By contemporary US standards, the reaction to what was clearly an attempt to assassinate House Speaker Nancy Pelosi by a right-wing extremist and conspiracy theorist, which ended up with her elderly husband severely beaten with a hammer, was unsurprising. Fox News commentators blamed Democrats for the attack and expressed sympathy for the attacker by suggesting he’d been harshly treated. Republicans used the attack to claim Democrats were soft on crime. Right-wing commentators claimed the attack was a hoax and a false flag operation. Elon Musk, who is committed to restoring extremism, hate speech and conspiracy theories to Twitter, personally spread misinformation about the attack.
In a country where the president tried to incite an insurrection to overturn his election loss, where right-wing terrorism has for years been identified by law enforcement agencies as the country’s biggest security threat, where anti-Semitism is surging and where right-wing Republicans routinely threaten political opponents with violence or murder, it seems one more step along the way to civil war.
Much of the US mainstream media continues to treat the rise in violence and hate speech as a both-sides problem, the result of polarisation for which Democrats are as much to blame as Republicans. Some major outlets, like The Washington Post, have begun explicitly pushing back against both-sideism, noting that it is Republicans who have become more extreme and more hateful in their rhetoric — a process that began with the Tea Party movement, which transformed into openly racist “birtherism” about the first Black president, and saw its full flowering in Trump and an explosion in conspiracy-theorist thinking within the mainstream GOP.
It’s important to note none of this is unprecedented, even putting aside the Civil War. Violent, often deeply repugnant rhetoric characterised the “debates” of many of the now-sainted founding fathers in the early years of the republic; the 1850s was characterised by extremist rhetoric and violence by slaveholder interests. Conspiracy theorising has long been a key feature of US politics from colonial times right through to now. Racist terrorism was a key feature of the South from Reconstruction to the 21st century. The 1960s and early 1970s saw widespread terrorism, intense polarisation, constant rioting and political violence.
What’s different is that conspiracy theory thinking hasn’t been this mainstream since before the Civil War. Many conservatives fought hard to keep extremism and conspiracy theorists like the John Birch Society out of the Republican Party in the 1950s and 1960s, and succeeded; the likes of Liz Cheney fighting MAGA Republicans and Trump are now the last remnants of rationality in a party where the fight against extremism has been lost. And there’s an entire mainstream media ecosystem that helps spread conspiracy theories and extreme rhetoric, along with social media.
And not too far away is the prospect of Trump, a blatant criminal and would-be dictator, making another bid for the presidency — or a smarter, more wily version of him.
What’s still more worrying is that this is happening at a time when the economy is growing and unemployment is at just 3.5% and wages growth is over 6% in nominal terms.
Next year is likely to see a US recession as a result of the Federal Reserve’s determination to smash inflation — as part of a globally concerted monetary contraction (and continuing serious problems in the Chinese economy). A serious recession, one that sees unemployment spike and worries about joblessness (and all that entails in the US, like losing access to healthcare) spread among voters, will only further encourage extremism, tribalism and populism. History shows economic uncertainty is a great friend to tribalism, ethnocentrism and populism around the world.
For the United States, it will have meant 9/11, two major wars, the financial crisis and the ensuing great recession, a pandemic and another recession, all in the space of a quarter of a century.
And in that same period, we’ve all been handed a new technology to create our own communities, spread hate and misinformation and organise violence from the palms of our hands — by platforms that maximise revenues by maximising the amount of time we spend on our screens and how angry we feel about what we’re seeing.
This is a long way of saying that however awful things are in the US currently, all the risks are downside: things could get much uglier, and it’s not implausible that’s exactly what will happen. Like the near-fatal assault on Charles Sumner by a slaver senator on the floor of the US Senate in 1856, the attack on Paul Pelosi might end up being a footnote to a far darker chapter just a few years later.
It seems the yanks dont know when to calm down. It certainly looks like things could get pretty violent soon. Trouble is it will be very one sided. Rednecks own dozens of guns each but your average woke democrat probably doesnt own any. If the shooting starts it will be pretty awful.
Should the rednecks take control it will only be a matter of time before ‘thieves fall out’. Then it may prove even worse.
The military is more likely to be on the side of the Democrats IMHO.
At this stage they may well be on the side of “democracy” rather than the Democrats per se, but that will pass.
Unlikely – a career choice of a uniform, weapons and obedience to orders from above is not an indicator of regard for the rights of others.
This cohort’s biddability has been the fatal flaw of civilisation since the Bronze Age and readily exploited by rulers.
Fortunately they are easily identifiable, young males aka trouble looking for somewhere to happen.
If they survive until a woman takes them in hand they may grow out of it.
Meanwhile we are seriously considering accepting a kind offer from the US military to park six nuclear-armed long-range bombers at Darwin – what could possibly go wrong?
They’ll be safe there. The Chinese aren’t going to target their own port city.
Nice.
Thank you Adam Giles and associated mates who facilitated the 99 year “Lease”.
