Something I’m coming to realize about the free press is it’s really designed to make the world make sense. To tell a narrative the fits a certain world view.
And I remember when I studied the columbine shootings; what I learned is how broken those shooters brains were. That I think on some level, I imagined a rational anger directed at their classmates, and not the bizzare rantings of a confused adolescent (which of course they were)
So we of course don’t want to introduce the concept of groypers, or 4chan meme culture or the bizarre rantings of a broken mind that probably led to this tragedy, and instead use this opportunity as to continue to perpetuate this neat story that justifies everyone’s priors.
I have only watched this from afar (Sweden), but it seems weird that the people that are the loudest about their outrage are the same people that mocked Nancy Pelosi after the attack on her husband (she wasn't at home).
Even Charlie Kirk himself said a Patriot should bail the man out.
I don't condone the attack on Charlie Kirk. I think political violence in a liberal democracy is a bad thing. However, to me it seems like a lot of people wouldn't have minded much if the dead husband and father of 2 would have been on the other team. From what I have seen about the divisive discourse of Charlie Kirk, I am not sure Charlie Kirk would have minded much himself.
Searching twitter about the murder of Melissa Horton or attack of Pelosi, and you will find republican lawmakers spreading misinformation about it and even mocking the victims or making fun of the attacks. These people should not be in the business of lawmaking. They believe in nothing except their own team winning no matter what.
> I have only watched this from afar (Sweden), but it seems weird that the people that are the loudest about their outrage are the same people that mocked Nancy Pelosi after the attack on her husband (she wasn't at home).
I don't think that's true. I think you're getting a biased sample.
It's certainly true that the right is being loud, but that is to be expected. What is different, this time, is that this man was assassinated while engaged in an almost platonically pure act of free speech. He was literally killed for expressing an opinion in a public square, and it happened from the left, so there's broad-based recognition that something is wrong. Right now, the only faction that isn't being loudly critical of this act is the extreme (mostly younger, online) left.
That is not to say that the other incidents you're citing are any less wrong, or that you won't find crass commentary about poltical violence on all sides of the political spectrum. No political party is above the fray, but Caesar's wife must be above reproach. The left has made an identity out of being liberal, and being liberal, originally, means being broad-minded and tolerant [1]. This is a fundamental violation of that principle. I think it's easy to over-generalize from the actions of a single individual, but when you add in the fact that the assassin was quoting reddit memes, and couple the giddy celebration on bluesky...it's hard to ignore the cultural trend.
I personally identify as classically liberal, I have very little in common with Kirk's politics, and I'm horrified by the assassination. This is a throwback to a form of violent reactionary protest that the US hasn't really had to deal with since the 1960s, and for the first time in my recollection, it's coming from "my side" of the political spectrum. We need to exorcise this demon.
[1] To be completely clear and pedantic: I am not suggesting that the right is not liberal in the classical sense, nor am I implying that they should strive for anything less. I'm just making an argument about perception and self-identity. For better or worse, the US political left has self-labeled as "liberal", and dresses up and cosplays in the image of an educated, erudite elite. To have members of that tribe resort to violence to suppress speech -- to celebrate that violence -- is a wholesale rejection of the fundamental tenets of the identity itself.
> For better or worse, the US political left has self-labeled as "liberal", and dresses up and cosplays in the image of an educated, erudite elite. To have members of that tribe resort to violence to suppress speech -- to celebrate that violence -- is a wholesale rejection of the fundamental tenets of the identity itself.
Ever since about 2011 or 2012, I have been wondering what on earth happened.
Of course, Santos says nothing about freedom of speech in this scene. But he speaks of expanding rights for everyone, not threatening people for exercising them.
How common is it for public political liberal figures to encourage violence? The only ones I have seen, but yes view might be biased, celebrating it have been republicans. Trump himself joked about the attack on Pelosi's husband. A lot of other elected republicans spread misinformation about it.
- We do not know the motivation of the shooter, but charlie had violent enemies who claimed he wasn't fascist enough, just like he had enemies who claimed he was too fascist.
- We do not know the alignment of the shooter, but we have at least as much evidence that he was right-wing as we do that he was left-wing.
- There is not a consensus that condemnation for fascist rhetoric was false, but we do have a nonzero, nonmajority of people claiming there is.
- We do not know if charlie was "good" or "innocent", but I personally feel that this violence was a bad idea, and feel bad that his family is suffering through it. Also, he clearly had friends who are hurting, too.
I agree that we should tone down actions and rhetoric, and as explained above, the things in your post after the first sentence work against those aims. Better to just tell everybody on all sides to tone down their actions and tone down their rhetoric. I am on board with you there.
We do know that name-calling and calls for violence and propensity for violence (all things suspected of contributing to this action) are coming from right-wing voices at least as much as they are coming from left-wing voices. So let's start by not engaging in political violence (both assassins and ICE attacks), and see if we can find agreement on language.
As far as I can see, there's nothing there mentioning people accusing others of being 'not fascist enough'. Also, you said 'violent enemies', but I can't see that mentioned either.
Interesting! I and many others have read the exact same sections and come to the opposite conclusion: that the sections do indeed describe multiple feuds with a violent group that felt that Charlie wasn't fascist enough
(Obviously they don't use those exact terms, so I hope you're not hung up on a lack of a quote saying verbatim "we are fascist and you aren't fascist enough" or "we hereby announce that we are violent", please let me know if you are fixated upon this)
Like I said, we shouldn't speculate on motive, because we can see there is at least as much there as anywhere else. Anyhow, why do you think your conclusion is so opposite others'?
That's absolutely not what happened; this isn't MLK, this man died while spewing dog whistles about gang violence to justify the very gun culture that would kill him (in the hands of a peer conservative, not a leftist, not a democrat, not a liberal).
And I remember when I studied the columbine shootings; what I learned is how broken those shooters brains were. That I think on some level, I imagined a rational anger directed at their classmates, and not the bizzare rantings of a confused adolescent (which of course they were)
So we of course don’t want to introduce the concept of groypers, or 4chan meme culture or the bizarre rantings of a broken mind that probably led to this tragedy, and instead use this opportunity as to continue to perpetuate this neat story that justifies everyone’s priors.