JD
Vance
almost
gave
the
game
away.
In
an
interview
with
CNN’s
Dana
Bash
on
Sunday,
the
Republican
vice
presidential
candidate
came
close
to
acknowledging
that
rumors
about
Haitian
migrants
eating
cats
in
Springfield,
Ohio,
are
completely
fabricated
—
and
then
backtracked,
saying
the
rumors
are
true
after
all.
“If
I
have
to
create
stories
so
that
the
American
media
actually
pays
attention
to
the
suffering
of
the
American
people,
then
that’s
what
I’m
going
to
do,”
Vance
said.
When
Bash
asked
him
to
clarify
whether
he
created
the
story,
Vance
made
an
about-face,
claiming
he
had
heard
“firsthand
accounts”
from
his
constituents.
“I
say
that
we’re
creating
a
story
meaning
that
we’re
creating
the
American
media
focusing
on
it,”
Vance
continued.
“I
didn’t
create
20,000
illegal
migrants
coming
in
Springfield
thanks
to
Kamala
Harris’
policies.
Her
policies
did
that,
but
yes,
we
created
the
actual
focus.”
Right-wing
influencers
and
content
creators
have
profited
off
their
posts
about
Springfield,
while
politicians
like
Vance
have
used
the
rumors
to
underscore
a
broader
political
point.
Vance’s
goal
is
to
keep
attention
on
Springfield
—
and
to
continue
to
paint
the
city
and
its
residents
as
victims
of
a
supposedly
open
border.
The
goal
isn’t
just
to
demonize
Haitian
migrants
but
to
create
a
narrative
of
a
community
under
siege,
echoing
an
increasingly
popular
right-wing
conspiracy
theory
about
an
elite
Democratic
plot
to
“replace”
white
Americans
with
migrants
of
color.
Linking
to
a
graph
claiming
that
Haitian
migrants
were
resettling
in
conservative
states,
Elon
Musk
—
no
stranger
to
the
“great
replacement”
theory
—
implied
that
Democrats
were
overseeing
“massive
voter
importation
to
make
swing
states
permanently
blue
and
turn
America
into
a
one-party
state.”
A
day
before
he
went
on
CNN,
Vance
claimed
that,
despite
the
media’s
claims
that
the
rumors
about
Haitians
were
baseless,
the
story
“turned
out
to
have
merit.”
That
supposed
merit
came
from
a
post
published
by
Manhattan
Institute
fellow
and
right-wing
operative
Christopher
Rufo,
who
obtained
a
video
that,
he
said,
depicted
African
migrants
grilling
cats
in
Dayton,
Ohio.
The
video
has
been
disputed,
and
several
people
have
noted
that
the
animal
on
the
grill
appears
to
have
six
legs
and
is
more
likely
to
be
three
chickens
than
a
mutated
cat.
“To
be
clear:
this
single
incident
does
not
confirm
every
particularity
of
Trump’s
statement,”
Rufo
wrote.
“But
it
does
break
the
general
narrative
peddled
by
the
establishment
media
and
its
‘fact
checkers,’
who
insisted
that
this
has
never
happened,
and
that
any
suggestion
otherwise
is
somehow
an
expression
of
racism.
It
takes
only
a
single
exception,
however,
to
falsify
a
hypothesis,
and
the
logical
next
step,
for
any
honest
broker,
is
to
ask
if
it
is
happening
more
often,
and
elsewhere.”
Vance,
Rufo,
and
their
allies
are
saying
two
things
at
once:
the
racist
rumors
about
Haitian
migrants
in
Springfield
may
be
untrue,
but
the
fact
that
Springfield
is
being
overrun
with
Haitian
migrants
is
irrefutable;
and
also,
the
rumors
are
true
because
Vance’s
constituents
said
so.
This
isn’t
the
first
time
Vance
has
tried
to
have
it
both
ways.
Vance
previously
claimed
the
rumor
was
based
on
calls
he’d
gotten
from
constituents
before
acknowledging
the
possibility
“that
all
of
these
rumors
will
turn
out
to
be
false”
and
pivoting
to
what
he
claims
is
the
real
story
the
media
is
ignoring
in
Springfield.
Except,
as
we’ve
explained
before,
the
supposedly
“real”
narrative
Vance
is
pushing
about
Haitian
migrants
in
Springfield
is
also
untrue.
During
the
CNN
interview,
Vance
said
Harris
“allowed
20,000
Haitian
migrants
to
get
dropped
into
a
small
Ohio
town,”
implying
that
Springfield’s
growing
Haitian
community
was
the
result
of
a
coordinated
campaign
by
Harris
and
President
Joe
Biden.
Even
the
term
“migrants”
implies
that
the
Haitians
who
have
recently
moved
to
Springfield
did
so
shortly
after
crossing
the
border.
In
fact,
according
to
reports
from
publications,
including
The
New
York
Times,
they’ve
largely
relocated
to
Springfield
from
other
states,
including
Florida
and
Georgia
—
and
were
drawn
there
by
word
of
mouth,
not
because
of
some
federal
recruitment
scheme.
On
a
recent
episode
of
Vox’s
Today,
Explained,
I
discussed
how
these
more
insidious
rumors
fuel
the
great
replacement
conspiracy
theory.
And
as
Bash
pointed
out,
this
is
all
putting
Springfield
residents
—
Vance’s
constituents
—
at
risk.
Government
buildings
have
received
a
spate
of
bomb
threats
since
the
rumor
about
Haitian
migrants
in
Springfield
went
viral.
Most
recently,
two
elementary
schools
in
Springfield
were
evacuated
Monday
after
receiving
threats,
and
two
local
colleges
moved
to
virtual
learning
Monday
for
the
same
reason,
CNN
reports.
Per
Reuters,
the
FBI
is
looking
into
the
threats.
The
city
canceled
its
annual
CultureFest,
slated
for
September
27th
and
28th,
to
“prevent
any
potential
risks
to
attendees,
staff,
vendors,
and
volunteers.”
It’s
worth
emphasizing
that
all
of
this
began
with
a
handful
of
right-wing
influencers’
posts
on
X
—
which
were
not
only
boosted
by
the
platform’s
algorithm
and
CEO
but
also
amplified
by
Vance
and
former
President
Donald
Trump
on
the
debate
stage.
Instead
of
being
contained
to
a
small
vitriolic
corner
of
the
internet,
the
racist
memes
about
Haitians
have
spilled
out
of
the
far-right
echo
chamber
and
are
putting
real
people
in
danger.
Original author: Gaby Del Valle
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