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People's Convoy Gives Up, Will Leave Washington, D.C., Area After Three Weeks of Doing Nothing

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  john-russell  •  2 years ago  •  14 comments

By:   Zachary Petrizzo (The Daily Beast)

People's Convoy Gives Up, Will Leave Washington, D.C., Area After Three Weeks of Doing Nothing
After creating a mini-city in Hagerstown, the trucker convoy will pack it up and leave town in the coming days.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



BYE BYE!


Three weeks after the so-called "People's Convoy" landed in Washington, D.C., the group is calling it quits after accomplishing nothing except injuringresidents and circling the Beltway.

Co-organizer Mike Landis announced Sunday night that the group would pack its things up in the coming days and drive back to California.

"So what I want to know is, what do you think about heading to California?" Landis asked, to the crowd's delight. "Sounds like a great plan," one convoy-goer yelled back.

Landis further said that convoy-goers who remain posted up in Hagerstown, Maryland—who have experienced many freezing nights while camped out in the small town an hour and a half north of D.C. proper—will enjoy a southerly route back to California. "We're gonna take a little more southern route, so it's a little warmer than this," he said.


He pledged to "come back to finish this job" in the metro area at some unspecified time, which seems highly unlikely as their crowd dwindles.

The announcement comes after lead organizer Brian Brase fled Hagerstown again over the weekend amid continued splintering within the group.


"I am not running away," Brase said in an attempt to convince the crowd Saturday night.

Convoy organizers didn't return The Daily Beast's request for comment on Sunday night.

Over the past three weeks, the convoy has struggled to gain traction with lawmakers in Washington. The group met only with Republican Sens. Ted Cruz, Ron Johnson, and a handful of House Republicans while never brokering a meeting with a single Democratic lawmaker despite attempts to do so.

From claiming that average D.C. residents who flipped off truckers during their never-ending Beltway loops were agents of "antifa," to being hilariously trolled by a single bicyclist and eventually getting a permit swatted down by the U.S. Park Service, the convoy kept stepping on rakes.

"Six antifa vehicles! Six antifa vehicles," one trucker yelled over the CB radio on March 16 while the convoy circled the Beltway and annoyed commuters as its presence triggered Metro PD to close exit ramps. "Keep your heads on a swivel!" another trucker chimed in.

During its final week in Hagerstown, the group became increasingly desperate, with two of its medics leaving and factions emerging between those who believed the convoy was "corrupt[ed]" and those who thought it wasn't. Morale was also dropping fast, and it appeared that the $2 million raised was drying up quickly, as organizers increasingly tightened the restrictions on how and when fuel reimbursements would be distributed to truckers.

Brase, the group's de facto leader, had previously told The Daily Beast the convoy could go on "indefinitely." "This is a process that we are hoping to do diplomatically," Brase said. "We're in it for the long haul."

"We could go indefinitely, right now, if that's what it takes," he concluded. "We are not going away."


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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    2 years ago

Jackasses , we hardly knew ye.

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
1.1  devangelical  replied to  JohnRussell @1    2 years ago

[deleted]

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
2  JBB    2 years ago

There were truckers protesting vaccine mandates?

Who knew? Who cared? What did they accomplish?

Nobody, nobody and not a damn thing. Zippididoda! 

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
2.1  Texan1211  replied to  JBB @2    2 years ago
There were truckers protesting vaccine mandates? Who knew? Who cared?

The hallmarks of truly peaceful protests!

 
 
 
Hal A. Lujah
Professor Guide
3  Hal A. Lujah    2 years ago

384

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
3.1  bbl-1  replied to  Hal A. Lujah @3    2 years ago

d's?

 
 
 
Hal A. Lujah
Professor Guide
3.1.1  Hal A. Lujah  replied to  bbl-1 @3.1    2 years ago

"Six antifa vehicles! Six antifa vehicles," one trucker yelled over the CB radio on March 16 while the convoy circled the Beltway and annoyed commuters as its presence triggered Metro PD to close exit ramps. "Keep your heads on a swivel!" another trucker chimed in.

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
3.1.2  bbl-1  replied to  Hal A. Lujah @3.1.1    2 years ago

Ah yes.  The 'foil' of the fools.

 
 
 
bbl-1
Professor Quiet
4  bbl-1    2 years ago

Hard to believe they were still there.

To quote a 'line' from the movie, "Forrest Gump."-------------(You stupid or something?)

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
5  Buzz of the Orient    2 years ago

And besides wasting fuel, wasting their time, they accomplished........???  Is there still a backup at the docks tying up the supply chain for need of truckers?  

 
 
 
Tacos!
Professor Guide
6  Tacos!    2 years ago

Every vacation must come to an end.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
7  seeder  JohnRussell    2 years ago

www.salon.com   /2022/03/28/ginni-thomas-and-the-truckers-convoy-why-the-right-seeks-refuge-in-conspiracy-theories/

Ginni Thomas and the truckers' convoy: Why the right seeks refuge in conspiracy theories

Amanda Marcotte 6-8 minutes   3/28/2022


In the end, the People's Convoy ended how it began: Pointlessly.

Daily Beast reporter and   Salon alum Zachary Petrizzo   reports that, after three weeks of trolling the residents of Washington D.C. by driving around aimlessly,   the truckers are finally going home . With great drama Sunday night, organizer Mike Landis declared that, while the truckers were packing up and going home, they would, at some vague future time, "come back to finish this job."

"I am not running away," said Landis' co-organizer Brian Brase before he ran away. 

