LINDSTROM, Minn. – This small town feels like an island.
Surrounded by a chain of lakes, with an idyllic main street and neighborhoods of neatly kept homes and churches, it presents a classic portrait of Americana.
But that tranquil image was shattered twice last year by armored SWAT vehicles and squads of FBI agents bursting through one family's doors with guns drawn.
By October, four men from one Lindstrom family had joined the still-growing list of Americans indicted on charges of storming into the U.S. Capitol last Jan. 6.
A fervent belief that the 2020 presidential election had been stolen and what one relative has since described as a divine responsibility to protest the vote inspired the Westbury family to be there that day. As Congress tried to certify the presidential election results, they joined a crush of Donald Trump supporters. The mob taunted police and shouted "Treason!" as they heaved past the shattered windows of the U.S. Capitol building, its security alarms blaring.
"Watching our country being destroyed by our own people is the saddest thing I've ever seen," read one Facebook post later shared by Robert Westbury, the family's 62-year-old patriarch. He was referring not to what he saw inside the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, which he described in other posts as a "peaceful protest." Depictions to the contrary, he would write, were liberal lies.
The Westburys are among the millions of Americans being swept along in a raging current of falsehoods: The election was stolen. COVID-19 vaccines are dangerous. Climate change is hype.
The deluge of disinformation is soaking social media and being endorsed by prominent voices in media and government and candidates for public office. And as it spreads and deepens, the consequences are getting more severe.