Keven Ruby
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Keven Ruby is Senior Research Associate at the University of Chicago's Chicago Project on Security and Threats (CPOST) and Research Director for CPOST's Minerva Initiative-funded research on militant propaganda.
Bio
From the Chicago Project on Security and Threats website:[1]
- "Keven Ruby is Senior Research Associate at CPOST and Research Director for CPOST's Minerva Initiative-funded research on militant propaganda. Keven has worked on a number of projects since joining CPOST in 2012, and has co-authored articles appearing in the Journal of Conflict Resolution and the American Political Science Review. He is currently working on a book project with Robert Pape and Gentry Jenkins on the targeting logics of militant groups. Keven earned his PhD in Political Science from the University of Chicago in 2012. He also holds an MA in International Affairs from George Washington University, and a BA in International Studies from the University of South Carolina at Columbia.
'Violence is Trump's Brand'
Keven Ruby was referenced in an article titled "Violence is Trump's Brand" dated June 3, 2024 by Ruth Ben-Ghiat, who writes in part:[2]
- "How unsurprising that former president Donald Trump showed up at a gun store in South Carolina and declared that he wanted to buy a gun, specifically, a customized "Trump 45." Glock. Since 2015, his political project has centered on cultivating extremists, radicalizing ordinary Americans, and building a civilian army to commit violence in his name."
[...]
- "If you don't fight like hell, you won't have a country anymore," Trump raged to the thugs assembled on Jan. 6, before he sent them off to assault the Capitol.
- That terrible day made clear Trump’s endgame in cultivating as many individuals as possible and preparing them psychologically to be willing to persecute his enemies. In doing so, Trump wrote a new page of the coup playbook: if you can't get the military to cooperate with your takeover attempt, you have a civilian army at your disposal.
- On Jan. 6, that army included anti-government extremists and hate group adherents but also many ordinary people with no prior history of militancy. These "middle-aged, middle-class insurrectionists,"[3] in Robert A Pape and Kevin Ruby's words, believed Trump's lies about winning the 2020 election and justified their violence on moral and patriotic grounds.
- Two years later, it is clearer than ever that inciting political violence is Trump’s political project, and his campaign appearances and events must be seen in that light. His rallies and other events present violence as the preferred way to resolve differences in society and as the only way to move history forward. The gun shop stop was merely the most obvious of these attempts to expand his corps of armed followers..."