Against 'Incitement'
Political speech doesn't kill people, people kill people
When a significant portion of the commentariat decided in early January that enough hyperbolic, martially themed political rhetoric was enough, that it was time for journalists to purge words like "battleground" from their election reporting and certainly long past time for the Republican Party to erase such eliminationist modifiers as "job-killing" to describe Democratic legislation like Obamacare, not a single member of the newly cautious caucus pointed a cautionary finger at Chris Hedges.
Chris Hedges, if you haven't heard of him, is a Pulitzer-winning New York Times war correspondent turned apocalyptic essayist for the lefty website Truthdig.com. He is someone who, after Greek protesters burned banks and murdered innocents in 2010, wrote: "Here's to the Greeks. They know what to do when corporations pillage and loot their country." Around that same time he wrote a piece titled "This Country Needs a Few Good Communists." And as many commie nostalgics tend to do, Hedges has repeatedly claimed that the modern U.S. is comparable to Hitler's Germany.
Jared Loughner's murderous rampage in Tucson, Arizona, which killed six, wounded 13 others, and prompted a national re-think of violence-tinged alarmism, did nothing to dull Hedges' tongue. Days after the massacre, he wrote that "Corporate systems of power are instruments of death that can be fought only by physical acts of resistance."
And yet the only mention of Hedges I could find in the lengthy discussion of post-Loughner political rhetoric came from Hartford Courant columnist Susan Campbell, who paraphrased him arguing that "the left's dedication to tolerance makes it ineffective in the face of intolerance." Intolerance in the face of intolerance is no vice.
I bring up Hedges not because I think that his words incite violence, but because I am convinced they do not. And I am just as convinced that most of the people calling for a "new tone," for a rhetorical disarmament in the discussion of politics, are motivated not by an equal opportunity antipathy to non-empirical hyperbole, but by a partisan revulsion at excess from the side whose beliefs they happen to find distasteful.
If "death" and its variants truly were the new verboten in political discourse, as the New York Times editorial page and countless commentators suggested in response to the GOP's post-Loughner "Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act," then Hedges, whose new book is titled The Death of the Liberal Class, would no longer be welcome at the adults' table. And yet there he was on National Public Radio, giving the disaffected-progressive response to President Barack Obama's State of the Union address, arguing that Communists were "partly" right in their economic analysis, and categorizing any Democratic tack toward the political center as "capitulation." For Hedges, politics is a question of life, death, and war. And on that score, at least, he is right.
If you read one piece in our package about the political class' truly bizarre (if distressingly predictable) reaction to the Loughner massacre, make it Senior Editor Radley Balko's piece about "The Deadliest Rhetoric." There Balko makes the always timely and almost always ignored point that the government's use of "war" rhetoric, particularly in the horrendous four-decade war on drugs, has, in concert with the militarization of local police departments, led directly to the outright murder of scores of innocent people. Violent rhetoric begat wretched laws whose enforcement killed the very Americans who were allegedly being protected. It is a status quo that should shock the conscience of every citizen.
Chris Hedges, on the other hand, has no armies or SWAT teams. He may express admiration for bank-burning Greeks and totalitarian-apologist Marxists, but even if we were to discover, for instance, that the thugs who broke the leg of Republican operative Allee Bautsch outside a GOP fundraiser in New Orleans last year had tattooed the contents of Hedges' latest screed just before their stomping spree, Hedges should still be off the hook. The reason is as simple as the old playground rhyme: Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.
We may never unravel the crazy-quilt motivations and influences rattling around Jared Loughner's very troubled head. (For a more sophisticated attempt than most, try Managing Editor Jesse Walker's "Unpacking Jared Lee Loughner.") But the blame is nevertheless straightforward: It falls on the man who pulled the trigger. Whoever attacked Bautsch (in a crime that you would have heard about long before this column had the noisy protest outside the Louisiana fundraiser been held by Tea Party activists rather than scruffy left-anarchist types) is ultimately responsible for whoever attacked Bautsch.
