic ofKiribati, Republic ofKorea, Democratic People's Republic ofKorea, Republic ofKuwait, State ofKyrgyz RepublicLao People's Democratic RepublicLatviaLebanon, Lebanese RepublicLesotho, Kingdom ofLiberia, Republic ofLibyan Arab JamahiriyaLiechtenstein, Principality ofLithuaniaLuxembourg, Grand Duchy ofMacao, Special Administrative Region of ChinaMacedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic ofMadagascar, Republic ofMalawi, Republic ofMalaysiaMaldives, Republic ofMali, Republic ofMalta, Republic ofMarshall IslandsMartiniqueMauritania, Islamic Republic ofMauritiusMayotteMicronesia, Federated States ofMoldova, Republic ofMonaco, Principality ofMongolia, Mongolian People's RepublicMontserratMorocco, Kingdom ofMozambique, People's Republic ofMyanmarNamibiaNauru, Republic ofNepal, Kingdom ofNetherlands AntillesNetherlands, Kingdom of theNew CaledoniaNew ZealandNicaragua, Republic ofNiger, Republic of theNigeria, Federal Republic ofNiue, Republic ofNorfolk IslandNorthern Mariana IslandsNorway, Kingdom ofOman, Sultanate ofPakistan, Islamic Republic ofPalauPalestinian Territory, OccupiedPanama, Republic ofPapua New GuineaParaguay, Republic ofPeru, Republic ofPhilippines, Republic of thePitcairn IslandPoland, Polish People's RepublicPortugal, Portuguese RepublicPuerto RicoQatar, State ofReunionRomania, Socialist Republic ofRussian FederationRwanda, Rwandese RepublicSamoa, Independent State ofSan Marino, Republic ofSao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic ofSaudi Arabia, Kingdom ofSenegal, Republic ofSerbia and MontenegroSeychelles, Republic ofSierra Leone, Republic ofSingapore, Republic ofSlovakia (Slovak Republic)SloveniaSolomon IslandsSomalia, Somali RepublicSouth Africa, Republic ofSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSpain, Spanish StateSri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic ofSt. HelenaSt. Kitts and NevisSt. LuciaSt. Pierre and MiquelonSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudan, Democratic Republic of theSuriname, Republic ofSvalbard & Jan Mayen IslandsSwaziland, Kingdom ofSweden, Kingdom ofSwitzerland, Swiss ConfederationSyrian Arab RepublicTaiwan, Province of ChinaTajikistanTanzania, United Republic ofThailand, Kingdom ofTimor-Leste, Democratic Republic ofTogo, Togolese RepublicTokelau (Tokelau Islands)Tonga, Kingdom ofTrinidad and Tobago, Republic ofTunisia, Republic ofTurkey, Republic ofTurkmenistanTurks and Caicos IslandsTuvaluUganda, Republic ofUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited Kingdom of Great Britain & N. IrelandUruguay, Eastern Republic ofUzbekistanVanuatuVenezuela, Bolivarian Republic ofViet Nam, Socialist Republic ofWallis and Futuna IslandsWestern SaharaYemenZambia, Republic ofZimbabwe

Here is the original post:
Ann Coulter: No biggie, just the end of civilization - Northwest Georgia News

Tarleton State Honors Educators with Crystal Apple Awards – The Flash Today

STEPHENVILLE Tarleton State University recognized 12 distinguished educators last week with induction in the Crystal Apple Society.

In 2012 the College of Education, under the leadership of Dr. Jill Burk, established an award to honor educators who make a positive impact on students. Since then, Crystal Apple Society Award winners have been identified annually.

This years honorees are Bret and Monica Barrick, Dalta Ann Coulter, Jody Fain, Kevin Ferguson, Max Glauben, Dr. Russ Higham and Debby Hopkins-Higham, Dr. Beck Munsey, Diane Pokluda, Dr. Beth Riggs and Michel Wimberly.

These 12 outstanding educators are making a positive impact across our great state! Tarleton President James Hurley tweeted after the ceremony.

Bret Barrick

A Tarleton graduate, Barrick coached and taught in the Mineral Wells Independent School District and is now transportation director. In his nomination form retired Tarleton Associate Provost Dwayne Snider and student Connor Spencer lauded Barricks encouraging coaching style. Spencer said Barricks personable approach as a baseball coach helped ease his transfer to Mineral Wells High School as a junior, and observing his passion for the job encouraged Spencer to pursue coaching. Dr. Snider said Barricks recognition of players not just for being the best but for their willingness to work hard and improve is something all teachers should do.

Monica Barrick

Also nominated by Dr. Snider, Monica Barrick teaches mathematics at Mineral Wells High School and taught his niece. Dr. Snider praised Barricks patience and positive attitude as well as the effort she makes for each student, which helped his niece navigate transferring to a new high school as a senior and feel supported from the outset.

