If you’re wondering why you may have only recently heard of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, it’s because this horrific incident in Oklahoma was intentionally covered up for decades by white people in power and their allies.
Today’s GOP is desperate to cover up the Jan. 6 attack because — like the whites who ran Tulsa in 1921 — it grasps how bad this looks for it politically.
Historian Scott Ellsworth explained to NBC News that the mayor and other city officials “realized that the massacre was this horrible public relations problem,” so they actively sought to erase records of the attack. This cover-up worked, which is why so few people outside of Black communities have heard much, if anything, about it until very recently.
One hundred years later, we’re seeing a disturbing similarity in the way many Republicans are downplaying a different terrorist attack carried out by white extremists: the Jan 6. attack on the U.S. Capitol.
On Tuesday, President Joe Biden became the first sitting president to travel to Tulsa to commemorate the deadly 1921 attack that a white mob unleashed on Black residents in the prosperous Greenwood neighborhood. Biden acknowledged the estimated 300 lives taken and more than 1,000 homes destroyed in the violence. The neighborhood had been home to Black entrepreneurs, lawyers, doctors and other professionals, a rare concentration of Black wealth both then and now.
While the Tulsa Race Massacre and Jan. 6 are not comparable in terms of loss of life or destruction, as Biden shared in his Tulsa address, one 107-year-old Tulsa survivor, Viola “Mother” Fletcher, pointed out some telling resemblances. The Jan. 6 attack by “a mob of violent white extremists, thugs” had “reminded her of what happened in Greenwood 100 years ago,” Biden shared.
There’s another glaring similarity between the two events: Today’s GOP is desperate to cover up the Jan. 6 attack because — like the whites who ran Tulsa in 1921 — it grasps how bad this looks for it politically, since its supporters carried out the attack. One of the most glaring examples of this came recently from Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., who denounced those who called the riot an “insurrection,” saying it looked more like a “normal tourist visit.”
There’s also Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., who spoke at a white nationalist event in February and who last month slammed not the attackers, but federal law enforcement for “harassing peaceful patriots.”
Senate Republicans just last week blocked a bipartisan commission to investigate the details surrounding the Jan 6 riot.
Beyond that, Senate Republicans just last week blocked a bipartisan commission to investigate the details of the Jan. 6 riot. Like the politicians in Tulsa in the 1920s, they appear to want to cover up the details surrounding the attack because it’s bad PR for the GOP. It’s also possible that some Republicans in Congress — likely similar to some white politicians in 1920s Tulsa — feared a thorough investigation might implicate them in the attack.
When Biden stated in his Tuesday address that “what happened in Greenwood was an act of hate and domestic terrorism with a through line that exists today still,” he was 100 percent correct. So was FBI Director Christopher Wray when he stated in his March testimony at a Senate hearing that Jan. 6 was an act of “domestic terrorism.”









