maiforpeace wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:maiforpeace wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
Last point - within hours of the shooting - maybe within minutes of the shooting - we had causal attributions to Tea Partiers and Sarah Palin and others....some of the first comments I heard were to the effect of "see! this is what we get with 'this kind' of rhetoric." Yet, I can't seem to locate any specificity. the actual quotes they're talking about. What did these folks say - what are some examples - of what is considered an "incitement?" My guess is that a quote by Tea Partiers and Sarah Palin advocating violence is hard to come by. I doubt they did advocate violence or call for violence. The argument will be, IMHO, that it's their "overall tone" - and their "implicit message" - that arises out of their vociferous opposition to certain government policies or proposals that "creates an atmosphere" conducive to this kind of violence arising...
Sharron Angle:
"Our founding fathers put the second amendment in there for a good reason, and that was for the people to protect themselves against a tyrannical government. In fact, Thomas Jefferson said it's good for a country to have a revolution every 20 years. I hope that's not where we're going, but if this congress keeps on going the way it is, people are really looking towards those second amendment remedies and they're saying my goodness, what can we do to turn this country around? And I'll tell you, the first thing we need to do is take Harry Reid out."
"The nation is arming, what are they arming for, if it isn't that they are so distrustful of their government? They're afraid they'll have to fight for their liberty in more second amendment types of ways. That's why I look at this almost as an imperative...if we don't win at the ballot box, what will be the next step?"
And there's more where that came from...
So what? Is there any reason to think that Loughlin even heard or read Angle's statement? And, is there any reason to think he was motivated by it? Teh fact of the matter is: the 2nd Amd was put in the Constitution "for a good reason" and part of that reason was for the protection of the people against a tyrannical government. So what? That's been the case for 225 years. And, Thomas Jefferson did say that it would be good for the country to have a revolution every 20 years. Was Loughlin motivated to kill by Thomas Jefferson?
If Loughlin was motivated by that Sharon Angle quote, then why didn't he shoot Harry Reid? Why shoot a pro-gun rights, gun owning, Blue Dog Democrat?
I was just giving you an example...actually, if there was anything to specifically incite him to violence against Ms. Giffords, it was Sarah Palin's crosshairs map and her tweet to "Lock and reload" that referenced the map. (her aide's excuse that it was a 'map' crosshairs is bullshit in light of her tweet)
But, of course, there is nothing in anything the shooter wrote or said, or in how his friends described him , that indicate that he saw, read, or focused on that. Moreover, martial metaphors in politics are commonplace.
Maybe the killer was motivated by John Kerry? There is the same amount of evidence, and maybe this had been ringing in Jared's ears for a while and he took his shot at a Congresswoman who happened to be within range....
Bill Maher: “You could have went to New Hampshire and killed 2 birds with one stone.”
John Kerry: “I could have gone to 1600 Pennsylvania and killed the real bird with one stone.”
Or maybe he was set off by Obama himself:
“If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun,”
Jared brought a gun....
Oh, and there is more where that came from!
maiforpeace wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:But, again - there is nothing to show that Loughlin had any sympathy at all for Sharon Angle. In fact, his friends said he was a "left wing pothead" and had "radical" opinions. He was also noted by classmates to be scary, and to arbitrarily raise questions in class at college about "mind control." One friend said he had an unusual concern with 2012 prophecies. And, his writings showed him to be anti-religious and concerned about the In God We Trust on the money and Bibles. Surely, that's not Tea Party stuff?
Point being - even if we assumed for the sake of argument that Angle's comments could "incite" someone to violence - the question here is "did it incite LOUGHLIN to violence?" What evidence is there for that? Wouldn't we at least want to establish that he even heard it/read it and sympathized with it? From what I've read, he would be just as likely to shoot Sharon Angle in the head as Rep. Giffords and Judge Roll. Judge Roll was a Bush Republican appointee. And, the fucker shot a little girl and several other people.
So why is he charged with an assassination attempt instead of simply the attempted murder of Ms. Giffords? It was planned, and she was targeted...not Sharron Angle, or the Judge. The judge, the young girl and the others that died or were injured were collateral damage.
