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SOMERVILLE, MA -
January 10, 2011 - The
tragic shooting in Tucson this past weekend claimed the lives of
six, including Federal Judge John Roll, and left congressional
Representative Gabrielle Giffords----the
evident target of alleged gunman Jared L. Loughner----in
critical condition following a gunshot through her brain. In
all, twenty people were shot. The writings of Loughner, who was
arrested at the scene, echo right-wing Patriot and anti-Federal
Reserve themes mixed with rhetoric similar to that from people
who are mentally unbalanced. While it remains unclear the extent
to which the assassination attempt on Rep. Giffords was that of
a committed right-wing ideologue, there's ample evidence that
aggressive right-wing rhetoric targeting liberals and leftists
as traitors to the nation encourages some unstable people to act
out in aggression or violence.
Right-wing
demagogues may not be legally culpable for this most recent
violence, but they must share some moral culpability for
fostering a toxic political climate in which such acts are more
likely to occur.
In March 2010,
Tea Party icon and presumptive 2012 Republican presidential
candidate Sarah Palin released a
"target list" of Democrats to beat in the November election
featuring a map in which twenty House districts were marked with
rifle scope crosshairs. She later told her supporters over
Twitter, "Don't Retreat, Instead-Reload!"
In June,
Giffords' Republican opponent, Tea Party candidate Jesse Kelly
held a campaign event at which supporters were invited to shoot
an assault rifle with the candidate. The
newspaper listing for the event read in part, "Get on Target
for Victory in November. Help remove Gabrielle Giffords from
office, Shoot a fully automatic M16 with Jesse Kelly."
In our 2009
report
Toxic to Democracy: Conspiracy Theories, Demonization, and
Scapegoating,
PRA senior analyst Chip Berlet explains how demonizing rhetoric
can lead to violent acts:
"Right-wing
pundits demonize scapegoated groups and individuals in our
society, implying that it is urgent to stop them from wrecking
the nation. Some angry people in the audience already believe
conspiracy theories in which the same scapegoats are portrayed
as subversive, destructive, or evil. Add in aggressive
apocalyptic ideas that suggest time is running out and quick
action mandatory and you have a perfect storm of mobilized
resentment threatening to rain bigotry and violence across the
United States."
"The current political environment
is awash with seemingly absurd but nonetheless influential
conspiracy theories, hyperbolic claims, and demonized targets,"
explains Berlet, "and this creates a milieu where violence is a
likely outcome."
The Tucson attack evokes the 2009 murders of Kansas abortion
provider,
Dr. George Tiller, and Holocaust Museum security guard,
Stephen Johns, as well as a
rash of other right-wing violence in the aftermath of the
2008 presidential election. We are reminded, too, of
John Patrick Bedell's 2010 attack on the entrance to the
Pentagon, Andrew Joseph Stack's suicidal flight into an Austin
IRS office that killed Vernon Hunter, and Byron Williams'
shootout with California state police while allegedly on his way
to kill people at the Tides Foundation and San Francisco ACLU.
During summer
2009, the demonizing language used at many congressional
representatives' local town hall meetings was complemented by a
number of anti-Obama "patriots" who showed up outside (and even
inside) those events with
all manner of firearms. Those threatening displays
fortunately did not devolve into shootings. At the time of the
Tucson shooting spree, Rep. Giffords, a supporter of Obama's
health care reform plan, was holding her own outdoor "Congress
on your corner" constituent event. The father of one of the
dead, nine-year-old Christina Green, told the press that the
"bookends of her life"----she
was born on 9/11/2001----had
been "tragic."
May we all
work to ensure that the Tucson shootings are the final bookend
to the demagoguery, intimidation, and violence that has so
tainted our political life since Obama's election.
For
more about right-wing rhetoric and conspiracy theories targeting
liberals, leftists, President Obama, and Democrats:
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Toxic to Democracy, a
special report by senior analyst Chip Berlet
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Chip Berlet on "The Becking of
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords",
Democracy Now!
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Alleged Giffords Shooter Shares Currency Plot Obsession with
Anti-Abortion Killer
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Possible Racist and Anti-Immigrant Tie to Alleged Arizona
Assassin
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"Right-Wing Populism & Conspiracism and the Tea
Party movement: How Right-Wing Populists use
Demonization, Scapegoating, & Conspiracy Theories to Justify
Apocalyptic Aggression," paper by senior analyst Chip Berlet
for UC Berkeley's Fall 2010 Tea Party Conference
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Tea Parties, Right-Wing Populism, and Scapegoating, an
introduction to the topic by Political Research Associates
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Extremism, Conspiracy Theory, and Murder, NPR's
Fresh Air with Terry Gross
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