Dalta Ann Coulter

Coulter graduated from Tarleton with an education degree and taught for 34 years in Breckenridge, Moody, Killeen and Bruceville-Eddy schools. At BEISD she started Preschool Programs for Children with Disabilities and taught special education for 29 years before retiring in 2015. She was nominated by Jo Ann Kern, who noted that Coulter was not only a passionate advocate for her students with special needs but skillfully advised their parents on overcoming difficult challenges.

Jody Fain

Stephenville health science teacher Jody Fain was nominated by four of her students, who touted the positive impact her cheerful, caring nature and active communication had on them, even inspiring one to go to medical school.

Kevin Ferguson

Ferguson has taught sixth-grade science since 1992 at Gilbert Intermediate School in Stephenville, where he is lead teacher and department head. He has taught two generations of theKen Howellfamily, who nominated him. His passionate teaching style make him stand out as an educator, said the elder Howells, while both daughters agreed that although science was not necessarily their favorite subject, Ferguson made it fun.

Max Glauben

Glauben was nominated by the Tarleton Department of Psychological Sciences for his contributions to education and humanity. As a teenager Glauben survived the Nazi invasion of Warsaw, five concentration camps and a death march from the Flossenbrg concentration camp to Dachau. His parents and younger brother died. After he was freed and moved to the United States, he served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War and became a tireless advocate for establishing a Holocaust museum where survivors stories could be shared in the hopes that such atrocities would never happen again. What started in the Jewish Community Center in Dallas became the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum, where a holographic image of Glauben relates his experiences. He spent much of his life traveling and educating on the dangers of discrimination and the importance of tolerance, and in 2018 he visited Tarleton to share his story. He died in 2022, and his son Phillip accepted the award on his behalf.

Debby Hopkins-Higham

Now retired from Tarleton, Hopkins-Higham was instrumental in the professional development partnership with Waco ISD and two separate campuses. Retired professor Dr. Ann Calahan, who nominated her, lauded Hopkins-Highams collaborative partnerships with area schools, administrators and teachers and her care for each students field placement throughout the educator preparation program.

Dr. Russ Higham

Dr. Higham, an educational leadership and policy Associate Professor at Tarleton-Waco, was nominated by the late Dr. Don Beach, who worked with him more than 20 years and praised his positivity, always knowing his students names and keeping up with them in their careers. We need educators like him because they show they care for students, and in doing so it helps students become more successful, Beach wrote in his nomination. Hes just a good life coach.

Dr. Beck Munsey

Dr. Munsey, head of the counseling department at Tarleton, was nominated by Dr. Annette Albrecht, who heralded him as an exemplary educator. He has taught hundreds of counseling students who in turn have graduated and worked with thousands of young adults across Texas and beyond. Dr. Munsey brings real-life experiences into the classroom from his private practice and is considered a superb mentor for his excellent counseling traits and the ability to impart them to students. He was the first Tarleton faculty member to record best teaching practices in diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging for use in professional development. His commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion won him accolades from the SAIGE Division of the American Counseling Association.

Diane Pokluda

Retired Crowley ISD teacher Diane Pokluda was nominated by Tarleton Professional Educators for her work as Region 9 and 11 specialist for the Association of Texas Professional Educators. Lauded as a rock star among professional educators, she and her husband, Steve, also a retired educator, share the benefits of ATPE membership in newsletters and special events on school district campuses. ATPE has supported the Tarleton Professional Educators student organization for over 12 years.

Dr. Beth Riggs

Dr. Riggs was nominated by Dr. Kathy Smith, head of the mathematics department, who praised Dr. Riggs skills as an educator who helps math majors complete their degrees in a timely manner. Dr. Riggs, a mathematics Associate Professor and the department associate head, has prepared Tarleton preservice teachers and provided professional development for in-service teachers across Texas.

Michel Wimberly

Student accolades fill the nomination form for Melissa Middle School percussion teacher Michel Wimberly:

Through his incredible teaching and musical gifts, Mr. Wimberly undoubtedly makes a lifelong impact on the students he serves, added Dr. Lesley Leach, who nominated him. We honor his dedication to his craft and his students.

Like Loading...

Related

Follow this link:
Tarleton State Honors Educators with Crystal Apple Awards - The Flash Today

Homegrown review: Timothy McVeigh and the rise of the Trumpist threat – The Guardian

Books

Jeffrey Toobin has written a brilliant, chilling book on the Oklahoma City bombing and the rise of Republican extremism

Sun 14 May 2023 02.00 EDT

Jeffrey Toobin has combined two great books in one. The first is an edge-of-your-seat thriller, describing Timothy McVeighs every movement on his way to committing one of the most horrific crimes in American history. The second traces how a huge part of the Republican establishment has come to embrace many of McVeighs most dangerous convictions.