Sure - didn't you read the news reports? Giffords and Jared Loughler had met previously, in person. Loughler described her as "stupid," and disliked her intensely, apparently. Loughler was also one of her constituents, and to Loughler, Giffords would have been a commonly seen figure - in the news daily or weekly - repeatedly in public doing these speaking engagements with constituents. Sure, he targeted Giffords - and they charged him with assassination because she was a Congresswoman and she wasn't shot at random.
Giffords was not a liberal. She was a conservative democrat, and despite all the fawning "love talk" we hear after she got shot, she voted against Pelosi, and she was a staunch gun owning pro gun rights Democrat. If a tea partier was going to shoot someone for political reasons, she would be far down the list.
And, key point: Jerad wasn't in the Tea Party - didn't protest with the Tea Party - and his own writings don't sound at all like the Tea Party.
maiforpeace wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:maiforpeace wrote:
Whether or not he was incited by rhetoric doesn't mean that rhetoric isn't out there and shouldn't be toned down...even Ms. Gifford made the call for more reasonable discourse a number of times in her own speeches and comments.
The fact of the matter is, what we consider discourse that should be "toned down" today, is actually already toned down from what we had in the past. It used to be quite common to burn politicians in effigy. Imagine that today? Speaker Boehnor or Fmr. Spkr Pelosi being hoisted up with a noose around his or her neck and set ablaze symbolically?
Politicians are stilled burned in effigy all over the world...wasn't Bush burned in Iraq? So what if it is toned down from what it used to be? Does that still make the current tone acceptable?
Yes - politicians are still burned in effigy all over the world. But, not here. Did you think it was "going to far" to burn Bush in effigy in Iraq?
You ask "does that still make the current tone unacceptable?"
First we have to agree on what the "current tone" is. I would say, initially, that the tone from the left is no better than the tone from the right. I would add to that that overall - in general - the tone really isn't bad. I remember the vitriol from the Left against Bush during his Presidency. That vitriol doesn't become "acceptable" in my view just because we hate the target it's directed against.
I can't say that overall the "tone" is all that bad. Some people get rude and nasty - but, there is no accounting for manners. Beyond that - you'll have to just tell me what words and sentences you think cause murder and should be eliminated from the language.
Should we remove hateful writings from libraries so teenagers can't study them? Mein Kampf? What's to allowed to be said in political discourse now?
maiforpeace wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:maiforpeace wrote:
Gabrielle Gifford:
"We're on Sarah Palin's targeted list. The thing is, the way that she has it depicted has the crosshairs of a gun site over our district. [When] people do that they've got to realize there are consequences to that action."
The huge difference between Keith Ollberman and his crosshairs map is that Gabrielle Gifford wasn't on his map, nor was she one of the two people of several on Palin's map who defeated the Tea Party opponent.
But, there is nothing at all to indicate that Loughlin was motivated by anything but being deranged.
Not true. More evidence is showing he did not like Ms. Gifford's politics. So, if he is also deranged, any rhetoric that attacks her politics will only serve as fodder for his craziness.
We know he didn't like her politics - but, what we've learned about him shows he didn't like Tea Party politics either! So, how can you say he was motivated by the Tea Party?
Look - I'm not saying he didn't hate Giffords and her politics. He also thought she was stupid. That doesn't mean that right wing rhetoric drove him to do this.
This is a be careful what you wish for scenario .... if you link this fella with the Tea Party, you have to be prepared for the same tenuous connection to be made to this guy's lack of belief in god, his opposition to In God We Trust and his view that he shouldn't have been given a Bible by the army. I mean...after all...the religious right will say that this is the result of taking God out of public life.....
My point is that we ought not to blame writings and amorphous rhetoric that have nothing to do with the given situation. If there was a call to violence - if there were writings by Loughler himself revealing that he was following some incitement from a third party - etc. - sure - that could be relevant. But, to bandy about this notion that the "tone of political discourse" is now "unacceptable," we open the door to what? What's the next step? One Congressman already has the 2011 equivalent of the Sedition Act getting geared up to submit to the Congress.....
The day we become a country that can't deal with "unacceptable rhetoric" or a tough "tone" to political discourse is a sad day indeed. Maybe that day has already come.