Culture MAGA, the Next Generation - Trump’s political movement introduces the youngest voters to its kind of camaraderie.

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By Stephanie McCrummen
JUNE 21, 2024, 6:30 AM ET

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Brendan McDermid / Reuters / Redux

The line began forming early Tuesday morning in Racine, Wisconsin, the usual river of red hats, cargo shorts, canes, and conspiracies, except that here and there were the fresh faces that the old-timers needed most.

“I was in fifth grade when Trump was elected,” Kylie Smith, 18, was saying, excited for her first rally. “I just remember my dad yelling, ‘Trump won! Trump won!’”

“I just wanted to be here—it’s a learning experience,” her friend Libby Kramer, 20, was telling me, as an older man in an i’m voting for the felon T-shirt listened in.
“Welcome to the party,” he said.

“It’s so good to see you girls,” a white-haired woman wearing a FUCK BIDEN hat said.

Nearly a decade into the “Make America Great Again” movement, what Donald Trump needs to return to the White House is new voters, and among the most promising are the youngest, most impressionable voters of all. They were in elementary school when Trump was first elected, and the machinations being deployed to sweep them into the fold are less about issues such as Gaza or the planet or student loans than lights, screens, music, and the emotional appeal of righteous belonging—which has always been necessary for building armies and social movements.

That kind of production has remained the essence of Trump rallies such as the one in Racine. And it has been the year-round specialty of Turning Point USA, the right-wing youth organization whose recent “People’s Convention” in Detroit was a carnival of swirling lights and booming music, with sponsors including the Association of Mature American Citizens—the MAGA version of the AARP. That event drew a crowd of young attendees who cheered 70-year-old Steve Bannon as he yelled “Victory or death!,” and 78-year-old Trump as he spoke of “the largest deportation operation in American history,” and two young men in sunglasses who walked onstage and unfurled a red flag that read white boy summer, a white-supremacist slogan.

Outside of such events, the task of introducing young people to the shame-free camaraderie of the MAGA movement has been up to social-media influencers, parents, and, as the election nears, long-timers at rallies such as the one in Racine, where an older woman scanned the faces up and down the line.

“It’s so good to see all the young people here,” she said.

Just ahead, the rally was setting up in a park along a harbor of Lake Michigan: the stage, the screens, the speakers, the huge American flag hanging limp from a crane.

“I think we’re moving,” said a young man holding hands with his wife, both of them 21-year-olds for whom supporting Trump was a kind of rebellion.

“I grew up in a Democratic household, but I’m an adult now and I have to think for myself,” the woman was saying as her husband pulled her ahead. “We’re against abortion, we’re against illegal immigration.”

“We don’t support the culture Biden supports,” her husband said, and behind him, an older woman in the ubiquitous fuck biden T-shirt offered her solidarity: “And the economy has gone to hell—I’m scared for you young people.”

Behind her, a man from the state GOP was handing out cards. “Join the Milwaukee GOP! We’re on Instagram! We’re on Twitter! The whole political world is coming to Milwaukee!” he was saying, referring to the Republican National Convention next month.

Behind him, the line was getting longer. There were mothers who’d brought daughters, and fathers who’d brought sons. Joe Vacek smiled and nodded as his 18-year-old son, Chase, said, “I guess I was 12 when Trump was elected.”

“Yep, we were at hockey practice,” his dad said.

“I remember the TVs in the lobby and these big portraits kept coming up,” the son said, recalling how Trump’s image began to seep into his consciousness. “I guess I started paying closer attention in 2020, especially when people started talking about election integrity. I was like, What are they talking about?, and I started researching.”

He glanced at his father.

“You’re doing great,” Joe Vacek said.

Behind them was 19-year-old Jordan Lazier, who’d come with his grandparents. He had decided that his first presidential vote would be for Trump.

“I remember when he was elected, I just liked him,” he said, recalling how his mother felt similarly. “I just knew he was better than Hillary, I couldn’t tell you how.”

“You’re a smart kid,” his grandmother said. “Don’t forget about the evil versus good.”

