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Sasha Abramsky

The Far-Right Takeover of Small-Town America

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Date:
Friday, September 13
Time:
7:30 pm PDT
Cost:
$10 - $35 Sliding Scale + optional $30 book add-on
Learn more about Sliding Scale tickets.

Venue

The Wyncote NW Forum
1119 8th Ave (Entrance off Seneca St.)
Seattle, 98101 United States
+ Google Map

Note: Town Hall events are approximately 75 minutes long.

Book cover of 'Chaos Comes Calling: The Battle Against the Far-Right Takeover of Small-Town America' by Sasha Abramsky, featuring a collage of Far-Right political symbols and American town imagery on a red background.
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Chaos Comes Calling: The Battle Against the Far-Right Takeover of Small-Town America

The Elliott Bay Book Company

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Headshot of Sasha Abramsky (with fair skin, grey hair/beard, and glasses)
Civics

Sequim––a quiet, coastal community just a couple hours away from Seattle––may seem like an unlikely microcosm for the rise of far-right politics. And yet, political journalist Sasha Abramsky has closely followed small-town communities, including Sequim, and argues that places like these have directly influenced current national politics. How could small-town USA be so instrumental in today’s political climate, including Donald Trump’s 2024 Republican presidential nomination?

Abramsky argues that the far-right have worked to take control, using suspicion, conspiracy, and bigotry, and forming alliances of QAnoners, anti-vaxxers, Christian nationalists, and militia supporters within small towns across the country. Stemming from his latest book, Chaos Comes Calling, he investigates the rise of the far-right, telling the parallel stories of recent years in two communities: Shasta County, California and Sequim, Washington.

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The ultimate fates of these two towns were different though. Abramsky shows how Sequim has returned to less extreme political views, while Shasta County has descended further into intolerance and divisiveness. He highlights the differences between the communities, including the efforts to organize against the far-right movement.

Places like Sequim may be small, but they may have huge ramifications in the national political scene. Abramsky believes there’s a path forward from polarization that threatens to break apart communities, and towns as close as Sequim can show us how.

Sasha Abramsky is a long-time political journalist and book author who has spent the last thirty years exploring the American political and social justice landscape. He has written extensively on poverty, criminal justice, immigration, and the rise of hard-right and alt-right political movements.


Presented by Town Hall Seattle.

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