If you want a perfect emblem of the current state of Republican politics, look to the story of how Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., spent this past weekend.
On Friday night, Gosar attended a conference for unvarnished fascists, where the main organizer gave a speech calling for America to be white nationalist country and openly celebrated the insurrection spearheaded by Donald Trump on Jan. 6. On Saturday, while speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), Gosar lamely claimed to denounce “white racism,” clearly feeling that those magic words erased his participation in and support for those who are organizing white racists to take over the country through force.
t should be silly that Gosar believes that simply declaring “I denounce” is enough to negate all his concrete actions in favor of white nationalism, but the sad fact is that he has good reason to think it will work. After all, that’s how things have been working for years in this country. Call it the fascism two-step: First, Republicans do something overtly fascist. Then they wave off concerns about their fascism by faking umbrage and relying on the widespread belief that “it can never happen here” to paint their critics as hysterical. Gosar was just a particularly blunt and obvious example, but it’s the strategy that’s been used throughout Trump’s presidency and now is being heavily employed to minimize the attempted insurrection. Continue reading.