“Good versus evil,” Jordan repeated, looking at her. “I know about satanic stuff most Democrats are into. Republicans talk about worshipping Jesus Christ, and Democrats worship the government.”

“We listen to a lot of prophets, and we understand Bohemian Grove,” his grandmother said, referring to some bleak corner of the QAnon conspiracy.

Behind her, a veteran rallygoer was explaining something called the Rattle Trap conspiracy to a newcomer who was saying, “There’s so much out there I don’t know about.”

Behind them was Bob Harper, 18, and Katherine Hughes, 19, who figured her journey to this point had begun in fifth grade, when her teacher instructed the class to color the states on a U.S. map red and blue after Trump got elected in 2016. That was the first time she thought about people as red or blue, and the country as something other than united. And she wanted to feel united, which is how being here made her feel.

“We can’t really talk about all this with many kids our age—they call you racist, homophobic,” Hughes said, referring to the mood on her community-college campus, where she said most students were liberal, and many were Muslim, and she felt ostracized.

“I just feel we should really be one country instead of divided,” Harper said, and soon the line began moving faster.

Music started blaring from the rally site. Someone from the pro-Trump Right Side Broadcasting Network began filming, and people chanted for the camera, “Trump! Trump! Trump!”

Tyler Marquisse, 19, was getting excited. He had driven over from his hometown of Kenosha, where the formative experience of his young political life had come in the summer of 2020, when protests and riots had broken out after the police shooting of a Black man named Jacob Blake, and a young white man named Kyle Rittenhouse had shot and killed two protesters. Marquisse was 14 at the time, and his reaction had mostly been fear. He recalled his parents telling him there was a gun in the bedroom, and a gun in the kitchen. They told him, “If someone walks through that door, you protect yourself,” and he remembered Trump coming to Kenosha soon after that.

“Trump protected us,” he said now, standing near the front of a line that stretched several blocks past tables piled with T-shirts depicting Trump as an Old West outlaw, as a mafioso-looking convict, and with two middle fingers held up to the world.

Seeing all of this, Matt Lahee, 20, was not sure what to think yet. “I’m just curious mostly,” he said, standing in line with his younger brother and his friend, both of whom were wearing red MAGA hats.

Lahee was not. He wasn’t sure whom he would vote for in November. He had come with his siblings because he was home from school in Vermont, and because he wanted to see for himself what Trump and his rallies were all about.

What he remembered about growing up in an upper-middle-class Chicago suburb with Trump as president: bobblehead dolls of Trump and Hillary Clinton. Snapchat groups where kids took sides. A social-studies teacher who had a Trump T-shirt on the classroom wall. Another teacher who taught students about mass incarceration. Neo-Nazis in Charlottesville, Virginia. Having Latino friends. Running track, fishing, and doing what you do as a kid up until 2020, when everything was upended by the pandemic and the police killing of George Floyd and the protests he never joined, even though he remembered the video, and feeling very sad about what happened.

“Hey, Matt?” his brother, Ryan, said now. “What was that thing you were saying in the car? About nostalgia?”

“I was saying things seemed like they were going smoothly before COVID hit,” Lahee said. “But I don’t know if that’s just nostalgia, or if it was really better?”

He wasn’t sure, and now the line was moving, and soon they were all inside.
Their first Trump rally had soft green grass, and a view of Lake Michigan, and the smell of hot dogs and fries. A warm breeze was blowing, and the sun was out.

“Isn’t it a great day to be at a Trump rally?” one of the warm-up speakers said.

People milled around. A young couple talked about the possibility of Trump being assassinated. A young man with long black hair, a beard, and an ankle monitor stood alone for a while until several police officers approached and quietly escorted him away. The loudspeakers began blaring “Time in a Bottle” and older people mouthed the words.

Matt Lahee found a place toward the back of the crowd. He yawned. He sat on the grass through “Pinball Wizard” and a video of Elvis Presley, and when the crowd got restless and started chanting “We want Trump!,” he did not join in.
When Trump arrived and “God Bless the U.S.A.” swelled and people hoisted their phones, Lahee folded his arms.

