Given the events of today especially as well as the preceding days, to write that it has been a bad week would be a horrible understatement.
While the suspect in the synagogue massacre might not have liked Trump, he was still dipping into the same well:
Robert Bowers & Cesar Sayoc.— Wajahat Ali (@WajahatAli) October 27, 2018
Not immigrants who came on a caravan.
Not Muslims.
Not refugees.
Not black men who kneel to protest police brutality.
Not women angry at Kavanaugh.
Not Mexican invaders.
Angry, homegrown American men inspired to violence due to an ideology of hate.
On October 22, a package was found at the home of financier George Soros containing a pipe bomb. Soros has been set up as a boogeyman figure by many on the right and figures prominently in their conspiracies including funding antifa (or really any protest against Trump and his policies):
The attacks against him consistently contain antisemitic tropes. The following day, a similar package containing a pipe bomb was delivered to the home of former president Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, though the secret service intercepted the package before it arrived.
The response of much of the right in the United States was to suggest that the pipe bombs were a "false flag" and were carried out by left-wing groups. They blamed the Democratic Party, antifa, George Soros, the Clintons, and Obama. In Canada, the reaction of the groups and individuals I follow on social media followed a similar trend. For example, on the Canadian Combat Coalition page, members simultaneously celebrated the attempted assassinations and denied that they had actually occurred. It was also claimed that anyone who would be arrested was a patsy; the far right knew the "real" truth:
More pipe bombs followed. Between October 22 and 26, George Soros, the Clintons, Barack Obama, Eric Holder, Maxine Waters, John O. Brennan, Joe Biden, Robert De Niro, James Clapper, Cory Booker, Kamala Harris, and Tom Steyer. Almost all of these packages were intercepted at a postal facility. The commonality of all these individuals is that they are prominent critics and political adversaries of Donald Trump. Every one of them have been personally named, attacked, and been dehumanized by Trump.
It shouldn't be all that surprise that this occurred. Violent rhetoric has defined the Trump presidency and that of many of his much of his base. He has encouraged his supporters to attack protesters at his rallies. As recently as last week he praised a Republian congressman for assaulting a journalist. He routinely calls for the arrest of his political opponents (to which his supporters bleat "lock her up" on cue). He refers to the press as the "enemy of the people."
And even after all of this, he still can't help but return to form:
Just moments after Trump calls for unity at a WH event, he references "globalists," prompting several audience members shout "Soros" -- who was a target of one of the bombs -- and others shout "lock him up" to which Trump chuckles, points and repeats "lock him up" pic.twitter.com/IWZR3DRCvk— Robert Maguire (@RobertMaguire_) October 26, 2018
As in the United States, those few Canadians who support Trump refuse to acknowledge that his rhetoric has contributed to this current political climate even as they themselves continue to post comments regarding the need to "purge" society of the left; when someone actually attempted make the online threats a reality, they deny that it could possibly be one of their own:
On October 26, a suspect was arrested:
He was a registered Republican....
.... and a virulently racist who routinely threatened people on the left as well as the press on Twitter and Facebook:
His posts attacking President Obama appear to go back to at least 2011:
However, don't think that something as insignificant as "evidence" or "facts" will sway the far-right in the United States or Canada:
Echoing the antisemitism of many who are claiming the attempted political assassinations are a "false flag" a leader in the Canadian Combat Coalition has posted the following:
They also undermine themselves with posts (and the accompanying comments) such as these:
Many of us who have been concerned about the violent political discourse emanating from the White House have said that it was a matter of time before it would result in a tragedy; truth be told there were numerous instances that I could point to where this has already occurred. Thankfully in this case a tragedy was averted.
