‘Replacement theory’: View from an immigration-wary Georgia district

Justin Walis, a 26-year truck driver, doesn’t see his beliefs in the Buffalo, New York, shooting last weekend. 

Mr. Walis wears his fourth-generation German immigrant status like a name tag, praises foreign-born colleagues, and says he supports more legal immigration. 

Why We Wrote This

The mass shooting in Buffalo last weekend has focused attention on ideas termed the “great replacement theory” – that there’s a conspiracy to disempower white Americans. To historians, the spread of nativism today is not surprising.

But at the same time, Mr. Walis voted for one of the country’s most ardent anti-immigrant politicians in recent memory – Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has spread the so-called great replacement theory that there’s a plot to diminish the power or population share of white Americans.  

According to authorities, that idea is one of the motives Payton Gendron listed in his 180-page screed before driving 200 miles to a Buffalo supermarket and shooting 13 people – 11 of whom were Black and 10 of whom died. 

In the week since Saturday, public attention is also focusing on how strains of replacement theory – often in subtle forms – have taken root in America. Polling suggests millions of Americans believe some, albeit less extreme, version of it.

And the spectrum of views can become blurry: To what degree are old debates over immigration and cultural change synonymous with “replacement” rhetoric? What’s clear is that all of these have a long history.

“It boils over because of the crisis we’re living in,” says Pam Nadell, a historian at American University. “It’s a manifestation of the crisis.”

Dallas, Ga.

Justin Walis, a 26-year truck driver, doesn’t see his beliefs in the Buffalo, New York, shooting last weekend. 

Mr. Walis wears his fourth-generation German immigrant status like a name tag, praises foreign-born colleagues, and says he supports more legal immigration. 

But at the same time, Mr. Walis voted for one of the country’s most ardent anti-immigrant politicians in recent memory – Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has spread the so-called great replacement theory that there’s a plot to diminish the power or population share of white Americans. Many might say Mr. Walis believes a version of it himself. 

Why We Wrote This

The mass shooting in Buffalo last weekend has focused attention on ideas termed the “great replacement theory” – that there’s a conspiracy to disempower white Americans. To historians, the spread of nativism today is not surprising.

According to authorities, that idea is one of the motives Payton Gendron listed in his 180-page screed before driving 200 miles to a Buffalo supermarket and shooting 13 people – 11 of whom were Black and 10 of whom died. 

To Mr. Walis, fault rests with the individual. “If some whack job dreams up a manifesto and decides to go out and kill people, that’s on him – no one else,” he says.


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