The Atlantic
The Capitol Rioters Weren’t ‘Low Class’
The business owners, real-estate brokers, and service members who rioted acted not out of economic desperation, but out of their belief in their inviolable right to rule.
January 12, 2021
Updated at 2:20 p.m. ET on March 25, 2021.
The mob that breached the Capitol last week at President Donald Trump’s exhortation, hoping to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, was full of what you might call “respectable people.” They left dozens of Capitol Police officers injured, screamed “Hang Mike Pence!,” threatened to murder House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and set up a gallows outside the building. Some were extremists using the crowd as cover, but as federal authorities issue indictments, a striking number of those they name appear to be regular Americans.
Illustration: Elena Scotti (Photos: Getty Images, Shutterstock) (Shutterstock)
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If you, like a lot of people, woke up this morning to the news that pro-Trump rioters had stormed the U.S. Capitol, you’re probably thinking – what the hell is happening? As Jack L. Rozdilsky Associate Professor of Disaster and Emergency Management at York University wrote for The Conversation, the “anarchy” unfolded “as Congress was set to confirm President-elect Joe Biden’s victory”.