If it was lucky that the attempted political assassinations were not successful, the luck ran out today in horrible fashion:
Update:— Tess Owen (@misstessowen) October 27, 2018
-11 confirmed dead
-Six injured, including four police officers. One of the injured, a 70-year-old man, was shot multiple times in the torso & is in critical condition
-Robert Bowers, the suspect, had an assault rifle and at least 3 handgunshttps://t.co/enMpFA2JLh
The Anti-Defamation League says this is likely the biggest single murder of Jews — just for being Jewish— in US history. An ignominious record. https://t.co/AxRpfa1edB— Laurence Tribe (@tribelaw) October 27, 2018
They were in synagogue for a religious baby naming ceremony, a Jewish tradition. What occasion could be more joyous? Until a maniac with an AR-15 and and arsenal of handguns started shooting. God bless the victims and the heroic 1st responders. And save our country from hate.— Andrea Mitchell (@mitchellreports) October 27, 2018
The perpetrator of the tragic synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh--a horrible anti-Semitic sequel to Dylann Roof's attack--appears to have been a white supremacist. For the current state of that hateful movement, see our recent report at https://t.co/NkXNb5emS5.— Mark Pitcavage (@egavactip) October 27, 2018
“The moral inadequacy is vast. Murderous acts of hate have occurred, on a national scale, several times this week. It is a tragedy that the President is not able to see them for what they are.” He is not willing, I would argue. Or he can, and doesn’t care. https://t.co/emGAoCRiI3— Jamil Smith (@JamilSmith) October 27, 2018
Churches and mosques across the U.S. are extending love and support after the synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh pic.twitter.com/x0zwQ60Kq2— NowThis (@nowthisnews) October 27, 2018
Vigil in Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh for shooting victims at Tree of Life synagogue pic.twitter.com/XRqA4U1vkf— Trip Gabriel (@tripgabriel) October 27, 2018
Unlike the pipe bomb suspect who was obsessive in his devotion to Trump and who turned his van into a veritable shrine, the suspect in the murder of (as of this writing) 11 men and women at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh was not a fan of Trump. However this isn't because he was a progressive. In fact his criticism of Trump was that he wasn't nationalistic and extreme enough:
Another MAGA terrorist, this one fed on a steady diet of antiSemitic ideology against George Soros, strikes again. My deepest & sincerest condolences to this wonderful Jewish community that stood by the true teachings of Judaism in helping the wayfarers & vulnerable. https://t.co/mXONlERyGA— Mubin Shaikh (@MrMubinShaikh) October 28, 2018
However his hatred was based in large part on the anti-immigrant, anti-refugee, Islamophobic, and I'd say antisemitic atmosphere of fear, resentment, and blame fostered by people like Trump. For example, these are among the Tweets this month from Trump regarding a caravan of refugees traveling north to the US border:
While the suspect in the synagogue massacre might not have liked Trump, he was still dipping into the same well:
The suspect in the Pittsburgh synagogue mass shooting wrote on social media that Jews were helping transport members of Latin American migrant caravans https://t.co/9KL2jUG3D3 pic.twitter.com/xJB7f3mJR0— CNN Breaking News (@cnnbrk) October 27, 2018
This last post was made shortly before he allegedly attacked the synagogue:
The dehumanization of immigrants and refugees in this country may also have played roll in what could very well have been a horrible tragedy:
Thus far after monitoring the reaction of Canadian rightists, I see a few general themes even though most of these posts were made after the suspect had been arrested and named. They blame antifa:
Muslims:
The Jews and George Soros:
And, of course, all of the above including the old "false flag" chestnut:
I have to admit that right now, I'm not feeling especially hopeful for any of this ending any time soon:
Trump warned there will be "violence" if the Republicans lose their majority in Congress as a result of the 2018 midterms, in a recording now heard by CNN.https://t.co/vIJqfMJWR5— Julia Davis (@JuliaDavisNews) October 27, 2018
reminder that this happened https://t.co/OajGXnnOxt— dimirror match (@wehpudicabok) October 28, 2018
UPDATE: Because far too often we remember the names of the shooters, and not their victims.
The official list of the victims killed at the synagogue shooting:— NPR (@NPR) October 28, 2018
Joyce Fienberg, 75
Richard Gottfried, 65
Rose Mallinger, 97
Jerry Rabinowitz, 66
Cecil Rosenthal, 59
David Rosenthal, 54
Bernice Simon, 84
Sylvan Simon, 86
Daniel Stein, 71
Melvin Wax, 88
Irving Younger, 69
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https://www.balloon-juice.com/2018/10/27/taking-stock-after-this-weeks-domestic-terrorism-incidents-where-we-are-and-what-comes-next/#comments
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