“In many ways, Jan. 6, was a bug light. It brought extremists from all areas. And they all came with different skill sets,” Seamus Hughes, deputy director of the Program on Extremism at George Washington University, told NBC. “You have the militias on one side. On the other side, you have the merely curious, people wrapped up in the moment.”
Donald Trump lured the bugs to the light with his big lie, that the election had been stolen. He incited the insurrection with this lie even before the election that he lost. The lie was simple though not based on any facts, he claimed he had won in a landslide though hos opponent had more votes. For months he paid for an ad campaign built around the tag line, “Stop the Steal.” He still insists that his lawyers refer to him as the 45th president rather than the former president.
On that fateful day he whipped up the crowd saying, “And we fight, we fight lie hell, and if you don’t fight like hell you aren’t going to have a country anymore.” But this was only one of hundreds of comments aimed at inflaming the hate red of his followers. He had convinced them over the months that their votes had been stolen. He claimed in a tweet “Dead people voted.” He didn’t offer evidence, he didn’t need to. The lie would incite his followers. On December 30, 2020 he tweeted “JANUARY SIXTH, SEE YOU IN DC!” The bugs flew to the light believing they were doing their patriotic duty.