In the weeks after the 9/11 terrorist attack, former President George W. Bush famously declared in a joint address to Congress: “Either you are with us or you are with the terrorists.” Apparently to today’s Republicans, that axiom only applies if the terrorists are brown or Black — because when it comes to the overwhelmingly white mob that attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, the GOP is doing everything it can to whitewash and downplay the attack.
But what we saw that day was by definition an “insurrection,” as well as an act of “domestic terrorism.” Period. That’s not hyperbole or my opinion. FBI Director Christopher Wray labeled it the latter in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee in March.
If we must engage with the GOP’s latest effort to distract from the seriousness of the violence we saw in January, the law is clear.
As 18 U.S. Code Section 2331 provides, “domestic terrorism” involves “acts dangerous to human life” in violation of the law. Given that 140 police officers were injured, some seriously, we can say this element was fulfilled.
Secondly, these acts must have been intended to “influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion.” The goal of the attack was to prevent Congress from certifying President Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory. Even House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said as much a week after the attack when he declared on the House floor that “the violent mob that descended upon this body” on Jan. 6 “acted to disrupt Congress’ constitutional responsibility.”
Despite these undisputed facts, some in the GOP believe that the “T-word” only applies when the attacker’s skin color is anything other than white. Take, for example, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., who just last month called Black Lives Matter “the strongest terrorist threat in our county.” And in 2018, Greene wildly warned when two Muslims were elected to Congress — Democratic Reps. Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib — that it was part of “an Islamic invasion of our government.”
Meanwhile, when an actual invasion of angry white supporters of former President Donald Trump lays siege to our Capitol, Greene finds other words to use. Last week on the House floor, Greene first employed the GOP’s classic whataboutism, equating isolated instances of violence during last summer’s Black Lives Matter protests with a terrorist attack upon our Capitol incited by the president of the United States to overturn the 2020 election. Greene then voiced her concerns for those arrested for attacking the Capitol, claiming they were “being abused” in jail, with some “being held for 23 hours a day in solitary confinement.”
Then there’s Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., who gave the keynote address at a white nationalist event in February. In 2016, Gosar bemoaned that former President Barack Obama “refuses to define the enemy for whom and what they are — radical Islamist terrorists — and refuses to put forth an effective war strategy.” But when it comes to Jan. 6, Gosar last week painted the people who attacked the Capitol as “peaceful protesters,” while shaming the Department of Justice for pursuing those involved in the attack, claiming the agency was “harassing peaceful patriots across the country.”







