Speaker of the House Mike Johnson wrote the foreword and publicly promoted a 2022 book that spread baseless and discredited conspiracy theories and used derogatory homophobic insults.

Written by Scott McKay, a local Louisiana politics blogger, the book, ā€œThe Revivalist Manifesto,ā€ gives credence to unfounded conspiracy theories often embraced by the far-right ā€“ including the ā€œPizzagateā€ hoax, which falsely claimed top Democratic officials were involved in a pedophile ring, among other conspiracies.

The book also propagates baseless and inaccurate claims, implying that Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was subjected to blackmail and connected to the disgraced underage sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

Other sections of the book defend podcaster Joe Rogan from racism charges after it was revealed he used the N-word, which Rogan later apologized for. The book also disparages poor voters as ā€œunsophisticated and susceptible to government dependencyā€ and easy to manipulate with ā€œBlack Lives Matter ā€˜defund the policeā€™ pandering.ā€

ā€œScott McKay presents a valuable and timely contribution with The Revivalist Manifesto because he has managed here to articulate well what millions of conscientious, freedom-loving Americans are sensing,ā€ Johnson writes in his 300-word foreword.

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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The book also propagates baseless and inaccurate claims, implying that Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was subjected to blackmail and connected to the disgraced underage sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

    While McKay remains ambiguous in his book regarding the elements he asserts werenā€™t disproven, he explicitly writes on his public Facebook page that the conspiracy related to code words was not debunked and goes as far as labeling Podesta as a pedophile.

    Jared Holt, an expert on right wing conspiracy theories at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a think-tank that studies disinformation, told CNN that Johnsonā€™s promotion of the book raised questions about the new House speakerā€™s judgment.

    Another section takes aim at poor voters, who the author calls, ā€œunsophisticated and susceptible to government dependencyā€ and says they are easily manipulated with ā€œbowdlerizing old monuments, or midnight basketball, or Black Lives Matter ā€˜defund the policeā€™ pandering.ā€

    McKayā€™s book also shares other unfounded conspiracy theories, including the debunked claim that the Democratic National Committeeā€™s emails in 2016 were not hacked but leaked by a staffer named Seth Rich.

    The book targets and taunts prominent Democratic officials, including calling Interior Secretary Deb Haaland ā€œhalf oppressedā€ because her mother is Native American and father is of Norwegian descent and writes that former President Barack Obamaā€™s ā€œchief selling point was that he was black.ā€


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