historical about this and go back. so before there was this focus on domestic terrorism, before there was al qaeda, there was oklahoma city, there was timothy mcveigh. so right wing white supremacist terrorism is not new and has been really bad in the past. this is a different sort of manifestation of it. it has a leader or inspirer in donald trump who is more a presence on the national scene than, say, in mcveigh s day there was no one really comparable. and there are millions of people who seem to have bought into the maga idea. and it s that fringe of the maga idea that slides into that terrorist category or potential terrorist category that should really worry us all, i think.
day one of glastonbury was all about festivalgoers finding a place to camp. they fell into many different categories. there were the late arrivals. categories. there were the late arrivals- - - categories. there were the late arrivals. ., ., , ., , ., arrivals. you are trying to spot a iece of arrivals. you are trying to spot a piece of ground arrivals. you are trying to spot a piece of ground big arrivals. you are trying to spot a piece of ground big enough - arrivals. .. you are trying to spot a piece of ground big enough or- arrivals. you are trying to spot a| piece of ground big enough or how big a tent? it is piece of ground big enough or how bi a tent? , ., ., , big a tent? it is for man but we have not big a tent? it is for man but we have got things big a tent? it is for man but we have got things that big a tent? it is for man but we have got things that are - big a tent? it is for man but we have got things that are here . have got things that are here already have
militia then, to the oath keepers on january 6th? 100%. you know, mcveigh was inspired by this horrible novel, the turner diaries, which talks about a rebellion against an evil federal government. quite a few of the january 6th insurrectionists read the turner diaries. if you look at their obsession with gun rights, just like mcveigh, their belief in violence, and the big surprise to me was the obsession with the founding fathers. this claim that, we are like the revolutionaries of 1776 against evil tyrants. that mcveigh felt that s why the story was so interesting to me. at one level, it was history. but it felt very contemporary because mcveigh s views are part of where we re at today. it reads it s a great read.
they dominated headlines in the anti-government lone wolf. you think it s no the complete story. talk about the influences. i think it is relative today. if you look at mcveigh, you see that he was not a loner. not by himself. he was part of a movement. he was part of the conservative movement. a lot of people remember he was outraged by what the fbi did at waco. he was just outraged about what happened a year earlier when bill clinton signed the assault weapons ban. the obsession with guns. the belief in violence. the obsession with the founding