Diamond and Silk, Fox & Friends’ favorite black Trump supporters, explained

Diamond and Silk, the Trump-supporting North Carolina sisters who inexplicably became a centerpiece of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s congressional hearings last year, are headed back to Capitol Hill. This time, for the State of the Union.

Rep. Steve King (R-IA), who in January was stripped of all of his committee assignments for expressing racist views, on Tuesday announced he was inviting Diamond and Silk as his guests to the State of the Union later in the evening. He’s only allowed one guest, though, so he decided which one to actually bring along with a coin toss.

Diamond and Silk have been on the radar in the Trump orbit for a while. Had you watched Zuckerberg’s congressional hearings last year without any context, you might have thought Facebook was embroiled in a major scandal over censoring two people named Diamond and Silk. The Trump-supporting North Carolina sisters were named multiple times when Zuckerberg appeared before the House and Senate. (For comparison, Myanmar, where Facebook has helped fuel violence and ethnic cleansing, came up just once.)

They also testified before the House Judiciary Committee about social media filtering after claiming they had been censored by Facebook. “This is a stupid and ridiculous hearing,” an exasperated Rep. Ted Lieu (D-CA) said at one point.

Like them or not, the pair have made it into the public consciousness.

Diamond and Silk are largely known for their YouTube videos, which feature them commenting on the latest, often Trump-related, news. Diamond does most of the talking, while Silk chimes in with “Mmhmm,” “That’s right,” and “Yes.”

“Their job is to uncritically echo whatever it is that the president needs them to say,” said Leah Wright Rigueur, a Harvard professor and author of The Loneliness of the Black Republican.

They’ve amassed 1.7 million followers on Facebook and 1 million on Twitter, and their YouTube videos have racked up millions of hits. In an interview with Fox & Friends in April 2018, President Trump described the pair as “warriors.” They’ve visited him in the Oval Office and campaigned for him in 2016.

The pair, whose real names are Lynnette Hardaway (Diamond) and Rochelle Richardson (Silk), have become fixtures within the cast of characters surrounding Trump. Their YouTube videos get hundreds of thousands of views. The tickets for their national tour start at $50. Their support for Trump, and his embrace of them, has made them stars of an alternate media universe — one in which the biggest Facebook scandal is about whether the platform once deemed their posts “unsafe.”

“If you had to pick a style of black Republicanism that would fit comfortably in the Trump administration, Diamond and Silk is probably what you would come up with,” Corey Fields, a Georgetown University professor who studies race and politics, told me.

Diamond and Silk are former Democrats turned Trump-supporting YouTube stars

Prior to their Trump-propelled stardom, Diamond and Silk were lifelong Democrats with a YouTube channel called “The Viewers’ View,” which they said in a 2016 interview with Rolling Stone was a place to talk about things they didn’t like.

But whatever those early videos were, they’re largely gone, replaced by a series of pro-Trump hits. You can still find some remnants of Diamond and Silk pre-Trump on their YouTube page. There’s a “Black Lives Matter” video juxtaposing slavery and videos of police brutality, and another video where they comment on Sandra Bland, a young black woman who was found hanged in jail after being arrested during a traffic stop. Her death was later ruled a suicide.

“We probably had, what, 10 people [watching] our YouTube channel?” Diamond told Rolling Stone.

But in August 2015, they posted a video after the Republican presidential primary debate where Megyn Kelly asked Trump about his past treatment of women and description of them as “fat pigs,” “slobs,” and “dogs.” “Maybe you should go back and report news for Sesame Street,” Diamond says and accuses Kelly of taking a “low blow.” The video has now been viewed 1.7 million times.

“We were all on the Trump train from the beginning, and when we watched the debates and we didn’t like the questions that Megyn Kelly was asking, we spoke out on that, and that went viral,” Diamond told the publication.

During the 2016 election, the pair switched parties so that they could vote for Trump in the North Carolina primary. They put up a website with information for others to “ditch and switch” from Democrats to Republicans. The site also lists information on first-time voter registration.

A video titled “DIAMOND AND SILK ARE MAD AS HELL!” from November 2015 addresses Trump’s stance on immigration. “It’s easier and cheaper for you to deport instead of support,” Diamond says. Another from July 2016, during the Democratic National Convention, warns that “bikers for Hillary” were headed to Philadelphia, where the event was being held. Across the screen flashes an image of former secretary of state and 2004 Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry on a bike, and Diamond and Silk laugh hysterically.

