We got another window to break
Very granola, very crunchy person turns trumpian insurrectionist:
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 children’s 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.
Some more time passes and she turns up at the January 6 insurrection.
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 you’re 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.”
The FBI is now looking for her.
“I was not part of a plot—organized, whatever,” Powell, who was speaking from an undisclosed location, told me. “I have no military background. . . . I’m a mom with eight kids. That’s it. I work. And I garden. And raise chickens. And sell cheese at a farmers’ market.” During the interview, she reviewed photographs and videos of the Bullhorn Lady, acknowledging that many of the images showed her, and offered detailed descriptions of the skirmishes they depicted.
Powell was born in Anaheim, California, and grew up on what she described as “the really bad side” of Fresno. She was raised by her mother, who worked at a local shop, and by her stepfather, a plumber. “It was rough, but she didn’t do without anything,” her mother, Deborah Lemons, who has had a strained relationship with Powell for the past several years, said. “She always had clothes. She always had food.” Lemons said that, when Powell was a child, she and her stepfather were the victims of a carjacking. Powell was held at gunpoint and her stepfather was kidnapped for several hours by their assailant. “Knowing what that feels like, I am just absolutely amazed that she would participate in something like this and not consider or have a lot of compassion for the people who were inside that building,” Lemons said, referring to the riot. “She well knows what it’s like to wonder if she’s gonna lose her life.”
Ideology can do strange things to people.
Three years ago, Powell separated from her husband. Since then, she has worked various part-time jobs to support her children, who range in age from four to their mid-twenties. She told me that she has a certification as a group fitness instructor, and has taken a course in alternative medicine. “She’s very granola, very crunchy,” a friend, who asked not to be identified, told me. “Does yoga, eats vegetarian, homeschools all their kids.”
And bashes out windows in the Capitol so that people can get inside to hunt down Democrats.
She wasn’t a fan of Trump’s in 2016, but the masks requirement changed everything.
Paula Keswick, who co-owns a local creamery that sold Powell cheese and yogurt, said that Powell was barred from working at some events after she refused to obey pandemic restrictions. “She was just adamant she was not going to wear a mask,” Keswick said. (Powell said that she now works part time at a local bookstore.) Last summer and fall, Powell said, she attended various protests, including anti-mask rallies. “If there was a protest in Harrisburg, I was there for almost all of them,” she told me. On July 4th, she drove for four hours to join members of several far-right groups, some of them armed, who gathered at the Gettysburg National Military Park, purportedly to protect Civil War monuments from desecration. At the rally, a man wearing a Black Lives Matter shirt was surrounded and aggressively questioned by about fifty demonstrators. In a video posted online, Powell is among the group…
Because masks, freedom, masks.
She told me that she did not share the racist views espoused by some on the far right. (In 2013, she tweeted, “what’s up, my niggas?” Powell defended the use of the N-word, saying, “My favorite book is ‘Gone with the Wind,’ and it uses that term freely.”)
GWtW is a hair-raisingly racist novel and movie, and did a lot to teach generations to be even more racist than they would have been anyway.
So she voted for Trump this time.
Concerns about mask requirements, which she called a “liberty issue,” were instrumental in her decision. She claimed that the risks of the coronavirus had been overstated by public-health officials, saying that she had not seen many deaths in her county. On November 5th, 2020, she wrote in a Facebook comment directed at a friend, “I won’t get a vaccine either. I hear what you’re saying about the whole world being in on the conspiracy as far as the corona virus goes.” On December 27th, she posted, “I’m unashamedly a ‘super spreader,’ ” attaching photographs of crowded, mask-free holiday and birthday parties. That day, she uploaded a video of a large maskless meal, during which several children said, “No masks,” and Powell could be heard saying, “The masks are total bullcrap. You guys just need to get out there and live. Get arrested—it’s fine.”
Have another bowl of granola.
Radicalised at the drop of a (MAGA) hat.
It sounds like the mask thing connected with such unpleasant undercurrents as racism and alternative medicine and the Trump thing let all these new feelings out to play.
I do worry a lot about whether this sort of thing has already happened to me and I’m wrong about everything. I hope worrying a lot about that is enough to prevent it happening…
You realise you’re all supposed to rush in and reassure me at this point, right?
Ha, sorry, no can do, I worry about (or at least poke at) the same thing.
That is not remotely surprising.
There is a nexus between organic food proponents, anti-vaxxers, and political conspiracy theorists. Trump and the coronavirus just increased the activism.
latsot, I do too. I hope that is a good sign; I meet a lot of people who never entertain the thought that they might be wrong, that they might be buying into bullshit. I don’t want to be one of those people, but damn it creates chaos when you always poke at yourself (to use OB’s term).
It’s when you stop wondering that it’s time to worry, but by then it’s too late. Insane people never wonder if they’re insane, they just know they’re the sane ones. Ditto cospiracy theorists, anti-vaxxers and the rest.
I work for a fellow who thinks that all news media is corrupt, that Jews control everything, the holocaust never happened, C19 is a conspiracy, and so much more.
He once asked me how many Youtube videos I watch, because that’s where the truth is, in a video clip made by the kid who failed fingerpainting in Kindergarten.
There’s no idea more dangerous than “I am one of the good guys”…
Roj, I like to watch the acrocats; I’m sure there is a lot of truth there, but it’s all spoken in meows, and I don’t understand it.
Naif:
Yup. This is totally true. It’s the same psychological impulse that motivates all of them. A certain unholy and seemingly incompatible mixture of distrust and yearning for authority, combined with denial and assertion of expertise/science.
One worry I have is that “trans skepticism” makes me such an outlier in the standard lefty-prog community. But I am also conflicted by my disdain for ever growing realms of pseudo-intellectualism on the left. And some of the ever finer parsing of group identity and victimhood is weird to me.
Latsot, you’re way beyond any hope of help or reassurance. But know that I’m standing right beside you asking the same question “Are we the bad guys?”
Brian @ 11 – Interesting. I don’t think I’ve ever been conflicted about my disdain for lefty pseudo-intellectualism. Other disdain-objects yes, but not that one. That one’s personal.
I have friends in various locations in the “liberal/leftist/progressive” matrix, and many routinely criticize others ostensibly on the same “side”. I have disagreements as well, and have shifted views over time in several topics. But almost none of my friends has expressed in public any criticism of transgender ideology, and my doing so has caused significant hemorrhaging of my social media set of friends. It is weird, I agree, and sad. I used to parrot some of the nonsense before I realized what it was, and I see others doing so, similarly mindlessly.
Acceptance of conspiracy-mongering is as bad among proggys as among rednecks. The all-powerful, demonic TERFs? The wholesale rejection of science that swarms around alt-med? The cultish ‘health’ practices? Look into the eyes of a convinced vegan.
Not to mention the science rejection that swirls into the vortex of environmental activism. Everything natural is good! Everything human is bad! Science is the enemy! Reality is the enemy, apparently.
There is a lot of need for good quality environmental activism, but unfortunately, much of it is not good quality, and much of it goes counter to the science.