Toobin is a lawyer who became a full-time writer and TV pundit 30 years ago. This is his ninth book and his most important, because it gives the clear and present danger of rightwing extremism the attention it deserves.

McVeigh was a brilliant marksman who fought in the first Iraq war but failed a tryout for the Green Berets after only two days. This, Toobin writes, was a shattering defeat he had no plan B.

McVeighs biggest ideological influence was a novel, The Turner Diaries, which envisaged a world in which the government had the power to confiscate private arms, Black people were allowed to attack whites with impunity and whites were punished for defending themselves. It also imagined the blowing up of the FBI building in Washington with a truck filled with thousands of pounds of fertilizer, blasting gelatin and sticks of dynamite.

That became McVeighs template for blowing up the Alfred P Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, on 19 April 1995, with a rental truck. The death toll was 168, including 19 children. More than 500 were injured.

Toobin covered McVeighs trial for the New Yorker and ABC News. His interest was rekindled when he realized the conspirators arrested in a plot to kidnap the current Michigan governor, Gretchen Whitmer, were much like McVeigh.

I know these people, he writes.

Then he discovered McVeighs lead lawyer had donated 635 boxes of documents to the University of Texas.

I knew that an archive of this extent had never before been publicly available in a major case.

In Homegrown, Toobin combines the fruits of those documents with interviews with more than 100 participants, among them Bill Clinton, president at the time, and Merrick Garland, now attorney general, then lead prosecutor of McVeigh. The result is one of the most detailed and exciting true crime stories I have ever read.

But in many ways the other book Toobin has written is even more important. It is the book that looks at the birth of the extreme language that now dominates Republican politics. McVeigh embraced white supremacy and violent action just as a Republican House speaker, Newt Gingrich, and a talk show host, Rush Limbaugh, were engaging in rhetorical violence at a pitch the country had rarely heard before on national broadcasts.

Gingrich instructed Republicans to describe Democrats as sick, pathetic, traitors, radical and corrupt, while describing himself as standing between us and Auschwitz. Limbaugh said the second violent American revolution was a quarter of an inch away. Toobin draws a straight line to the titles of books written by extremists today, from Deliver Us From Evil: Defeating Terrorism, Despotism and Liberalism (Sean Hannity) to Treason: Liberal Treachery from the Cold War to the War on Terrorism (Ann Coulter).

To Toobin, the mistake Garland made was the same one he himself made when he covered McVeighs trial: both focused on the acts of a loner, instead of connecting the atrocity to the beginnings of the mainstreaming of rightwing extremism.

One of the most interesting parts of the book lies in Clintons prescience. Because the Oklahoma bombing came barely two years after the first bombing of the World Trade Center by Islamic fundamentalists, the media and many others assumed foreigners were the culprits again. Clinton was certain that wasnt the case.

This was domestic, homegrown, the militias, he told his staff. I know these people. Ive been fighting them all my life.

Clintons earliest political memory was of the Arkansas governor Orval Faubus refusing to allow Black students into Little Rock Central high school. Clinton remembered those opposed to integration, the faces twisted with rage. He also believed hatred was especially virulent in the early 1990s, because of Gingrichs sneering contempt and Limbaughs roiling bombast.

McVeighs own linear connection to old hatreds was confirmed by his membership of the Ku Klux Klan.

McVeigh saw himself as the leader of an army of extremists but Toobin is convinced, by the evidence, there were only two significant co-conspirators. The disastrous change in our own time lies in the way the internet has enabled millions of such people to connect. One study for the Department of Homeland Security found social media was used in 90% of US extremist plots.

Toobin writes: More than any other reason the internet accounts for the difference between McVeighs lonely crusade and the thousands who stormed the Capitol on January 6.

The terrorism expert Juliette Kayyem said the internet gave white-supremacist terrorism what amounts to a dating app online. In Toobins words, when Donald Trump became president, the wolf pack had a new leader.

This is one of the most important markers of the decline of the Republican party. After Oklahoma City, no politicians defended the attack. But after January 6, many Republicans did just that. Andrew Clyde, a Georgia congressman, said the riot resembled a normal tourist visit. Since leaving the White House, Trump has turned to a new level of feral zealotry, embracing QAnon, the antisemitic conspiracy theory he reposts on his social media platform, and regularly expressing eagerness to pardon rioters as soon as he enters the White House again.

This week provided the most dramatic evidence yet of how completely the political-media establishment has been corrupted by organized hatred. CNN, a formerly respectable organization, decided the best thing it could do was to give a national forum to the hero of millions of white supremacists. That decision alone drove home the urgency of the message of Toobins brilliant book.

{{topLeft}}

{{bottomLeft}}

{{topRight}}

{{bottomRight}}

{{.}}

Go here to read the rest:
Homegrown review: Timothy McVeigh and the rise of the Trumpist threat - The Guardian