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Meadows's texts: Fox News hosts were appalled by Jan. 6 before they decided to downplay it

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Meadows's texts: Fox News hosts were appalled by Jan. 6 before they decided to downplay it

"He is destroying his legacy."

Aaron Rupar
Dec 14, 2021
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Meadows's texts: Fox News hosts were appalled by Jan. 6 before they decided to downplay it

aaronrupar.substack.com
Ingraham told Meadows Trump was “destroying his legacy” by doing nothing about the Capitol attack. She started downplaying it that very same night. (Fox News screengrab)

Thank you for checking out this free edition of Public Notice. If you appreciate this work and want to read everything on the site, please consider a paid subscription.

And if you missed yesterday’s edition (also free!) where I unpack the pro-coup PowerPoint presentation that was circulating around Trumpworld ahead of January 6, check it out here.


Laura Ingraham, Brian Kilmeade, and Sean Hannity have now spent almost a full year downplaying the January 6 insurrection. Ingraham went as far over the summer to compare cops who were assaulted by Trump-supporting insurrectionists to crisis actors.

But as we learned on Monday, they sung a remarkably different tune while the attack on the Capitol was unfolding. A hearing in which the January 6 committee voted to hold former Trump Chief of Staff Mark Meadows in criminal contempt for not complying with subpoenas revealed that all three hosts sent texts to Meadows during the insurrection expressing disgust with Trump’s inaction.

“Mark, the president needs to tell people in the Capitol to go home,” Ingraham wrote to Meadows, according to messages read by Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) during the hearing. “This is hurting all of us. He is destroying his legacy.”

Kilmeade urged Meadows to “please get him [Trump] on TV” and said the violence was “destroying everything you have accomplished.” Hannity similarly encouraged Meadows to have Trump “make a statement” asking his supporters to leave the Capitol.

Watch Cheney read these texts during Monday’s hearing:

Twitter avatar for @atrupar
Aaron Rupar @atrupar
Cheney reads a J6 text from Laura Ingraham to Mark Meadows that read, "he [Trump] is destroying his legacy" & another from Brian Kilmeade that said Trump was "destroying everything you've accomplished" by not speaking out against the insurrection. Even Don Jr pleaded for action
12:26 AM ∙ Dec 14, 2021
4,160Likes1,303Retweets

Even Donald Trump Jr. texted Meadows — though it’s somewhat odd he wouldn’t have just texted his father directly — and told him his dad needed to “condemn” the attack because things had “gone too far” and “gotten out of hand.”

Twitter avatar for @kaitlancollins
Kaitlan Collins @kaitlancollins
Liz Cheney says Donald Trump Jr. texted Mark Meadows on Jan. 6: “He’s got to condemn this ASAP. The Capitol Police tweet is not enough.” Don Jr. later said, “We need an oval office address. He has to lead now. It has gone too far. And gotten out of hand.”
12:26 AM ∙ Dec 14, 2021
13,723Likes3,161Retweets

Monday’s January 6 committee hearing happened a couple hours before Hannity and Ingraham went on the air, but both hosts went to comical lengths to avoid talking about their text messages. Hannity actually did an extended interview with Meadows in which he never raised the subject.

Twitter avatar for @justinbaragona
Justin Baragona @justinbaragona
Sean Hannity had Mark Meadows on for 8 minutes and never once brought up the text message he sent him during the Capitol riots! Just incredible!
Image
2:47 AM ∙ Dec 14, 2021
1,723Likes408Retweets

Meadows instead went to desperate lengths to rewrite history, claiming Trump’s main concern on January 6 was creating a “safe environment” for people even while video played right next to him showing Trump supporters assaulting police officers.

Twitter avatar for @atrupar
Aaron Rupar @atrupar
lol
2:41 AM ∙ Dec 14, 2021
429Likes84Retweets

Ingraham, for her part, totally ignored the January 6 committee hearing, instead devoting a large chunk of her show to attacking Democrats like Chuck Schumer for being old (never mind that Trump is four years older than Schumer).

Twitter avatar for @atrupar
Aaron Rupar @atrupar
Ingraham is digging deep to find things to talk about other than her text messages
Image
3:03 AM ∙ Dec 14, 2021
1,689Likes245Retweets

The text message revelations shed light on just how cynical Ingraham and Hannity’s downplaying of January 6 has been. They obviously understood not only the grave implications of Trump supporters attacking the Capitol, but also realized the then-president wasn’t doing nearly enough to quell the violence. And yet on their shows the night of January 6 they tried to pin blame on antifa.

Twitter avatar for @justinbaragona
Justin Baragona @justinbaragona
Media Matters president @GoAngelo points out on MSNBC's All In that Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, and Brian Kilmeade all suggested on Jan. 6 that Trump supporters weren't responsible for the violence -- instead blaming left-wing agitators and antifa.
1:49 AM ∙ Dec 14, 2021
703Likes275Retweets

It sounds like more revelations are coming. During Monday’s hearing, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) read text messages from unnamed elected Republicans indicating that they actively supported Trump’s coup attempt, and committee chair Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS) said their names will eventually come out.