RAF Base Tindall is where any such B52’s would be located and would make Katherine a legitimate target. The expansion of the runway and fuel tank storage started in Feb 2020 BTW so it’s not a new story.
Media and commenters don’t even know the difference between Darwin and Katherine!
The Dibber, who never saw a war he didn’t love – from a safe distance, yesterday claimed that the USA didn’t need B52s in the NT to threaten China because Norad bases in “Alaska are much closer“.
Alaska is 6,329kms as the bomber flies from central China, RAF Tindal is just under 6,300kms so he needs to buy a new atlas instead of relying on the one showing the majority of the world British pink.
And a distorted projection.
Strangely enough, the US could lob an intercontinental ballistic missile from somewhere in the US into the lagoon of Kwajalein base in the Marshall Islands in the early 80’s. A lot further than the B52’s can fly.
I don’t think the technology has gone backwards in the intervening 40 years.
Indeed, you gotta love the Dibbster, he’s always up for a fight, from the safety of an large office in Canberra of course.
4 Corners last night was borderline surreal what with the toy soldiers being moved about by right wing think tank alumni. The AEI person reckons there’ll be war between China and US over Taiwan within 5 years although there appears to be no incentive and no particular sign that China is massing on the border so to speak. The debacle in Ukraine would be a skirmish compared to a seaborne invasion of Taiwan. There’s no real economic incentive to sacrifice all the Chinese blood and treasure, unlike Ukraine which is vast and resource rich. 4 Corners is well past it’s use by date but unfortunately it’s all we have.
Tindal base is outside Katherine, 400 kms from Darwin.
We have a number of air strips which will take a B52, spread through out of Australia.
If the US wants to build hangers, accommodation and storage on our base, who cares?
If China gets its knickers in a twist over a few B52’s, one wonders what they are planning.
The NT considers itself a frontier anyway.
“If China gets its knickers in a twist over a few B52’s, one wonders what they are planning”.
More concerned about what the Yanks are up to.
China’s response is no different to our, ever constant, whining and paranoia that China will establish a military presence in the Solomons. The Yanks already have enough bases in closer proximity to China than Australia. This is just a blatant provocation.
And people wonder why Russia finally cracked it over Ukraine. The West doesn’t know when to pull their heads in.
Always amazed at how the near murder of Charles Sumner was dealt with.
Perp got a fine only, then got reelected with huge support.
Pro slavery press made a hero of him.
Bloke who was assaulted was mocked and his trauma downplayed.
Seems to be a bit of a pattern in the US.
Thanks for this reference. I read about Sumner and Brooks as a result of your post. What a telling event in US history! What sticks in my mind is how the pro-slaver press accused Sumner of cowardice because he couldn’t return immediately to the senate from his savage beating. Brooks, on the other hand, was a fine courageous southern gentleman to them, despite the fact that he had hit Sumner with his gold-headed heavy cane before Sumner could rise from his desk, continued to hit him as he lay trapped by the desk, continued after Sumner had freed himself but was blinded by his own blood, and continued after Sumner had lost consciousness. All the while, Brooks was backed up by pro-slaver Keith brandishing a pistol.
Keitt! No relative!
(Three attempts before auto-“correct” let this correction through.)
Sounds about right for a country founded by religious zealots.
Some commentators say that many Americans cannot accept that whites will be a minority in the near future (already in some states). Germany 1933? Fascism writ large.
You are correct Tony, save it was not a question of population in Germany, it was the perception of who had he control of industry and commerce.
That’s an implicit admission from them that they engage in racist behavior. They’re scared of being the minority because they know exactly what they have done to minorities.
Could not help but notice on ABC News breakfast this morning, how proud the new US ambassador is of her country,.
Apparently law and order is nowhere near as bad as we read on the news, and people the world over still love American “democracy” and their staunch defence over the last 75 years of the international rules-based order.
I feel so reassured..!!
Try to remember she was raised in ‘Camelot’, a fable.
She was raised out of the limelight in order to prevent some nutter killing her or her brother.
Until 12 she mostly lived in Europe, based on Onassis’ private island, Skorpios.
She returned to enter high school in the USA.
Caroline Kennedy is the only living offspring of JFK.
She has only stepped forward now that her children are grown up.
As an ambassador she is supposed to be politically neutral and gave it a good crack on ABC breakfast.
Do you really think that a little girl who had had her father shot dead with his brains all over her mother’s clothes, is completely removed from the current surge of violence in the USA?
Or has she started to warn her family to be careful.
This disgusting scenario has been whipped up by a desperate relevancy deprived, ex- president, grifter, serial bankrupt. This person, who also happens to be morally bankrupt is facing charges for not paying his state taxes. Al Capone went for not paying his taxes, although the Trumpster has far less class than Capone.
Unfortunately the right wing media keep the pot simmering, ready to bring it to the boil and then we have Elon Musk and twitter. Heaven help us.