He listened as Trump mocked his successor’s age, and the crowd chanted “Fuck Joe Biden,” and he did not join in. He listened as Trump talked about illegal immigrants and “all the killing you’re going to see unless you elect me,” and as the crowd chanted “Kick them out!” and “Do it! Do it!” And he did not join in, and instead listened.

He listened to the whole hour-and-a-half speech, and when it was over and the Village People were blasting, he headed toward the exit, still unsure what all of this meant.

“I don’t know,” Lahee said. “It was kind of dark.”

Source (Archive)
 
and when the crowd got restless and started chanting “We want Trump!,” he did not join in.
When Trump arrived and “God Bless the U.S.A.” swelled and people hoisted their phones, Lahee folded his arms.
Wow, what a stunning and brave act of defiance!

Why do they all have this main character syndrome? In a perfect world he would just get shoved into a locker for writing shit like this.
 
I can't wait to see what this movement looks like after Trump is dead. If the message as to what MAGA really even means is muddled now(Just look at Nick Fuentes' own movement coined after Trump's "America First"), I can only imagine how hilarious it will be when younger and younger men are attracted to it. No real goal in sight, nothing to work towards, just "trigger the liberal" counter culture non-movement. Feels a bit obvious, but what else would you expect from worshiping a TV star and a mediocre businessman who has no clue about politics?
 
Lmao, poor Stephanie McCrummen. She left the Washington post to join the resistance at the Atlantic, and you can tell she was sure she was onto a winning idea - go to a Trump rally and show everyone its just a pack of hate filled q-anon boomers and that the kids aren't having it. But then she gets there and everyone is happy and friendly, both young and old. The best she can do is some kid currently being torn between not giving a shit about politics and being told he has to, torn between being accepted by his family or by the establishment - a kid who is clearly not keen on the spotlight at all but too beaten down to tell her to fuck off.

Stuck with months of work that has assembled into diddly and fuck all, she decides to pretend his obvious discomfort with her focus is discomfort with MAGA, dedicating the last quarter of the article to the hack's old reliable - disaffected reportage - following Lahee around and describing his actions, allowing her to imply whatever she likes without his pesky personal thoughts getting in the way. And even then he still won't play ball - the closest she can get to the narrative she wants is paralysis, he won't join in, but he won't stand apart either.

So she ends by asking him what he thought, and all he says is "It was kind of dark". Fucking hell. How the fuck do you turn that into a story? You don't, you just write five paragraphs of reportage and then end it and hope that the pseudo-intellectuals running the media will see something poetic in it. Then tear into your former Washington Post colleagues as hard as you can in the hopes everyone forgets about this and remembers what a fearless member of the resistance you are.
 
protests and riots had broken out after the police shooting of a Black man named Jacob Blake
Who had been at a home where he was not allowed to be due to a restraining order, that the police were called to by the female inhabitant who filed the order, that he refused to leave when confronted by the police. After fighting with them and not being able to be restrained after the use of tasers he advanced on a car full of children with a knife in his hand at which point he was shot.
and a young white man named Kyle Rittenhouse had shot and killed two protesters.
Both of whom were part of an armed mob chasing Kyle who had already discharged weapons during the pursuit. The first killed was a repeat child rapist killed when he left Kyle with n o escape route and tried to grab his gun, the second part of a mob that managed to knock Kyle over as he fled and clubbed him in the head with a skateboard before being shot.

Sure was a whole lot left out, wasn't there?
 
Unironically, part of the reason why people even go MAGA is because they're doing it to piss off the leftoids. The same assholes who have been controlling and screwing up everything for a good decade. The 2016 pants shitting the left did was just that priceless.

