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SFSilentNoMore 1 point ago +1 / -0

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I know the people that stormed the Capitol building as described by the head of Capitol police were NOT MAGA people. When you read his letter he states having been around us and noted that our demeaner and theirs was not anything similar. https://static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2021/02/Letter_to_Congressional_leaders_02012021.pdf

This is a MUST read and save letter for posterity and historical purposes for future generations.

on one of these videos there is a reference ie fact check type notation.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Patriot-movement-American-movement

I think the FBI and CIA are attempting to prostitute the idea of these extremists and superimpose their findings on to the Make America Great Again Movement - I can see how easily they could trick people to think WE think what those folks thought from the militia and the Patriot movement.

CREEPY but now we have a clue as to how they can try to make US domestic terrorists

Tied directly to Timothy McViegh.
Supporters of the Patriot movement were able to disseminate and discuss their ideas widely and cheaply through the Internet, which became accessible to the general public in the early 1990s.

READ MORE views of Oklahoma City bombers Oklahoma City bombingIn Oklahoma City bombing …views characteristic of the broad Patriot movement, which feared authoritarian plots by the U.S. federal government and corporate elites. At its most extreme, the Patriot movement denied the legitimacy of the federal government and law enforcement. One manifestation of the rightist upsurge was the formation of armed militia groups, which,…

READ MORE Learn More! MILITIA MOVEMENT ArticleAdditional Info Home Politics, Law & Government Law, Crime & Punishment Militia movement American movement

WRITTEN BY John Philip Jenkins Distinguished Professor of History, Baylor University. Author of A History of the United States, Mystics and Messiahs: Cults and New Religions in America, Synthetic Panics: The Symbolic... See Article History Militia movement, in the United States, movement of radical paramilitary groups whose members generally accept highly conspiratorial interpretations of politics and view themselves as defenders of traditional freedoms against government oppression.

Militias are by no means a new phenomenon in the United States. Historical parallels include the network of fascist and “shirt” movements in the mid-1930s and the well-armed rightist Minutemen of the early 1960s. New militia groups were founded in the late 1970s and flourished despite laws in some 40 states that prohibited militias, paramilitary groups, or both. Some of these groups espoused fascist or anti-Semitic and other racist views—such as the belief that the United States is ruled by a Jewish-dominated tyrannical Zionist Occupational Government (the “ZOG”)—and promoted neo-Nazi literature, such as William Pierce’s The Turner Diaries (1978; published under Pierce’s pseudonym, Andrew Macdonald), a fictional account of how a militant anti-Semitic group uses violence to achieve world dominance.

Some militia groups also accepted the eccentric constitutional doctrines of the Common Law movement, which denies the authority of all governmental institutions above the level of the county. Even the militia movement’s least-committed members tended to believe that the United States government undermines American liberties, in part through its acquiescence in an international totalitarian regime, the so-called New World Order. Government oppression, they argue, manifests itself in the imposition of income taxes, gun control legislation, and environmental restrictions on private property, especially in the western United States.

In the 1980s the militia movement conceived of the American public as an “unorganized militia” that would supplement both the national armed forces and the National Guard of each state. As new private militias trained and armed themselves, however, they increasingly adopted overtly antigovernment policies. During the 1980s increasing numbers of people were attracted to survivalism, a movement that advocated a retreat to self-sufficient and well-armed rural settlements in anticipation of a general breakdown of society. Survivalists often warned of the imminent collapse of the United States as a result of nuclear attack.

Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content. Subscribe Now Subsequently, various antigovernment factions, including survivalists, members of the Common Law movement, white supremacists, and armed opponents of taxes and abortion, coalesced in the “Patriot movement,” which may well have attracted millions of sympathizers. Supporters of the Patriot movement were able to disseminate and discuss their ideas widely and cheaply through the Internet, which became accessible to the general public in the early 1990s.

Various events during this period served to galvanize the Patriot movement and its burgeoning militias. In 1992, at Ruby Ridge, the Idaho property of white separatist Randy Weaver, Weaver’s wife and son were killed during a controversial standoff with law enforcement agents. In the following year, the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, was raided by federal agents; following a protracted standoff, during which agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) attempted to enter the building, some 80 members of the group died in a fire. From the perspective of the militia movement, both events demonstrated the federal government’s persecution and killing of dissidents. The militias subsequently attracted legions of supporters, especially in Western states but also in some Midwestern states, notably Michigan. At its peak, the Northern Michigan Regional Militia claimed more than 1,000 committed members and thousands more sympathizers. By the mid-1990s the ranks of the militia movement had swelled to about 40,000 members among some 900 groups (some claims put the number of members at more than 250,000).

The movement reached a turning point in 1995 when Timothy McVeigh, a supporter of the militia movement’s ideals, exploded a massive homemade bomb at a federal building in Oklahoma City on April 19—the date was chosen to commemorate the Battles of Lexington and Concord in 1775 in the American Revolution and the fiery end of the siege of the Branch Davidian compound in 1993—killing 168 people. McVeigh and his associates had been connected with militia groups in Michigan and elsewhere, and, although no militia group was specifically linked to the crime, there was a widespread impression that the bombing was the logical outcome of the kind of antigovernment paranoia the militias fomented. Public revulsion and a government crackdown eventually reduced the influence and size of the militia movement to about 200 groups by the beginning of the 21st century. In 2009, following the election the previous year of the first African American president of the United States, Barack Obama, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the FBI warned that the right-wing militias and white-supremacist groups in the country were winning new recruits by stoking fears of gun control and expanded welfare rolls and by exploiting resentment created by the economic recession that began in late 2007. Some observers of the movements, however, were skeptical of those claims.