FROM THE ARCHIVE
SUBPEONA BANNON!
THE LEAD UP TO JAN 6 INSURRECTION
Molly Butler / Media Matters
YouTube terminated Steve Bannon's account. He had blood on his hands after months of calling for revolution and violence.
WRITTEN BY MADELINE PELTZ
MEDIA MATTERS
PUBLISHED 01/08/21
One of former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon’s mantras is “action, action, action” -- a call to his followers to be engaged and ready for political fights. On January 8, YouTube finally acted, removing Bannon's War Room account, after months of Bannon calling for revolution and violence.
On January 6, a group of pro-Trump insurrectionists took action, staging an attack on the U.S. Capitol to try to overturn the outcome of the 2020 presidential election and causing the deaths of five people. Some of the rioters described it as “the beginning of another American revolution.”
During the insurrection itself, one of the insurrectionists directly echoed Bannon:
In the lead-up to the attack, Bannon used his YouTube channel to repeatedly call for violence and revolution around the 2020 election while spreading false claims that it was being stolen from President Donald Trump. I’ve compiled a noncomprehensive review of this rhetoric, from before and after the insurrection.
Two days prior to Election Day, Bannon compared the response to the 2020 election to the American Revolution and likened himself to the founders who were labeled “insurrectionists” -- what he called the “Bannon types” of the era. Co-host Jack Maxey reminded his listeners that the founders “pledged their lives and their sacred honor” to the cause, and Bannon asked, “What have you guys done out there in the audience?”
Steve Bannon compares himself to John Adams
STEVE BANNON (CO-HOST): We’re not backing off of this, are you kidding me? This is what we’re built for, this is what we live for, right? Human fate, human destiny, all in your hands. Human action. You control your own fate. Your life, your country’s life, is what you make it. You think those guys before the revolution had to make a decision -- we wouldn’t have ever broken off from the British Empire.
JACK MAXEY (CO-HOST): Remember, those guys pledged their lives and their sacred honor.
BANNON: Sacred honor. Donald J. Trump took an oath to God on the Holy Bible. Took an oath to God before the world, right? An oath that’s been passed down from time immemorial, from Washington — right? — in an unbroken chain. Took that oath. What have you guys done out there in the audience?
MAXEY: And a third of those guys who signed the Declaration of Independence kept that oath and gave their lives.
BANNON: Yep. I tell you -- had to fight for it. And by the way, they knew they were going to hang. That’s what Franklin told them. Here’s what happened: They tried to redress it with the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Dickinson, John Dickinson, a Quaker, who I understand his argument. Hey, we’re Englishman; let’s try to work this out with Parliament.
They sent the bill of grievances, what they said, and Dickinson said, hey, we’re going to go to the king and we’re going to get this worked out. And I want John Adams, I want the hotheads, I want the Bannon types to shut up because they’re stirring trouble, they’re insurrectionists. I want them to shut up, I want to get them -- these Boston guys, that Sam Adams guy, this Hancock guy is nothing but a -- they’re all gun runners, they’re all making money bringing contraband in, they’re all scumbags. Right? That’s what they said. Hancock is a bad guy, Sam Adams is a bad guy, John Adams is a lawyer for the bad guys. Shut up because they’re insurrectionists. We’ll work this out.
And the king came back, he thought it -- they sent it to him, the bill of grievances from Dickinson, they got it, they reviewed it, sent it back, here it is, how about this. It’s treason and if you keep it up you’re all going to hang, right?
...
We’ve gone through this before, this is an inflection point, it’s a fourth turning, this is an inflection point. Didn’t tell you it’s going to be easy, it’s not going to be easy. All you have to do is have his back.
And the day before the violent pro-Trump mob overtook the U.S. Capitol, Bannon declared on his War Room: Pandemic podcast that “all hell is going to break loose tomorrow.”
His violent talking points undermining the democratic process extend back to months before the election, and they continued in its aftermath:
In September, he launched a national speaking tour called “The Plot to Steal 2020,” pushing various fantasies about election fraud, “lawfare,” and impending violence by liberals that would supposedly be used to elect Joe Biden to the presidency.
On the September 21 edition of War Room: Pandemic, he described the run-up to the election as “the pre-game to the civil war in the United States.”