As with the monstrous events of September 11, millions of human minds reacted to the unspeakable act in Tucson by lunging desperately for an explanation, any explanation, that may hint at somehow preventing the next murderous outburst. (For a list of some particularly inane examples, check out Senior Editor Katherine Mangu-Ward's "From Reefer Madness to the Hays Code.") Sadly, this tendency is even more pronounced among Americans who live and breathe the zero-sum dead zone of major-party politics. For those of us who consume and participate a little too much in instantaneous social-network projects like Twitter (follow us at twitter.com/reasonmag!), watching the reaction to the Tucson massacre unfold live in the hours and days following the shooting was a scarring experience, kind of like witnessing a loved one soil himself after too much drink. The initial suspects of malign influence overwhelmingly leaned right, toward Sarah Palin, the Tea Parties, anti-immigration activists, Glenn Beck, Ron Paul–style critics of the Federal Reserve. As time revealed a more complicated picture, wound-licking conservatives pounced right back by blaming everything from Bush-hating 9/11 Trutherism to an experimental high school education project allegedly funded in part by Democrat financier and all-purpose bogeyman George Soros. As reason.com and reason.tv Editor in Chief Nick Gillespie writes in "The Politicization of Everything," far too often "Both left and right embrace a totalist mentality that says the most important aspect of everything is whether it helps or hurts your party of choice." The reflex, in every sense of the word, is repulsive.
This will not be the last time political violence will be perpetrated or attempted during Obama's presidency (or those of his successors), so the pattern is worth committing to memory. Terrible deed prompts premature finger-pointing. (Extra credit in this case goes to the unmissed former Sen. Bob Kerrey for pre-emptively assuming that Loughner wanted to repeal ObamaCare.) Partisans immediately blame their mirror images on the other side of the aisle, and endless oxygen is expended debating an undefinable "climate" of violence allegedly created by political expression.
There is a happy ending to this grim business, and not just Rep. Gabrielle Giffords' miraculous recovery from a bullet to her brain. Politicians and pundits may be panicking, but the American people have largely kept their heads—much as they did in the days and months after September 11, though few gave them credit at the time. Polls showed solid majorities rejecting any link between political rhetoric and Loughner's violence. Calls to enact ill-advised legislation have mostly (though not totally) stalled out. Not only is Chris Hedges still free to make hyperbolic comparisons to Hitler's Germany, so are his analogues on the anti-Obama right. We should welcome the opportunity to refute them on their merits, instead of seeking to banish them from the great American debate.
Matt Welch is editor in chief of reason.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
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This article makes me so mad that I am almost incited to go out with a baseball bat and bash in some pundits' mailboxes.
The server squirrels must have posted this in the wrong dimension.
He's a terrorist because he attended an "overseas killing congressmen camp." ?
Nice try. I would rather shit a chayote than read your blog, rather.
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_RR5j.....te.php.JPG
God that must have hurt. Sorry baby
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The calls for civility in political discourse is akin to calling for collision free football.
Ain't gonna happen. Never was, never will be. All those idiots talking about it have a very severe case of rectal-cranial inversion.
Mostly, I think they just got their heads up their asses....
Do you guys work here?
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nobody.
At least seven of you watched. Perverts!
"Both left and right embrace a totalist mentality that says the most important aspect of everything is whether it helps or hurts your party of choice." The reflex, in every sense of the word, is repulsive.
You don't say. They remind me of Fritz Leiber's The Big Time, where no distinction is made between the Snakes and the Spiders; they're just the two opposing sides, and all that matters is their never-ending battle.
I'm fascinating, don't you think?
Your unhealthy fascination and obsession with Epi is quite tiring and boring for the rest of us.
Why don't you two just have angry sex and get it over with.
Look,
Common sense and rational thought has no home here sir. This is the US of A!
The myth of peak oil.
http://libertarians4freedom.bl.....k-oil.html
Is rectal your blogwhore idol, Greg?
Oh "Episiarch," you're so edgy. You hate everybody!
Well, Mr. Smith does not appear to be a follower of James Howard Kunstler.
I don't hate you, anonypussy. I don't really give a shit about you one way or the other.
This has all been settled, long ago.
Either the First or Second Amendment must go. Your choice.
Why not merge them?
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances, provided that all of the aforementioned people are armed. You know, with firearms.
Pro Lib, I like the way you think.
I admit, the merged amendment does subtly change one of the rights.
I still like it.
FUCK THAT! Pro Lib is trying to deny our right to ursine appendages. This aggression will not stand.
When I was a little kid (6 or 7 years old), I thought it was a right to wear sleeveless shirts.
I wish someone at Reason would write an article defending attacks on members of the government. I'm not saying that attacks are effective, but they are justified.
On the day of the Tucson shooting:
"Too bad. I don't give a shit about a politician."
-Episiarch
"Fuck off. Did you expect us to give a shit about some shitbag politician?"
-Warty
Exactly, anonypussy. Exactly. Even a stopped passive aggressive whiny Randroid is right twice a year.
