‘Million Militia March’ leads far right’s plan for a ‘second round’ Sunday in D.C., but chaos reigns
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The far-right extremists who overran the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 are far from done—but it’s also far from clear where they plan to strike next. That’s because the organizers of the various pro-Trump factions behind last week’s insurrection can’‘Million Militia March’ leads far right’s plan for a ‘second round’ Sunday in D.C., but chaos reigns
The far-right extremists who overran the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 are far from done—but it’s also far from clear where they plan to strike next. That’s because the organizers of the various pro-Trump factions behind last week’s insurrection can’t agree on whether to hold a fresh round of protests in state capitals around the nation, or to focus their fire on Washington, D.C., for militia-based protests beginning Sunday and perhaps extending into Inauguration Day on Wednesday. On the one hand, a number of far-right factions have been assiduously organizing armed protests—and possible statehouse invasions—at the Capitols of all 50 states, many of which appear to be ill-prepared for the onslaught. Yet a number of factions are urging people to ignore those protests—even conspiratorially smearing them as “false flags”—and instead concentrate their efforts on creating a massive turnout for Sunday’s planned “Million Militia March” in D.C. Read more