Nate Silver 2016.png

As one socialite once said, "Trump is a molotov cocktail that the plebs can throw at the elites".
 
the usual river of red hats, cargo shorts, canes, and conspiracies
Seethe
an older man in an i’m voting for the felon T-shirt listened in.
Seethe
a white-haired woman wearing a FUCK BIDEN hat
Seethe
the machinations being deployed to sweep them into the fold are less about issues such as Gaza or the planet or student loans than lights, screens, music, and the emotional appeal of righteous belonging—which has always been necessary for building armies and social movements.
It's just good politics when Mr. Cool Obama did it, it's vapid and shallow and scary when Trump does it. Seethe
That event drew a crowd of young attendees who cheered 70-year-old Steve Bannon as he yelled “Victory or death!,” and 78-year-old Trump as he spoke of “the largest deportation operation in American history,”
Seethe
and two young men in sunglasses who walked onstage and unfurled a red flag that read white boy summer, a white-supremacist slogan.
S E E T H E
Outside of such events, the task of introducing young people to the shame-free camaraderie of the MAGA movement
Not all the kids are responding to our Puritanistic shaming! This makes me seethe
the huge American flag hanging limp from a crane.
Stephanie McCrummen (wut lol) just ain't gonna stop not-cleverly seething is she
an older woman in the ubiquitous fuck biden T-shirt
Seethe
we understand Bohemian Grove,” his grandmother said, referring to some bleak corner of the QAnon conspiracy.
The absolute state of not knowing that Bohemian Grove used to be the exclusive target of left-wing seething about the MIC and patriarchy and secret capitalist exploiter deals. The world really did not exist before 2015 to the Stephanie McCrummens (wut lol) of the world despite her being in her MID-FIFTIES
a line that stretched several blocks past tables piled with T-shirts depicting Trump as an Old West outlaw, as a mafioso-looking convict, and with two middle fingers held up to the world.
Seethe
Matt Lahee found a place toward the back of the crowd. He yawned. He sat on the grass through “Pinball Wizard” and a video of Elvis Presley, and when the crowd got restless and started chanting “We want Trump!,” he did not join in.
When Trump arrived and “God Bless the U.S.A.” swelled and people hoisted their phones, Lahee folded his arms.

He listened as Trump mocked his successor’s age, and the crowd chanted “Fuck Joe Biden,” and he did not join in. He listened as Trump talked about illegal immigrants and “all the killing you’re going to see unless you elect me,” and as the crowd chanted “Kick them out!” and “Do it! Do it!” And he did not join in, and instead listened.

He listened to the whole hour-and-a-half speech, and when it was over and the Village People were blasting, he headed toward the exit, still unsure what all of this meant.

“I don’t know,” Lahee said. “It was kind of dark.”
I think, at long last, we've found suitable dating material for Stephanie McCrummen (wut lol). Of course she's 54 so it doesn't even matter. Those eggs are looooooooooong gone
 
“I don’t know,” Lahee said. “It was kind of dark.”
He didn't even really have an opinion, he says "it was kind of dark" as if that's supposed to represent anything? So either he agrees or he doesn't have a rebuttal.
“We can’t really talk about all this with many kids our age—they call you racist, homophobic,” Hughes said, referring to the mood on her community-college campus, where she said most students were liberal, and many were Muslim, and she felt ostracized.

“I just feel we should really be one country instead of divided,” Harper said, and soon the line began moving faster.
Where's the lies? America should be more united against dumb stuff rather than arguing over it like a bunch of kids, and it's not like you can say anything to the right of "I am a socialist" without getting yelled down by a horde of braindead sheep.

I don't know, it seems like people had a lot of fun there and their support for Trump only grew. I'm not sure whether this article was supposed to show how much more alive the Trump rallies are compared to anything Biden does or show how detached the "journalists" are from reality.
 
I can't wait to see what this movement looks like after Trump is dead. If the message as to what MAGA really even means is muddled now(Just look at Nick Fuentes' own movement coined after Trump's "America First"), I can only imagine how hilarious it will be when younger and younger men are attracted to it. No real goal in sight, nothing to work towards, just "trigger the liberal" counter culture non-movement. Feels a bit obvious, but what else would you expect from worshiping a TV star and a mediocre businessman who has no clue about politics?
"Trigger the liberals" is ultimately just going to be political theater at this point when AF's real goal is to soft power their way into making noncery mainstream so the only difference between the le' heckin based (((Far Right))) and the Democrats is that you can say the n-word while having a Epstein Island sex dungeon where Ali Ackbar runs amuck while the Democrats thinks that's too trashy and they just have paler skinned pedos instead.
 
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