
This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on March 24, 2023. It is shared here with permission.
While former U.S. President Donald Trumpâs 2024 campaign insists it is purely coincidental that his planned Saturday rally in Waco, Texas falls during the 30th anniversary of a deadly 51-day siege targeting a religious cult, some Texans and extremism experts arenât buying it.
Since law enforcementâincluding Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agentsâcarried out the botched operation at a Branch Davidian compound near Waco from February 28 to April 19 in 1993, the event has been a source of anti-government sentiment for the likes of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh and U.S. militia movement members.
âWhen Donald Trump flies into Waco on Saturday evening for the first major campaign event of his 2024 reelection quest, dog ears wonât be the only ones twitching,â the Houston Chronicle editorial board argued Thursday. âTrump doesnât do subtle; dog-whistle messages are not his style. The more apt metaphor is the blaring air horn of a Mack 18-wheeler barreling down I-10.â
ââWacoâ has become an Alamo of sorts, a shrine for the Proud Boys, the Three Percenters, the Oath Keepers, and other anti-government extremists and conspiracists.â
Houston Chronicle editorial board
âThe GOP-friendly city of WacoâTrump won McLennan County by more than 20 percentage points in 2020âhas every right, of course, to host a former president, the leading contender for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, but âWaco,â the symbol⊠means something else entirely,â the board stressed. ââWacoâ has become an Alamo of sorts, a shrine for the Proud Boys, the Three Percenters, the Oath Keepers, and other anti-government extremists and conspiracists.â
The twice-impeached former president faces potential legal trouble in multiple states and at the federal level for everything from a hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels to trying to overturn his 2020 electoral loss and inciting the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Trump, a documented serial liar, took to his Truth Social platform last weekend to say that he would be arrested Tuesdayâas part of a New York grand jury investigation into the hush moneyâand call for protests. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said Thursday that Trump âcreated a false expectation that he would be arrested.â
In a Truth Social post on Friday, Trump warned of âdeath and destructionâ if he is indictedâwhich led the watchdog Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) to charge that âheâs not being subtle, heâs threatening prosecutors with violence.â
The Chronicle board tied Trumpâs legal problems to his Waco trip:
Thirty years later, the anti-government paramilitary groups feeding off lies about the âdeep stateâ and a stolen election periodically visit the modest, little chapel on the site of the sprawling, ramshackle building that burned to the ground. Although the Branch Davidians had nothing to do with anti-government conspiracists, chapel construction was funded by loud-mouthed conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.
Militia members and conspiracists know exactly what Trumpâs Waco visit symbolizes. They have heard him castigate the FBI and the âdeep state,â particularly after agents searched for classified documents at Mar-a-Lago. How theyâll respond to his remarks, particularly if he shows up as the first former president in American history to face criminal charges, has law enforcement in Waco and beyond taking every precaution. What he says will likely set the tone for the presidential campaign to come. Every American should be concerned.
Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung wrote Friday in an email to The New York Times that Waco was chosen âbecause it is centrally located and close to all four of Texasâ biggest metropolitan areasâDallas/Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, and San Antonioâwhile providing the necessary infrastructure to hold a rally of this magnitude.â
The Chronicle board noted other local options, writing that âthe Waco Regional Airport and an expected crowd of 10,000 or so fit the bill. Of course, Temple or Belton or Killeen (home to Fort Hood) would have fit the bill, as wellâwithout the weight of symbolism.â
The Texas newspaper was far from alone in sounding the alarm about Trumpâs upcoming trip to Waco.
âWaco is hugely symbolic on the far right,â Heidi Beirich, co-founder of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, told USA TODAY. âThereâs not really another place in the U.S. that you could pick that would tap into these deep veins of anti-government hatredâChristian nationalist skepticism of the governmentâand I find it hard to believe that Trump doesnât know that Waco represents all of these things.â
âWaco has a sense of grievance among people that I know heâs got to be trying to tap into,â Beirich added. âHeâs being unjustly accused, like the Branch Davidians were unjustly accusedâand the deep state is out to get them all.â
The newspaper pointed out that âthough Trump has held more than 100 campaign rallies and similar events, and mounted a near-daily schedule of them during his campaigns, this weekâs appears to be the first one ever held in Waco.â
Megan Squire, deputy director for data analytics at the Southern Poverty Law Center, also rejected the Trump campaignâs suggestion that the trip isnât connected to the 1993 standoff and what means to many members of the far-right.
âGive me a break! Thereâs no reason to go to Waco, Texas, other than one thing,â Squire told USA TODAY. âI canât even fathom what thatâs about other than just a complete dog whistleâactually forget dog whistle, that is just a train whistle to the folks who still remember that event and are still mad about it.â
Even some right-wing figures are openly making the connection, as TIME reported: âPosting on the messaging app Telegram, far-right activist and conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer called the rally in Waco âvery symbolic!â A few MAGA influencers on social media noted the choice of location, with one calling it âa meaningful shot across the brow of the deep state.’â
Nicole Hemmer, a Vanderbilt University associate professor of history and author of Messengers of the Right: Conservative Media and the Transformation of American Politics and Partisans: The Conservative Revolutionaries Who Remade American Politics in the 1990s, wrote in a Friday opinion piece for CNNthat Trumpâs trip is âa provocation of historic significance.â
âWhen Trump became president in 2016, rather than becoming synonymous with the federal government as previous chief executives had done, he styled himself as both its victim and its adversary, promoting conspiracies about the deep state and encouraging supporters to keep him in power by any means necessary,â Hemmer highlighted. âIn choosing Waco as the kickoff site for his campaign rallies, he has signaled that his courtship of extremist groups will continue, and that he sees his role as a pivotal figure in the far-right mythos as central to his efforts to retake the presidency.â
Source: Therealnews.com