All this insecure masculine preening about coming back and not running away is all the more comical because it continues to be obscure what, exactly, the truckers think they were fighting   for .

RELATED:  The "People's Convoy," like Trump's new social media platform, is another right-wing grift gone bust  

Originally,   the People's Convoy was organized   to protest COVID-19 pandemic restrictions. The problem was there aren't any meaningful restrictions to protest. Lockdowns haven't been a thing for at least a year.   President Joe Biden's vaccine mandates on private businesses   were decimated by the Supreme Court. And nearly all remaining mask mandates were falling just as the truckers were making their way to Maryland after the   CDC adjusted its recommendations  based upon hospitalization rates instead of mere case rates. 

The cynical answer — which is certainly true in part — is that   the leaders were "protesting" in favor of their own wallets , using the People's Convoy mainly as a vehicle for fundraising.

But   Brase also gave the game away Saturday  when he was taped telling his fellow protesters "I would have been inside that Capitol building" on January 6. As their critics have contended from the beginning, the People's Convoy seems to be   exploiting the politics of the pandemic   as a tool to recruit people into insurrectionist politics. The claims about the pandemic were flimsy because it was never really anything but a pathetic justification for an ugly, anti-democratic movement. 



Thus it's hard not to spot the parallels between the rich fantasy life of the truckers, who imagine themselves to be standing up to some "tyranny" that doesn't exist,   and the texts from Ginni Thomas , the Big Lie-hyping wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. What is surprising about the texts sent to Donald Trump's chief of staff Mark Meadows is, sadly, not that Thomas was all-in on Trump's attempted coup. It's well-know that Thomas is a far-right activist and maximal Trump loyalist, of exactly the sort that would support a fascist coup. No, what is genuinely shocking is how delusional she apparently remains about her own actions. 

Like the truckers, Thomas appears to be   living entirely in a right-wing fantasy land  constructed through QAnon postings and the ravings of professional conspiracy theorists. She literally told Meadows, "Biden crime family & ballot fraud co-conspirators" were "being arrested" at "right now" and "will be living in barges off GITMO to face military tribunals for sedition." Spoiler alert: That wasn't happening. 

RELATED:  For "the integrity of the court": Why Clarence Thomas' wife is a major problem for the Supreme Court

Thomas also texted a link to a video titled "TRUMP STING w CIA Director Steve Pieczenik, The Biggest Election Story in History, QFS-BLOCKCHAIN" to Meadows, noting, "I hope this is true" and asking, "Possible???" The video was created by Steve Pieczenik, a professional conspiracy theorist who has argued that both the Sandy Hook and Las Vegas mass shootings were false flags. He even,   as Will Sommer of the Daily Beast reports , once claimed to have arrested Pope Francis. 

As Andrew Prokop of Vox points out , these were private texts not meant for public consumption and so it's safe to assume that Thomas actually believes all this, on some level anyway. In contrast, Sidney Powell, the lawyer-turned-conspiracy-theorist that played a prominent role in the coup effort, has been   defending herself in a major defamation case   by claiming "no reasonable person" could believe all the lies she was telling about the 2020 election. No one seems to have told Thomas that as she was repeating Powell's lies excitedly in private texts to Trump's chief of staff. 



Thomas appears to be so enmeshed in right-wing conspiracy theories and so allergic to reality-based sources of information that she broke her own brain. A similar situation can be seen happening with the People's Convoy.   As journalist Jared Holt explained on Twitter , an analysis of external links from People's Convoy chats shows that the participants have closed themselves off from fact-based media and appear to be entirely dependent on other conspiracy theorists for their "information." 

The concept of "belief" in these circumstances is always ambiguous. Whether Trumpers "really" believe their conspiracy theories is impossible to know for certain, and there's probably a wide range between people that are true believers, people who are knowingly lying, and all   the people in-between who mostly don't care enough   about what's true to ask if they "really" believe what they're saying. But what can be said for certain is that none of these people came honestly to the "belief" that vaccines are evil or that the 2020 election was stolen. Instead, they embrace these narratives because they are useful rationalizations for the deeper, truer belief that drives them: That the right is entitled to monopolize power, and that obstacles like "democracy" and "freedom" should not get in their way. 

Ultimately, what Thomas and the truckers are coming up against is a problem that's   plagued the GOP for so long that I wrote an entire book about it : Their actual beliefs are indefensible by any reasonable or evidence-based standard. So, instead of making their arguments directly, they swaddle them in lies and conspiracy theories. They rail against vaccine mandates that don't exist. They rave about election theft that didn't happen. All to justify that which cannot be justified on its own: Their belief that they are entitled to rule no matter what. And the more unjustifiable their actual beliefs become, the deeper they dive down the rabbit hole of conspiracy theories, rather than face the truth of what they've become. 

 
 
 
freepress
Freshman Silent
8  freepress    2 years ago

"Don't go away mad, just go away." The tribe of "Don Quixote", chasing imaginary windmills of grievances.

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
9  Drinker of the Wry    2 years ago

Intercepted last week.

*mournful lone fiddle music fades in*

My Dearest Abigail,

It has now been nigh on two weeks since we commenced our Long March from Hagerstown. Despite daily sorties to center the attention on ourselves proclaim the cause of freedom, the locals are at their best ignoring us, and at their worst making rude gestures toward our vehicles. Now the weather has turned, and the parking situation is intolerable. Nonetheless, we shall persevere until our goals are achieved, or the funds from our livestreams dry up. Pray for our people, pray for our cause.

I remain truly yours,
Orville

P.S. Send Slim Jims

 
 

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