Yesterday, violent right-wing terrorists forced their way to the U.S. Capitol after a pro-Trump protest that everyone on the planet — except, curiously, anyone involved in law enforcement — knew would go to dangerous levels, which led to a day when the United States will never have to live. I, seconds Fork, there were a couple of familiar faces in the crowd in front of the White House, specifically Ariel Pink and John Maus. The two appeared in a photo posted by filmmaker Alex Lee Moyer of Washington DC, which caused Pink to do so. tweet that he was there to “show peacefully [his] support the president “and that” he went back to the hotel and took a nap “before all the sedition started. So that’s great, right? He was there to express what he likes to the idiot despot who provoked the rage of the protesters and spent the last four years convincing people that he is universally loved and that the only possible explanation for something bad to happen to him is vast conspiracy of Antifa super-soldiers who (despite the name) are the real fascists. So if you’re supposed to be “I was in the peaceful White House rally” it’s a defense, it’s stupid shit.
As for Maus, his explanation is a little harder to analyze. He posted a link to Twitter on a religious writing of 1937 which denounces idolizing specific people or governments, which it would appear to be anti-Trump, but aside from what the hell that means, he has offered no clarification. Besides, as our friends from Jezebel, was one of the music artists related to Adult Swim’s brief show of alt-right sketches Millions of dollars present extremes: world peace and apparently refused to consider the possibility that the people he had worked with were anything but “nice.” After all, as he said Noisy in 2017, they did not “burn crosses or do anything like that.” Again: fucked up stupid.
This brings us to Alex Lee Moyer, who said it Fork in an email that was there because “she felt compelled to record what was happening.” To this day, Moyer was probably the most famous for TFW No GF, a sympathetic documentary about incels that allowed angry white boys on the Internet finally tells his part of the story. In a post on his now private Instagram, Moyer shared the photo with Pink and Maus next to the legend: “The day we almost died, but instead we had a great time.” A good time! Good for her. One might hypothetically wonder how one could almost die if only in the “peaceful” concentration of the White House and not in the siege of the Senate chambers, but in whatever it was. The thing is, he had a great time, which, after consulting our handy graphic on “Explanations of People Who Were in Riot,” is … let’s see here … oh yeah, stupid fuck .