Category: Politics 2017
NRO Editors Podcast 11/30/17
NRO Editors Podcast: Episode 66: The Pretender to the CFPB
James O’Keefe Shoots at the Washington Post and Misses
Save the Crusader
NRO: Save the Crusader
My half-doomed effort to save the Holy Cross College mascot.
Roy Moore Is Not the Cure for Judicial Supremacy
Tim Kaine Is Wrong about America and Slavery
Yes, radical Islamic terrorism is different
Trump Adviser Pleads Guilty to Lying about Seeking Hillary Emails from Russia
What The Paul Manafort Indictment Means
New Russian Nuclear Scandal Raises New Questions About Clinton Foundation
How Not to Marginalize the Alt-Right
NRO Editors Podcast 10/11/17
NRO Editors Podcast: Episode 60: A Corker of a Week
Flag Protests and the Power of Symbols
Harvey Weinstein and The Wages of The “Nuts and Sluts” Defense
The Bump Stock Debate Illustrates Two Competing Models of Political Strategy
Bobby Jindal for HHS
NRO: Bobby Jindal for HHS
Trump Charges Into The Democrats’ Trap on Puerto Rico
A Bogus Health-Care Number from the Center for American Progress
Eric Schneiderman Needs to Recuse Himself from Trump Investigations
SCIENCE/Hurricane Irma Should Teach Us Caution About Predictions
Republicans Should Kill This Bad Tax Reform Idea
Do Liberal Writers Really Believe In An Obligation To Oppose Everything Trump Does?
Editors Podcast on Hurricane Harvey
NRO: The Editors Podcast, on Hurricane Harvey and other topics.
WaPo and The Hill Publish ‘Troll Poll’ about Postponing the 2020 Election
The Pocketbook Party
How Republicans Went Wrong on Health Care
Military Fitness Is A Military Decision
It’s Not Treason, But It’s Not Defensible, Either
Religious Liberty, Trump Win Important Victories at the Supreme Court
In a Bad District for Trump, Karen Handel Persisted
We Should Have Heeded This Warning From Ronald Reagan
Who’s to Blame for Political Violence?
LA Times: Who’s to blame for political violence? My take on the Steve Scalise shooting.
The more we blame speech for violence, the more likely we are to use violence to stop speech.
On Wednesday morning, a Trump-hating Bernie Sanders volunteer shot five people at a Republican practice for the annual congressional baseball game. One of them was the third-ranking House Republican, Louisiana Congressman Steve Scalise. We could blame Democrats and Sanders supporters for this crime, if we wanted to imitate past liberal tactics. But the rush to score partisan points by using incidents of violence to discredit your political opponents is not only all too common but also cheap and dishonest.
The blame for violent acts lies with the people who commit them, and with those who explicitly and seriously call for violence. People who just use overheated political rhetoric, or who happen to share the gunman’s opinions, should be nowhere on the list.
In 1995, Bill Clinton famously used Timothy McVeigh’s bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City to tar Newt Gingrich and Rush Limbaugh and turn the public against small-government Republicans. The 2011 shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords led to an orgy of Republican-blaming, mostly based on the fact that Sarah Palin had released a map of 20 vulnerable Democratic districts with a set of crosshairs to mark each target. Never mind that the shooter had never seen the map and turned out to have no Republican connections and few conservative-sounding ideas. (Scalise’s shooter, by contrast, used his social media account to endorse and spread partisan arguments).
Since President Trump’s inauguration, several House Republicans have been targets of violence. A woman was arrested for trying to run Tennessee Congressman David Kustoff off the road after a healthcare town hall; a man was arrested for grabbing North Dakota Congressman Kevin Cramer at a town hall; a 71-year-old female staffer for California Congressman Dana Rohrabacher was knocked out at a protest and the FBI arrested a man for making death threats against Arizona Congresswoman Martha McSally.
Everyone can see that the political climate has gotten a lot nastier lately. Americans used to despise politicians they disagreed with; now they hate the people who vote for them. Fewer and fewer people can tolerate friendships with political adversaries, and polls show more and more Americans — yes, especially Democrats — have trouble respecting anyone who voted for the other candidate. Donating to the wrong cause can get your business boycotted, and a stray tweet can bring down the online rage mobs.
All the talk of “resistance” and “treason,” plus the apocalyptic rhetoric about the climate and healthcare, certainly doesn’t lower the country’s temperature. But drawing a line from rhetoric to violence will only make matters worse. Each half of the country deciding that the other half is literally responsible for murder will only deepen that divide.
Every political and religious cause will inevitably attract some zealots who take strong words too far. It’s fair to blame a movement for the violence it inspires if — and only if — its leaders actually, seriously urge and celebrate and perpetrate violent acts, as the leaders of groups like Islamic State do.
But even at a time when American political figures call each other fascists and traitors and rant about resisting tyranny, there remains a world of difference between our political factions and Islamic State. If you hear someone shoot their mouth off, just remember it’s still only their mouth.
The more we blame speech for violence, the more likely we are to use violence to stop speech. Blurring the lines between bullets and tweets eventually will leave us with more bullets. Nobody forced Scalise’s shooter to pick up a gun over politics; he did that himself. It cheapens the moral consequences of that decision to credit angry words with an assist.
Democracy and free speech need room for people to exaggerate and vent. It wasn’t right when Democrats blamed Republicans instead of the Arizona shooter for the Giffords attack, and it wouldn’t be right for Republicans to return the favor just to get even. Keep the blame where it belongs.
Yes, The Attorney General Can Have Privileged Conversations With The President
Trump & Comey Pod
Over at NRO, I’m on a podcast with David French (recorded Friday) talking Trump and Comey.