(Pink Hat Bullhorn Lady) A Pennsylvania Mother's Path to Insurrection
Before the pandemic, Rachel Powell, a forty-year-old mother of eight from western Pennsylvania, sold cheese and yogurt at local farmers markets and used Facebook mostly to discuss yoga, organic food, and her childrens baseball games. But, last year, Powell began to post more frequently, embracing more extreme political views. Her interests grew to include conspiracy theories about covid-19 and the results of the Presidential election, filtered through such figures as Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani, and the Infowars founder Alex Jones. On May 3, 2020, Powell wrote on Facebook, One good thing about this whole CV crisis is that I suddenly feel very patriotic. Expressing outrage at the restrictions that accompanied the pandemic, she wrote, It isnt to late to wake up, say no, and restore freedoms. Several days later, she posted a distraught seven-minute video, shot outside a local gym that had been closed. Police need to see theres people that are citizens that are not afraid of you guys showing up in your masks. Were going to be here banded together, and were not afraid of you, she said. Maybe they should be a little bit afraid.
On January 6th, during the storming of the United States Capitol, Powell made good on that threat. Videos show her, wearing a pink hat and sunglasses, using a battering ram to smash a window and a bullhorn to issue orders. People should probably coördinate together if youre going to take this building, she called out, leaning through a shattered window and addressing a group of rioters already inside. We got another window to break to make in-and-out easy.
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Powell said that she derived her beliefs a little bit from everywhere, and that she was not a follower of any mainstream news source. You can go online, go on Facebook now, and dig up a thousand different links about it, she said, of the election-fraud conspiracy theories. She said that Rudy Giuliani, Trumps personal attorney, had been a significant source of information, and that she had watched remarks he gave in Gettysburg, on November 25th, during a widely discredited state-senate committee hearing in which he and several witnesses made baseless claims of voter fraud. That was pretty moving to me, she said. I learned a lot from Giuliani and peoples testimonies.
Joan Donovan, a scholar of media manipulation and extremism, who serves as the research director of Harvards Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy, told me that Powells process of radicalization was increasingly common. You dont have to go to the dark corners of the Web to find this anymore, she said. Through these influencers, through these political propagandists, its all brought in through your news feed, through your home page. Donovan said that friends comments often provide an echo chamber for misinformation, and that every click on extremist content can prompt social-media algorithms to produce more of the same. Giuliani, in particular, has proved to be a popular entry point into the world of misinformation. There were a lot of people like her in that crowd, Donovan told me, referring to Powells participation in the Capitol riot. Theyre going to figure out ways to get back online and to keep communicating with each other. And, if Trump does figure out a way back on platforms where he can build power in the way he did before, this group of people is going to continue to be dangerous and menacing.
Lots more at:
https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/a-pennsylvania-mothers-path-to-insurrection-capitol-riot