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Why all these assassinations? — 9 Comments

  1. In the past, I have read thumbnail blurbs on the assassination of Pres. McKinley that describe his killer, Leon Czolgosz, as completely insane.

    This essay on Czolgosz in Wikipedia is not bad.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leon_Czolgosz

    Well, he had progressed from milder socialist organizations and influence, to more hardcore Marxist ones and had a keen interest in the anarchist Emma Goldman, and her thoughts. It strikes me that he was completely in possession of his faculties.

    There is also the copycat angle with Czolgosz. He was sympathetic to the killing of King Umberto in Italy about 15 months earlier.

  2. Jared Loughner, John Hinckley, and Giuseppe Zangara were arguably insane. No one was too concerned in re Zangara and he was executed within weeks of his attempt on (Roosevelt? Anton Cermak? No one quite knows).

  3. It doesn’t matter whether they’re insane or not, an assassination is a unilateral decision to deny the victim’s right to life. Implicit to that decision is the perpetrator’s voluntary forfeiture of their right to life.
    The principle of reciprocity, enshrined in international law applies. After trial and conviction, society should recognize and respect the perpetrator’s decision to forfeit their right to life and apply consequence accordingly.
    Knowing right from wrong is a moral determination subject to the individual’s discernment, assassination is an act. To accomplish one requires the ability to act in accordance with reality. Justice requires that actions must have proportionate consequence.

  4. I watched last week’s All In podcast—highly recommended to those who may not have heard of it—and Chamath (I’d mangle his last name so I’m not going to try) posited that so many disaffected young people got that way, or had their problems severely exacerbated, by the covid shutdown. They became shut ins, playing video games, connecting to weird, frightening internet communities that affirmed their aberrant thinking. This didn’t happen to all young people of course, but certainly to many of the most susceptible. Say hello to your future assassins, courtesy (at least in part) of stupid government policies.

  5. Neo asks: “Why all these assassinations?”

    Maybe because the Left rewards the assassins.
    Douglas Murray (h/t PowerLine):

    https://www.city-journal.org/article/political-violence-left-charlie-kirk

    The American Left has a long history of celebrating or excusing purveyors of mayhem.

    [AF: Murray begins with an illustrative story about a former leader of the IRA losing his bid for the Irish presidency because of his refusal to condemn the murders committed during his tenure.]

    The episode mattered because McGuinness still lived in the gray zone of political violence: not fully condoning it, but not fully condemning it, either—especially when it served his cause or came from his supporters. Some Americans have now entered this same gray zone. Parts of the U.S. Left have inhabited it for years.

    Many commentators have pointed to the difference in responses between the killing of George Floyd and that of Charlie Kirk. Floyd’s death led to a summer of violence, burnings, and lootings, behavior often excused by Democratic lawmakers. Groups like Antifa shut down American cities night after night with minimal official condemnation in the summer of 2020. By contrast, Kirk’s death, so far, has led to dignified and mournful prayer meetings. If the American Right were ever to erupt into violence, then it would face its own moment of challenge.

    Meantime, the American Left has the bigger questions to answer. In recent days, portions of the Left have expressed greater outrage about Jimmy Kimmel’s brief absence from his late-night talk show on ABC than Kirk’s absence from life. Others—up to and including members of Congress—have suggested that Kirk’s words constituted violence, and that therefore condemnations of the violence directed against him require a certain caveat. Such slips became possible only because the American Left has been increasingly drawn to the gray zone.

    We have seen this tendency already in the Left’s response to Luigi Mangione, the 27-year-old accused of assassinating United HealthCare CEO Brian Thompson last December on Sixth Avenue in New York City. Many have noted the gushing support for Mangione from some on the left, or Senator Elizabeth Warren’s comment after the murder that “people can only be pushed so far”—as though gunning down a husband and father could ever be a logical extension of a critique of the American health-care system.

    In response to recent criticism of their rhetoric, some on the left have pointed to frivolous right-wing reactions to the 2022 hammer attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband in San Francisco. But such tit-for-tat arguments miss the larger point. The issue is not whether both sides can produce individuals willing to commit political violence—that much is undeniable. The real question is whether those individuals will find a supportive ecosystem or, instead, encounter a firm “no,” like the one the Irish electorate eventually delivered to McGuinness.

    To answer this question in America today, we must ask another: Is there any scenario in which someone involved in political violence could expect preferment within American public life? For instance, can Pelosi’s attacker—a mentally disturbed man who cited right-coded motivations—ever expect a warm welcome in the conservative mainstream?

    The answer is almost certainly no. By contrast, there are many cases of left-wing figures who have engaged in political violence and later found not just acceptance but veneration within sympathetic institutions.

    An obvious case is that of Angela Davis.
    [AF: and quite a few others]

    Is it conceivable that the American Right could, at some juncture, feel that same frisson around violent figures? In theory, of course. But for the time being, it is hard to imagine anyone like—again, for the sake of argument—Paul Pelosi’s assailant being offered speaking gigs at American universities or receiving honorary degrees from conservative universities.

    The difference between these two reactions is the gray zone.

    It can be a distinct advantage to enter the arena of public debate with an undertow of violence on your side. From Irish Republican to radical leftist to Palestinian terrorism, the advantage lies not only in intimidating opponents but also in gaining political leverage by posing as the “moderate,” barely managing to hold back the men and women of violence. This is a mobster trick, at best, and it’s something I’ve witnessed many times from many political and religious directions in numerous countries. Its basic premise: “Agree to my demands—otherwise, I can’t promise that my friends won’t take a different route.”

    The question is not whether men of violence exist, what political direction they come from, or who finds violence useful to their cause. The question is whether the mainstream of society can hold to a single standard when violence enters the fray. Can it condemn violence without qualification, or will it recognize, and even indulge, the temporary advantages that a touch of violence can bring?

    IMO, Murray has to use the somewhat murky episode of Paul Pelosi’s assailant for an example of (non-governmental) political killing by the Right because there is not another one available, in Britain or America (or anywhere else in the world, perhaps).

    If there is, I would really like to know what I have missed.

    Note: I make an exception for governmental killings because obviously Trump taking out Qassim Soleimani is a political killing from the Right, but in the context of the undeclared war with Iran.

  6. Get ready, it has become religious to them. If you are a lefty and fail, you’re idolized. They think they really think they can win an armed conflict!

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