On January 6 of this year, a shirtless, tattooed man wearing blue and white face paint and a horned headdress stood at a rostrum where the U.S. Senate had been meeting just minutes before. And then the year got weird. Many of those same senators whose lives were threatened by the “QAnon Shaman,” armed with a sharp spike affixed to the top of a pole affixed to an American flag, took great pains to downplay the dangerous insurrection meant to override the results of the presidential election held in November.
'2021' will always be a four-letter word
'2021' will always be a four-letter word
'2021' will always be a four-letter word
On January 6 of this year, a shirtless, tattooed man wearing blue and white face paint and a horned headdress stood at a rostrum where the U.S. Senate had been meeting just minutes before. And then the year got weird. Many of those same senators whose lives were threatened by the “QAnon Shaman,” armed with a sharp spike affixed to the top of a pole affixed to an American flag, took great pains to downplay the dangerous insurrection meant to override the results of the presidential election held in November.