‘Wealthy Males North of Richmond’ referenced in GOP main debate : NPR


Oliver Anthony performs in Moyock, North Carolina, on Saturday.

Virginian Pilot/TNS / Tribune Information Service/Getty Photos


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Virginian Pilot/TNS / Tribune Information Service/Getty Photos


Oliver Anthony performs in Moyock, North Carolina, on Saturday.

Virginian Pilot/TNS / Tribune Information Service/Getty Photos

The primary Republican main debate opened up with a nod to a breakout nation tune, “Wealthy Males North of Richmond,” that has achieved the bizarre feat of topping the Billboard 100 chart virtually in a single day.

The tune, which is being hailed by some as a sort of “hillbilly elegy” for the working class, comes from a beforehand unknown singer who goes by the identify Oliver Anthony.

It rails towards the hardship of taxation, but additionally towards folks on welfare — and it additionally nods to a conspiracy concept that has turn into a mainstay of the far proper.

In a single lyric, Anthony says, “I want politicians would look out for miners / And never simply minors on an island someplace.”

YouTube

The point out of “minors on an island” is known to confer with the Jeffrey Epstein scandal; although Epstein died in jail in 2019, the circumstances round his dying proceed to feed conspiratorial considering.

“[That] actually opened up lots of people to conspiratorial content material that they may haven’t in any other case interacted with,” stated Jared Holt, senior researcher on the Institute for Strategic Dialogue. Holt stated anxieties round COVID-19 and false narratives round a stolen election have been usually blended in with content material that was skeptical about Epstein’s dying, bringing folks additional alongside the breadcrumb path of conspiratorial considering.

In one other taped interview on his public YouTube web page, Anthony additionally speaks about his concern over human trafficking and says “one of many worst issues a human can do is reap the benefits of a baby.”

Collectively, these notes hit on themes which might be foundational to the QAnon conspiracy concept.

That conspiracy concept revolves round a baseless declare that elites (these whom Anthony would possibly name the “Wealthy Males North of Richmond”) are secretly trafficking youngsters for intercourse and to reap their blood.

It’s intently tied in with the anti-Semitic blood libel and has helped lay the groundwork for an ethical panic round youngsters being focused by pedophiles, which at this time has propelled violent extremists to focus on LGBTQ folks and their allies.

Of explicit word is the best way during which this tune went viral. “It kind of unfold as an anthem,” stated Holt. “How I encountered it was by political channels slightly than music-focused channels. It isn’t like Pitchfork wrote up the tune.”

Holt stated that it is typical for political actions to latch onto cultural artifacts like music or films to broaden their attain. However on this case, Holt warned that the people seizing on the tune could lead unsuspecting audiences into their extremist spheres.

Among the many early on-line boosters of the tune have been Matt Walsh, a far-right commentator who has fanned anti-LGBTQ sentiment. Walsh posted the tune to his X account, to 1 million views. Jack Posobiec, a rightwing activist who promoted the false Pizzagate conspiracy concept and has documented ties with white nationalists, shared it on his X account to greater than 5 million views.

“What’s regarding is how this tune is getting used and the kind of figures who’re attaching themselves to the tune, particularly on the again of its success,” stated Holt. “And if these far-right figures are profitable in associating themselves instantly with the tune, it may doubtlessly open up a wider viewers that they may usually not have entry to on a regular basis.”

This reporting initially appeared in our reside weblog. Revisit how the talk unfolded.

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