“It’s time to wise up and take a chance on something different because what we’ve been doing for the same thing, we’ve been getting the same thing, and getting the same results,” Silk said in a 2016 interview with Complex about her support for Trump over Hillary Clinton. “Only a fool would fight in a burning house.”

And just like that, Diamond and Silk took off. Trump trotted them out during both the Republican primary and the presidential campaign. At a December 2015 rally in North Carolina, he brought them out onstage. “They became an internet sensation. I hope you’ve monetized this,” he said. “Do your little routine.”

They appeared at pro-Trump rallies and with other pro-Trump women, including the president’s daughter-in-law Lara Trump and spokesperson Katrina Pierson, on the campaign trail and were often seen on television and networks such as Fox News and CNN. “Being a business person, you don’t tell all your secrets, you don’t talk a whole lot, you keep that inwards and strategically plan out how you’re going to do it. Instead of just talking about it, you be about it,” Silk said in an August 2015 interview with CNN’s Don Lemon.

Post-election, the pair’s commentary has continued. Their response to a graphic photo of Kathy Griffin holding up a beheaded Trump has garnered 240,000 views on YouTube. Another video in which they juxtapose themselves into an episode of the daytime talk show The View has been seen more than 500,000 times.

In October 2017, the pair released a rebuttal to rapper Eminem’s anti-Trump rap with one of their own, “He’s Your President.” It’s an overlay of Eminem’s freestyle in which he calls Trump a “kamikaze” and declares, “We fucking hate Trump,” with Diamond and Silk repeating, “He’s your president, Trump’s your president.”

Diamond and Silk’s unexpected star has kept rising. The pair sell a variety of merchandise on their website, including T-shirts, glassware, hats, and even the “Trump’s Your President” single. They’re currently selling tickets to their “chitchat live tour,” with stops all over the country. Admission starts at $50.

That they are good at monetizing their brand is not necessarily a surprise — their parents, Pastor Betty Willis Hardaway and her husband, Freeman, are local televangelists. According to the Washington Post, their Hardaway’s Herb Garden in North Carolina sells a “colon cleanse parasite,” a Super Fat Binder Package, “blessed dream pillows,” and “love offerings.”

Diamond and Silk don’t necessarily appeal to black voters — but that’s not what they’re going for

The purpose of Diamond and Silk within the Republican Party and the MAGA crowd is not to convince black voters to support Trump but instead to give those who already lean toward Trump cover to back him. Just 4 percent of black women voted for Trump in 2016.

“Because you have a black woman who is a spokesperson for Donald Trump doesn’t mean that black women on the ground are going to vote for Donald Trump. Black women think [his policies] are going to be hurtful to them,” Wright Rigueur said. “But what it does do is provide a kind of legitimizing cover among the base, among people who are already supportive of Donald Trump.”

In other words: How can Trump be racist if these two black women support him? The Post notes that most of Diamond and Silk’s Facebook fans appear to be middle-aged white women.

Not only do Diamond and Silk fold neatly into Trumpworld, but they also fit the mold of the type of black Republican the party is comfortable with, Fields told me. They articulate Republican issues — perhaps especially those around race — in a way that is consistent with the party line that racial inequality, racial bias, and racism are sort of non-problems. In one Fox News interview, for example, Diamond said, “Trump is not a racist. He’s a realist. And the only color he sees is green.” The pair recently complained they had previously been stuck on the “Democrat plantation.”

“I don’t think there’s much substantive to the critique, but it’s a rhetorical critique that has existed since the late 1970s and ’80s, this idea that black Republicans somehow are seeing differently than other black people, they have some special vantage point on politics,” Fields said. “This is a consistent trope, especially among black Republicans who want to deemphasize the importance of race and racism in their politics.”

It’s not uncommon for Republicans to bring out high-profile cheerleaders within the framework of everyday Americans — think of the McCain-Palin campaign’s Joe the Plumber in 2008. Diamond and Silk are somewhat more unusual as black women, but even that isn’t entirely an anomaly; the GOP also has Stacey Dash, Omarosa, and Pierson. Their ultimate appeal isn’t to black voters but to white ones.

“It’s absolutely not aimed at black audiences. … One of the worst ways to reach out to black audiences is to call them slaves or say they’re cheap or brainwashed or on the Democratic plantation,” Wright Rigueur said. “It performs a kind of validation to the base — in this case, Donald Trump’s audience — and says, ‘Everything that you’ve thought, everything you believe is true, I as a black person am validating that.’”

