“I fear that there's going to be an assassination,” Rand Paul
told a Kentucky
radio show this week. “I really worry that somebody is going to be killed and that those who are ratcheting up the
conversation ... they have to realize they bear some responsibility if this
elevates to violence.”
I don’t always agree with Senator Paul, but I think that he’s
absolutely correct here. It really isn’t a
stretch to think that the current powder keg-like political climate could spark
an act of violence that could result in bloodshed. It isn’t farfetched at all because
it has already happened.
It was only last year that a crazed Bernie Sanders supporter
attacked
the congressional Republican baseball team as they practiced at a Virginia ballpark.
The attack left Louisiana Republican Steve Scalise badly wounded but alive.
Even before the baseball attack, the leftist Antifa movement held violent protests in several cities around the country. During the 2016 campaign, Trump
campaign rallies were the scene of leftist mob violence.
Not all the violence is on the left, however. In August
2017, an alt-right
militant drove his car into a group of counter-protesters
during a neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville,
murdering 32-year-old Heather Heyer. In August, a Trump
supporter from California was charged with threatening to shoot Boston
Globe employees because the newspaper was an “enemy
of the people.” In 2016, supporters of Ammon Bundy took
up arms against the federal government when they seized a federal wildlife
refuge in Oregon. The incident could easily have become a bloodbath, but
Republicans cheered when the conspirators were
acquitted.
Rand Paul has even had personal experience with violence.
When a neighbor attacked Paul in January
2018, fracturing five of the senator’s ribs, there was speculation that the
assault might have been politically motivated. In a plea
deal, the neighbor admitted to the attack
but said that he was motivated by Paul dumping brush on his property rather
than by politics.
If we haven’t experienced a political assassination in recent
times, it isn’t for lack of desire. Even before a leftist called for the assassination
of Brett Kavanaugh, a British man in the US illegally tried to pull
a police officer’s gun at a June 2016 rally to kill Donald Trump. Barack
Obama was the target of no less than
four assassination attempts at the hands of everyone from white supremacists
to ISIS to someone who thought he was the antichrist. Sooner or later, a
would-be assassin is going to get it right and the odds are about 50-50 as to
which side of the political spectrum will be at fault.
Paul went on to blame inflammatory rhetoric for planting the
seeds of violence. “When people like Cory Booker say get up in their face …
What he doesn’t realize is that for every 1,000 persons who want to get up in
your face, one of them is going to be unstable enough to commit violence,” Paul
said.
Recalling previous attacks, Paul said, “When I was at the
ball field and Steve Scalise was nearly killed, the guy shooting up the
ballfield, and shooting I think five or six people, he was yelling, ‘This is
for health care. When I was attacked in my yard and had six of my ribs broken,
and pneumonia, lung contusion, all that — these are people that are unstable,
we don’t want to encourage them.”
Paul is correct that
mentally unstable people don’t need to be encouraged to commit violence but
stopped short of criticizing his own side’s words.
There is a direct link between President Trump’s rhetorical attacks on the
press and the threats against the Boston
Globe. When people on the right say that
liberals and Democrats are traitors who are trying to destroy America, no one should
be surprised when someone commits a violent act against them. Perhaps the
biggest surprise is how little violence there has been so far given the heat of
rhetoric from both sides.
It’s easy for those of us on the right to criticize people
like Corey Booker and Maxine Waters when they call for confrontation. It is
much more difficult to call out those on our own side who incite or commit violence.
The problem is with radicals on both sides, however, and both sides should
police their own.
Originally published
on The
Resurgent
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