Imagine if you treated every (or actually even just any) demonstration that turned to a riot with this level of conspiratorial thinking.
There's no conspiratorial thinking required. From November 2020 to January 2021, Trump et al had been actively and openly campaigning to get the results of the 2020 election declared invalid and reversed practically nonstop since the instant they were declared. Hell, he
still insists that the results were fraudulent apropos of nothing more than him wanting to believe it.
For goodness sake, in the months leading up to the election, Trump had declared - repeatedly, explicitly, and emphatically - that he would only accept the results as valid if he won and would reject them as invalid if he lost. And mind you, at that point his attitude of "Heads I win, tails declared invalid and called for heads instead" was already
very well demonstrated as his go-to position for competitions, as seen in everything from the Emmys to the Republican caucuses in the primaries.
If that were the whole of it, it would have been dismissable as a spoiled brat's temper tantrum: unbecoming of someone his age and station, but well within his rights. But that's
not where it ended, so instead that becomes evidence of mindset and intent behind the events that followed, such as the brazen chicanery afterwards to
unlawfully alter the results of the election, such as seen in the
Jeffery Clark Letter, and the
Fake Electors plot as following the gameplan laid out in the
Chesebro Memos. In the words of Powell when she was representing Trump's claims,
"The entire election, frankly, in all the swing states should be overturned and the legislatures should make sure that the electors are selected for Trump".
And the march on the Capital was pitched both in the planning for the event and the speech preceding it as the culmination of all that: the last chance to embolden Congressional Republicans to "do the right thing" and "take back our country" from the Democrats by rejecting the tabulated results and unilaterally declaring Trump the 'true' victor so that he could remain in office.
Hell, that same morning, Trump sent out that "States want to
correct their votes, which they now know were based on irregularities and fraud, plus corrupt process never received legislative approval. All Mike Pence has to do is send them back to the States, AND WE WIN. Do it Mike, this is a time for extreme courage!" Which is to say...the "Pence Card", the premise that Pence could unilaterally reject the votes for Biden from swing states by falsely declaring them to be invalid.
Pence's unwillingness to play ball in that scheme in turn became the impetus of the chants of "Hang Mike Pence", because - as far as Trump and his base were concerned - that constituted treason. See Watkins, for instance, tweeting that Pence was "orchestrating a coup against Trump" and linking to a blog calling for "the immediate arrest of [Pence], for treason."
During the speech just before the march, Trump made a point of griping that congressional republicans had not done enough to back up his claims of voter fraud, as if their failure to sycophantically champion the claim - despite the lack of evidence - was a betrayal. And even during the attack itself, Trump tweeted to egg on the mob that - and I quote - "Mike Pence didn't have the courage
to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a
corrected set of facts,
not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. USA demands the truth!" (referencing again, Pence's unwillingness to play along with the "Pence Card" part of the scheme and falsely reject the results as fraudulent, and telling Trump et al that what they were demanding he do would be would be unlawful). For goodness sake, event itself was called the "
Stop the Steal Rally" followed by the "
Save America March".
There was zero ambiguity that the point and purpose was to get Congress to - in Trump's words - "do the right thing" by unilaterally declaring Biden's win invalid, flipping the vote, and declaring Trump the victor. That was clear even before accounting for things like the
Eastman Memos which spelled out the sleight of hand meant to provide the pretense under which to launder Team Trump's intended fraud.
But you want us to disregard
all of those details about the storming of the Capital - the context, the build up,
even its own stated purpose - and instead treat it as existing in a vacuum, with neither preamble nor purpose. And why? To insist that the criticism of it as attempting to overturn the result and keep Trump in power is necessarily "conspiratorial thinking" and that internal consistency would mandate that we derive similar conclusions from "any [other] demonstration that turned to a riot"? And that it was, in actuality, not substantively different than simple calls for recounts?
Come off it now. That doesn't even remotely resemble a good faith argument. It's a straight up dismissal of all relevant context and details in order to facilitate a false equivalence, claiming that two very different phenomenon are practically identical on the grounds that they have a commonality in an vague and abstract sense of being "dissatisfied with the election results" while pointedly ignoring context, scale, intent (in this case the retention of power through unlawful means that would then be treated as a fait accompli after it was accomplished), method, and consequences, despite those being essential differences. Hell, it openly equivocates between
verifying the results - as in the case of a recount - and dictating that the results be declared invalid apropos of nothing and flipped outright - as in the case of Trump's demands.
You might as well be insisting that a grand larcenist shouldn't be accused of stealing
because a discount hunter wouldn't be, claiming them to be functionally and legally equivalent by ignoring everything substantive about the actions and instead focusing exclusively on painting them as common abstractions of "they both didn't want to pay the full price for a product."