Republicans are using Diamond and Silk in their narrative about Facebook censoring conservative content

Diamond and Silk have continued to be prominent figures online and in conservative media circles, and every once in a while, they’ve managed to break through to the mainstream as well. They did, to a certain extent, with the Eminem response. But a Facebook moderation blunder and Republicans’ desire to cast the platform as an anti-conservative space has pushed them more into the limelight.

Diamond and Silk in 2017 began to say Facebook and other tech platforms, such as YouTube, were limiting the reach of their posts. Then in April 2018, the sisters said Facebook told them their posts were “unsafe.”

“The Policy team has come to the conclusion that your content and your brand has been determined unsafe to the community,” an email from Facebook informing them of the decision read, according to the Washington Post. “This decision is final and it is not appeal-able in any way.”

Facebook acknowledged sending the message but said it was “inaccurate” and that it had provided the sisters with information about the tools and policies applicable to their page.

“I call that a dictatorship,” Diamond said in an interview with Breitbart.

A number of Republicans brought up the matter in hearings with Zuckerberg, Facebook’s CEO, about the company’s practices in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) cited the matter as an example of a “pervasive pattern of bias and political censorship” at Facebook.

Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX) said he had been asked to inquire why Facebook was “censoring conservative bloggers” such as Diamond and Silk. Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) declared, “Diamond and Silk is not terrorism.” Zuckerberg told Barton that his team had made an “enforcement error” and had already been in touch with Diamond and Silk to reverse it.

Of course, whether Diamond and Silk were actually censored is questionable. Facebook appears to have reversed the decision quickly. Moreover, a ThinkProgress analysis found that the pair’s page actually received more interactions the month they said they were censored than when they said they were not. The pair claimed that Facebook never contacted them about the matter, but a Daily Beast report confirmed that the company, in fact, did.

But the sisters’ claim plays into the narrative employed by some Republicans that Facebook is biased against right-leaning content, a criticism the platform hasn’t been able to escape since Gizmodo reported in 2016 that Facebook workers routinely suppressed conservative-leaning news. Facebook has gone to great lengths to show that’s not the case — Zuckerberg met with conservative leaders after the Gizmodo story broke, and Facebook made changes to its trending stories feature — but accusations of bias persist, to the point that Diamond and Silk were on Capitol Hill last week to testify before the House Judiciary Committee about social media filtering.

The hearing was described as “bizarre,” “ridiculous,” and a “surreal spectacle” that at times devolved into shouting and at others saw observers trying to suppress laughter at some of the outlandish claims being made. Rep. Hank Johnson (D-GA) noted that the exposure a trip to Capitol Hill would give the sisters was likely to boost their income. Per Politico:

It’s also worth examining why Republicans and Trump are embracing and lifting up Diamond and Silk. “While it’s worth asking why Diamond and Silk support Donald Trump, it’s equally important to examine why characters like Diamond and Silk are raised to celebrity status among white Republicans,” Fields said.

“Not all black conservatives receive such a warm embrace. In my research, black conservatives who directly spoke to issues of racial inequality and black uplift felt marginalized within the GOP. So while we’re all laughing at the shenanigans of Diamond and Silk, it seems equally worth considering why the Trump administration has endorsed them as the new face of black conservatism,” he said.

During the House hearing, Diamond and Silk inadvertently kicked up dust over whether they’d been paid by the Trump campaign

Diamond and Silk made multiple false and dubious statements during their House testimony, which was under oath. One that garnered the most attention: that they had never been paid by the Trump campaign. Both Reps. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX) and Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) pressed the sisters on their claims that they’d never received payment from the Trump campaign, even though Federal Election Commission filings show they’d been paid $1,274.94 for “field consulting” work.

“We’re familiar with that particular lie. We see that you do look at fake news,” Silk responded to Jeffries.

The sisters have said the money was for reimbursement for travel expenses for an event they attended, Women for Trump, in 2016. Bradley Crate, the treasurer for Trump’s presidential campaign, told PolitiFact that was indeed the case and just wasn’t listed that way in the FEC filings:

The hearings seem to have boosted Diamond and Silk’s profile and likely made them more money. Around the time of their House hearing, more people searched for Diamond and Silk on Google than White House adviser Kellyanne Conway or then-Chief of Staff John Kelly.

Diamond and Silk, Fox & Friends’ favorite black Trump supporters, explained

It’s part of the pair’s “call and response with the Republican base,” Wright Rigueur said. “Their audience has continued to grow within conservative circles, and them testifying in front of Congress actually causes them to gain supporters” — and, in turn, money.

Sourse: breakingnews.ie

Diamond and Silk, Fox & Friends’ favorite black Trump supporters, explained

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