Those are nice. I just wish there was more.
Those are nice. I just wish there was more.
Why not get a gun and do it yourself, tough guy?
You realize there were other victims , right?
One of the deceased was a 9 year old girl, so excuse some of us for not giving a shit about a politician for a minute.
And still people ignore the dead adults who weren't government-sector workers.
"And still people ignore the dead adults who weren't Democratic Party government-sector workers."
There was a Federal judge killed as well and every pundit seemed to flush him down the memory hole with the other, non-Giffords, victims.
You are not alone, JE.
Ask, and "libertarian" scum will come out of the woodwork.
Any random guy who pumps out septic tanks deserves more respect than the average politician.
A crack whore deserves more respect than the average politician.
Septic tank pumpers perform a valuable and needed service, and many of them do it with competence and integrity. They deserve billions of times more respect than politicians.
Whores too.
My pee-pee burns 🙁
I thought the commentariat's silence regarding all the violent words being thrown around up in Wisconsin meant that it was okay resume uncivil discourse. My mistake.
Brandybuck|3.7.11 @ 8:24PM|#
"I thought the commentariat's silence regarding all the violent words being thrown around up in Wisconsin meant that it was okay resume uncivil discourse. My mistake."
Your mistake was the presumption that uncivil discourse was evil independently of who is making those uncivil statements.
If union thugs (and/or their apologists) do so, it's just fine. The commentariat has no problem with that.
The call for civility in discourse was only ever aimed rightward. Even thought the left in the US has more blood on their hands, and indulges in far more offenses against civility, from the institutions they captured during the Long March of the late 20th century, the left perpetuates the myth that it is conservatives who are violent in word and deed.
Let's face it: given a choice between a country ruled by fat, sweaty SoCons gibbering on about abortion and fags, and one ruled by earnestly condescending leftoids overcompensating for their bitterness and inadequacy . . . .
I'll take the SoCons every time.
"Let's face it: given a choice between a country ruled by fat, sweaty SoCons gibbering on about abortion and fags, and one ruled by earnestly condescending leftoids overcompensating for their bitterness and inadequacy . . . ."
Great description.
I'll take 'potent quotables' for 600.
"The left is guilty of far more offenses against civility... those bloodthirsty bastards."
I haven't even read the article yet, but I'm pissed off that I click on Reason, and once again am looking at the same picture of this jackass Loughner. Win the future!!
is that who it is? I thought it was Hit & Run's version of "What? Me worry?" It's growing on me, kind of reminding us that you can still smile in the face of adversity.
I really really really wish we could lose that picture of the AZ nutcase.
Use Giffords' instead.
How 'bout this one.
By the way, where is all the media handwringing over the behavior of the protesting union members in all the state capitals?
The lefty MSM were chomping at the bit and falling all over themselves to attibute all sorts of imaginary violent tendencies to the tea partiers.
But all the REAL violent incidents, comparisions of the Wisconsin gov to Hitler, etc, etc. get a total pass from them.
http://www.nationalreview.com/.....oy-murdock
Here's an exerpt from the story:
"At another protest, an interviewer asked what should be done with Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. "Put him back in the fields," suggested Don Wallace, former head of the United Firefighters of Los Angeles. And what about the leader of Fox News? "Roger Ailes should be strung up," Wallace proposed. "Kill the bastard."
I have this theory that progressives really aren't as morally sensitive about absurd things as they make out to be. Think about it, why would someone sincerely be more outraged about "violent" figures of speech than actual violence? I think that, knowing they don't have any moral standards, they calculatingly approximate the frequency that people with actual souls feel offended then save their affected righteousness for times that it's politically beneficial. Liberals can only simulate human emotion.
I smell a thesis!
Not calling someone the lying douchbag they are is the first step to eventually agreeing with them.
I agree with everything exept this:
lunging desperately for an explanation, any explanation, that may hint at somehow preventing the next murderous outburst.
Should read:
lunging desperately for an explanation, any explanation, that shuts down the political speech of our opposition.
Not this weirdo's picture AGAIN!
I like it. It should be the default picture to soften the awful shit we read about here.
i see
Jared Loughner and Sarah Palin running through a meadow, holding hands? http://dregstudiosart.blogspot.....do-it.html
A fair and balanced assessment of whose really to blame for the shooting.
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And this article goes double for the burning of the Koran and the violence "caused" by it.
I'm lookin' for somebody's ass to kick!
Whoa...since when did you guys start doing game commentary?
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