Twitter avatar for @atrupar
Aaron Rupar @atrupar
Schiff reads texts from Republican lawmakers to Meadows, including one on January 7 that said, "We tried everything we could in our objection to the 6 states. I'm sorry nothing worked." "That is chilling," Schiff says. "We would like to ask Mr Meadows what he thought about that"
12:38 AM ∙ Dec 14, 2021
2,118Likes683Retweets

Cheney went as far as to hint during the hearing that Trump could face federal criminal charges for seeking to obstruct a congressional proceeding. Even Ingraham would have a hard time ignoring that development.

The Atlantic glorifies Covid denialism in Michigan even as hospitals there are full

The Atlantic chose a really strange time to publish an article about how people in Michigan purportedly don’t care about Covid.

That story, written by Matthew Walther, editor of a Catholic literary journal called The Camp and a contributing editor at the American Conservative, is headlined, “Where I Live, No One Cares About Covid.” Walther, who lives in southwest Michigan, claims he doesn’t know a single person who has received a booster shot, never saw someone wearing a mask outside until he traveled earlier this year to Washington, DC, and dismisses the idea that students should mask in schools as “absurdly risk-averse.”

“Covid is invisible to me except when I am reading the news, in which case it strikes me with all the force of reports about distant coups in Myanmar,” he writes.


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Walther must not read much local news, because if he did, he’d realize just how lucky he, his wife, and four kids are that the unrest abroad, so to speak, hasn’t hit closer to home. It certainly has affected those those around him.

That’s because his article comes as Covid-related hospitalizations in his corner of Michigan have spiked to such a level that officials are talking publicly about the possibility that patients could be turned away.

Twitter avatar for @TrishaWWMT
Trisha McCauley @TrishaWWMT
HAPPENING NOW: Southwest Michigan public health say they need help as hospitals hit critical point with COVID-19 surge wwmt.com/news/local/sou…
Image
5:02 PM ∙ Dec 7, 2021
6Likes6Retweets

Things have gotten so bad statewide in recent days that officials have requested 200 additional ventilators from the federal stockpile while urging residents to get vaccinated. (Just over 55 percent of Michigan residents are fully vaccinated, ranking 32nd out of the 50 states and DC.)

But even if Walther’s news consumption was limited to major national outlets, you’d think he might’ve read Dr. Rob Davidson’s first-hand account in the New York Times about how bad the Covid situation has gotten in a hospital in southwest Michigan. The juxtaposition between the two pieces is striking.

Davidson, an emergency physician who I first got to know during the course of my reporting at Vox, opens his piece with a couple heart-wrenching anecdotes illustrating how senseless the vast majority of the Covid-related deaths are at his hospital.

From his piece:

Recently a patient in his 70s came seeking care at the small rural hospital in West Michigan where I’ve worked as an emergency physician for two decades. He had tested positive for the coronavirus earlier in the week, was running a high fever and struggled to breathe. When asked if he’d been vaccinated, he snapped back, “I don’t approve of the vaccine.”

A few days later, a young patient sick with Covid-19 was admitted with dangerously low blood oxygen levels. His spouse and infant child came in to say goodbye just before he was sedated and intubated. “I don’t think I’ll see you again,” he said. He died before the end of the week. He was unvaccinated.

As of last Monday, nine hospitals in Michigan were 100 percent full, and at least 20 others were at or above 90 percent capacity. Statewide, nearly one in four hospital patients has a confirmed or suspected case of Covid-19. In the last few weeks, my hospital has been consistently at or near capacity and nearly every day the vast majority of those patients are sick with Covid-19. Nearly all have been unvaccinated.

Davidson’s harrowing piece was published on December 8 — five days before The Atlantic decided to run Walther’s account of why he and everyone around him has moved on from Covid. He’s lucky he has that luxury.

Twitter avatar for @DrRobDavidson
Dr. Rob Davidson @DrRobDavidson
@matthewwalther @cpaz I do not blame you for writing it. I blame the @TheAtlantic for publishing it. They should know better. Even the part trying to discredit the NIH about evidence-based definitions of problem drinking that don't comport with your opinion. It's a weak straw-man offered as evidence.
5:19 PM ∙ Dec 13, 2021
281Likes33Retweets

In a direct message exchange, Davidson told me that he actually agrees with Walther’s premise — “it is my experience that people around here are living as if Covid does not exist” — but said that given the consequences of this attitude, it needs to be condemned instead of applauded.

“Dealing with people dying unnecessarily [is] very traumatic, and those are the cases that really sit with you, particularly when so many are in their 40s and 50s,” he said. “The level of frustration with the people acting like that author when we are seeing such high levels of sickness seeps into one’s everyday [work]. It makes it tough to maintain the empathy and compassion that make doing what we do possible.”


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Meadows's texts: Fox News hosts were appalled by Jan. 6 before they decided to downplay it

aaronrupar.substack.com
2 Comments
Claudia Hall Christian
Dec 15, 2021

Wait, you're saying that someone from the Catholic Church doesn't see what's right in front of their faces? No. Way. (Sarcasm) These are the same people who spent lifetimes defending the rape of their own children by priests.

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Tom Quigley
Dec 15, 2021

Aaron: Thanks for a great piece! Can’t wait to see text messages matched to Congress members! Dr. Davidson has been speaking truth from the COVID trenches for a long time!

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