Y'know what?
Holy fuck.
Vital resource, instant recommendation to anyone curious about the event. Fantastic interviews, organized and edited to flow like goddamn fiction.
I knew what any layperson knew about Jan 6--the motivations (well, maybe a little more than any layperson on that, considering I got so fascinated by QAnon), the storming, the iconic photos, the one?two?idk? deaths. This really brought every detail into perfect clarity. Terrifying, honestly.
And immensely frustrating. The hundreds of weapons confiscated by security who didn't choose to, yknow, be concerned? The tips ignored? The amusement park level security and barricades? Dude. The cops just lost in that crush. Genuinely surprised not more people died on the scene, and that of all of them, only one was from gunshot. Seemingly the only gun fired.
The interviewees mentioned repeatedly that the law enforcement response was in stark contrast to BLM protests the summer before. I would have appreciated something more than just "I think" and "I believe" statements on this, but that probably would have broken the format. Reason is that I just like facts, speculating is unhelpful, and also, I do think the police were right to not start shooting or using lethal force. They were right to say they were wary of starting a shootout. I guess it also exposes that the protests got so violent because of, not in spite of, how little threat the protesters posed. It was safe to bring out the rubber bullets because they knew no one would fight back.
Sigh. Exhausting book, but a fantastic one. Will definitely be looking for Neus's other book in this format.