This article describes a situation during the 1/6 insurrection where GOP house members felt they had to vote to decertify the election against their own beliefs because they thought if they didn't, Republican activists would come to kill them and their families.
For all the people who #bothsides things, who say it's not that bad, who justify doing nothing by saying the other side is worse -- no. It is that bad, and it's not both sides.
www.theatlantic.com
I don't think anyone knows how to fix the current Republican Party but the first step has to be the sane people who are left recognizing there's a problem. An extremely, extremely serious problem.
On the House floor, moments before the vote, Meijer approached a member who appeared on the verge of a breakdown. He asked his new colleague if he was okay. The member responded that he was not; that no matter his belief in the legitimacy of the election, he could no longer vote to certify the results, because he feared for his family’s safety.
For all the people who #bothsides things, who say it's not that bad, who justify doing nothing by saying the other side is worse -- no. It is that bad, and it's not both sides.
What the GOP Does to Its Own Dissenters
After January 6, Peter Meijer thought he could help lead the Republican Party away from an abyss. Now he laughs at his own naïveté.
I don't think anyone knows how to fix the current Republican Party but the first step has to be the sane people who are left recognizing there's a problem. An extremely, extremely serious problem.