During that same broadcast, he claimed Democrats are “trying to foist an illegitimate regime onto the republic of the United States. That would be Joe Biden.”
On September 28, he told his audience on YouTube the election would “be a knife fight” and said Trump needs “knife fighters.” He also challenged them to become election officials and “contest every ballot.”
On Election Day, before polls had closed, Bannon hosted Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani to declare Trump the winner. Suggesting the president would declare victory that night, Bannon said: “We're going to set the ground rules ... about not stealing this election.”
On November 5, Bannon called for Dr. Anthony Fauci and FBI Director Christopher Wray to be beheaded, saying: “I'd put the heads on pikes — right? — I'd put them at the two corners of the White House as a warning to federal bureaucrats.”
He also called for Attorney General Bill Barr to “arrest Jack Dorsey today” after Twitter put ”disputed” labels on Trump’s tweets falsely claiming victory.
Bannon declared that pro-Trump demonstrations show “we control the streets now,” comparing the situation to the American Revolution and the Civil War.
On November 4, Bannon compared the 2020 election results to what Aaron Burr supposedly said about the duel that killed Alexander Hamilton: “‘When it came to that split second, Hamilton’s hand shook and mine didn’t, right? So whose hand is going to shake today?” The former Trump adviser then added, “I saw the war dance. We got a good war dance. Don’t need a war dance, need a war party.”
Bannon targeted a Michigan man who stood up for voting rights, baselessly suggesting he is a domestic terrorist who should be punished like dissidents during China’s Cultural Revolution.
With votes still being counted, Bannon appeared on Fox Business to declare that “Trump is already in his second term.”
On November 21, he used bogus voter fraud claims to declare that “we’re not going to count all the votes.”
Pro-Trump lawyer Lin Wood appeared on War Room: Pandemic and called for Trump supporters to do what “our Founding Fathers did in 1776” and “be prepared to fight for their freedom” against “people trying to take over our country.” Bannon said Wood makes him “proud to be an American and a southerner.”
Now that his persistent fantasizing has become a painful reality, Bannon suddenly doesn’t want anything to do with it -- yet he also didn’t want to lose the hardcore audience he’s whipped up to violence. Since the events of January 6, Bannon has tried to walk a thin line:
After the Capitol insurrection, Bannon directed Trump supporters to “color inside the lines,” meaning they should not resort to violence, and to “color boldy.”
He also said that “you can’t justify” the violence that took place at the Capitol because “we don’t believe in taking matters into our own hands; we believe in the rule of law,” then blamed Vice President Mike Pence and “feckless Republicans” for failing Trump and inviting the riot.
He also downplayed the violence after the fact, saying, “It looks like 99% of the people are really peaceful, staying in the plaza.”
But his objections ring hollow, especially as he’s continued to discourage his audience from changing course or reconsidering their support for Trump “because we know you’re not summer soldiers or sunshine patriots.”
After an insurrectionist at the Capitol repeated Steve Bannon's call for violence, his show is still streaming via Google Play
WRITTEN BY MADELINE PELTZ
MEDIA MATTER
PUBLISHED 01/09/21 2
Yesterday I reported that an insurrectionist at the Capitol on Wednesday had repeated Steve Bannon’s call to put federal bureaucrats' “heads on pikes.”
At the time of Bannon’s remarks, YouTube issued a strike against the former White House chief strategist’s channel and suspended his show War Room: Pandemic from streaming for a week. Twitter removed him from the platform altogether, Bannon’s lawyers dropped him as a client, and Spotify later followed suit.
After Bannon made more than a half a dozen calls for violence and revolution, YouTube finally took the long overdue step of suspending his channel.
But it comes too late; YouTube deserves no congratulations.
We’ve now seen how his words have been directly connected to a violent insurrection. Only after the worst possible outcome became a terrifying reality did YouTube decide to enforce its own policies against inciting violence and pushing misinformation related to the 2020 election.
YouTube’s parent company Google must now follow through with its commitment to deplatform War Room: Pandemic. The co-hosts are now directing their audience to watch them on the app for Real America's Voice, the cable network that hosts the show. The app is accessible via Google Play, which has a policy against the incitement of violence on the platform. If the company is serious about preventing further political violence in this country, it must take action to ban this app
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