Conservative talk radio has been operating in this manner under cover of legitimacy for many years and it culminated with calls to action like this:
No, it has not. There are no calls for armed attacks. Saying "got to war" means, in U.S. talk radio, not to give in, to hold one's political ground and to speak out. It's a metaphor:
"a figure of speech in which a term or phrase is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in order to suggest a resemblance, as in “A mighty fortress is our God.”
Glenn Beck, two days before the Jan. 6 insurrection: “It is time to fight,” “It is time to go to war, as the left went to war four years ago.”
Good example of a metaphor.
Mark Levin: “Crush them, crush them. We need to kick their ass.”
A well used metaphor that never is taken literally.
Sean Hannity: “There’s no doubt this was stolen. No doubt whatsoever.”
A belief that people are free to hold, even if inaccurate.
You have been in the United States for an attempted coup.
No, I have been in the US for an almost totally unarmed protest. The burnings of areas in Louisville, Minneapolis, Portland, Chicago, Milwaukee, Seattle and others were far more violent and there were 1000% more guns and rifles fired in those than in the U.S. Capitol protest demonstration.
Over 50 active or retired military, law enforcement, former elected officials and U.S. government service employees were arrested after Jan. 6 and they have faced some of the most significant and violent charges brought so far in connection with the insurrection.
Nearly none were armed and none were trying to take over the government.
There are now investigations into why the U.S. Secret Service erased text messages from Jan. 6 after receiving a congressional subpoena.
Unproven and not relevant to whether there was an actual attempt to stage a coup d'etat.
It's not something that just happens in other countries anymore. Big, mainstream Conservative talk radio in the United States is still urging its audience to join in and get rid of the oppressive Democratic government every single day.
Yes, it does (and I will show you 7 of them in the last two years in a moment). An armed group, usually supported by all or a faction of the military, takes over all armed force facilities such as air bases, military bases, police stations and national guard stations. They then, using armed vehicles, planes and the like, surround the seats of power such as the legislature, the president's residence and key ministries and a leader or group of leaders issues a proclamation.
None of that was done last year in the US.
A news story from Vox from February of this year:
"Over the past 18 months, there have been seven coups and coup attempts in African nations. In Burkina Faso, Chad, Guinea, Mali, and Sudan, military leaders succeeded in seizing power; in Niger and, most recently, in Guinea-Bissau, they failed."
Calling African coups contagious is the wrong way to think about it.
www.vox.com
In fact, in recent and even distant memory there are no incidents of a succesful coup d'etat done by unarmed civilians. Government overthrows are done by armed forces and begin by taking over military bases, airports, armories, ports and the like.