A Field Guide to White Supremacy Quotes
A Field Guide to White Supremacy
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Kathleen Belew95 ratings, 4.01 average rating, 13 reviews
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A Field Guide to White Supremacy Quotes
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“The insurrection was meant not as a mass casualty attack, but as a show of force, to prove that a band of white self-proclaimed “patriots” could strike at the heart of democracy. As we untangle the relationships between groups and activists, between lawmakers and police who aided and abetted their cause, and between competing narratives of the event, our only hope of confronting this threat to the idea of America is in better understanding our history.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“But at this moment in United States political history the coconstitution of nativism and populism, held together by racial demonology, props open a door between Far Right extremists and the mainstream of U.S. politics. The intensification of domestic and global wealth disparity, the growing dysfunction of U.S. political institutions, and the long-term effects of climate catastrophe which will continue to drive refugees across the U.S. border all provide fodder for nativist populism and justification of its brutality.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“The culmination of the Trumpist GOP–Far Right alliance occurred on January 6, 2021, when hundreds of violent protestors stormed the U.S. Capitol to prevent the certification of the presidential election results.33 Trump mostly used populist performance in daily White House press briefings and on Twitter to rebuff expert knowledge and epidemiological protocols coming from the World Health Organization (WHO) or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (the U.S. agency primarily responsible for pandemic response), to tout untested treatments like the antimalarial drug Hydroxchloroquine, to refuse to wear a mask, to call for the “liberation” of states from lockdown orders, and to ratchet up nationalism and nativism.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“Trump wove together a vivid racialized and gendered conspiracy theory that links immigration, Islam, crime, socialism, and the Democratic Party in one associative chain. This demonization was not new. It fit squarely within what the late political theorist Michael Rogin called the “countersubversive tradition” in the United States—a persecutory fantasy centered on the imagined destructive power of women, immigrants, communists, and people of color that has been used to justify extraordinary violence and repression.31”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“Survey data at the time indicated that belief in birtherism correlates strongly with high levels of racial resentment. Even by the middle of his second term, up to a third of U.S. citizens believed that Obama either was born abroad or might have been.22 At the same moment, nativist populism”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“Thus anti-immigrant rhetoric, like other GOP talking points, lost its use value for Republicans by the mid-1990s. As Clinton strategist Mark Penn explained about his candidate’s continued success, “We did this by co-opting the Republicans on all their issues—getting tough on welfare, tough on crime, balancing the budget, and cracking down on illegal immigration.”21 Nativist politics largely lay dormant”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“The importance of the Buchanan campaign lies not in its capacity to win the nomination or the national election but in its organization of those forces into a coherent political coalition,” he wrote. “That coalition includes the remnants of the ‘Old Right,’ as well as various single-issue constituencies (pro-lifers, anti-immigration activists, protectionists) to which Buchanan is one of the few voices to speak.” For Francis, Buchanan had begun a process that would illuminate “new social forces that only now are forming a common political consciousness”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“Immigrants were depicted as outside invaders assaulting American culture, language, and institutions. As such, nativism brought the issue of nationalism to the center of right-wing populism in a way that had not been present before. Domestically, it meant that the American nation had to defend itself and its borders from nonwhite others who would destroy it. Internationally, it meant isolationism and an embrace of nationalisms elsewhere.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“One was the idea that immigrants were a direct threat to jobs and wages, allowing racist populists to talk about the rights of American workers.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“right-wing populist rhetoric, immigrants take jobs, opportunities, and basic social goods away from hardworking native-born white Americans.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“In the language of “Middle America” and the “Silent Majority,” Trump linked anti-immigrant politics to issues of middle- and working-class economic anxiety, deindustrialization, political powerlessness, and a sense of declining self-worth among white men.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“The founding documents of the United States promised life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness not for all, but for white, property-owning men.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“White supremacy is a complex web of ideology, systems, privileges, and personal beliefs that create unequal outcomes along racial lines across multiple categories of life including wealth, freedom, health, and happiness.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“This was, make no mistake, a domestic terror attack on U.S. democracy, aimed at derailing free elections through the use of violent force.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“included white power armed militants, disgruntled military veterans, QAnon conspiracy proponents, radical evangelicals, and fervent members of the Trump base, arrived by the thousands.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
“A long summer of peaceful mass protests against racist policing and systemic racism followed, escalating into rioting and looting in some cities. At many of these riots, militant-right activists ranging from antigovernment to white power militants delivered bombs, incendiary devices, and weapons to escalate peaceful demonstrations into confrontation with the militarized police forces. They assassinated law enforcement officers, plotted attacks on civil protests, and launched a major and coordinated attack on American communities.”
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
― A Field Guide to White Supremacy
