By Noah Rothman
Monday, May 19, 2025
One of the few features that distinguishes politically
motivated terroristic violence on the right from the same kind of violence on
the left are the divergent reactions they inspire.
We don’t have to look far for evidence of the extent to
which the psychological derangements that lead to right-wing violence are
covered as though they have significant purchase with the public. Indeed, the
subtextual goal of that sort of coverage is to convey to readers that most
Americans are only just barely sufficiently well adjusted to keep their
sympathies with the violent right to themselves.
The racist and misogynistic views expressed by the
Hispanic man who killed eight people at a Texas mall in 2023 are “common among
white supremacist groups,” the Texas Tribune reported. (“This is
a very complicated aspect of right-wing extremism,” CNN correspondent Juliette
Kayyem observed, insofar as “a lot of Hispanics might identify as being
white.”) The Tribune managed to connect that act of violence to a host
of ideologically inspired terrorist acts through the years.
Similarly, the 2022 slaughter of grocery shoppers in a
predominantly black neighborhood in Buffalo, N.Y., was treated as though it
were a leading indicator of the wave of racist murders to come. Coverage of
that horrific event dwelled on the degree to which the shooter might have been
inspired by antisemitic and racist memes as well as the conspiratorial notion
that the Democratic Party sought to “replace” white Americans with non-white
migrants. “According to an AP-NORC poll released this week, one in three U.S.
adults believes there is an ongoing effort “to replace U.S.-born Americans with
immigrants for electoral gains,” NBC News reported — a chilling
indication of the scale of the audience for this killer’s delusions.
Some are more explicit in their effort to indict their
political adversaries via a strained attempt to associate them with mass
killers. “Extremist murders are usually from right-wing actors,” the Washington Post’s 2023 headline read. “In the past five
years, there have been three deaths linked to left-wing extremists,” Philip
Bump reported. “There have been 176 linked to right-wing ones.”
The disordered thinking that leads sufferers to conclude
that ritual human sacrifice might beget positive social change doesn’t lend
itself to a coherent political philosophy. Those who subscribe to the
center-left political affinities that dominate American newsrooms can recognize
this even when a killer’s evil works inspire adulation among progressives —
as Luigi Mangione’s act of bloodletting did this past December.
The sort of discretion from which the violent left
benefits has been on display since last Friday, following the bombing of a reproductive health
facility in Palm Springs, Calif. As Rich wrote of this attack, the bomber, who managed to kill
only himself, subscribed to a variety of lunatic creeds — few of which could be
credibly described as right-wing. He was allegedly attracted to
“anti-natalism,” a philosophy that rejects procreation entirely. The Washington Post reports that he endorsed
“pro-mortalism,” adherents of which believe more people should die. He also
endorsed “negative utilitarianism,” which stipulates that life should be made
as miserable as possible, presumably to make the sweet embrace of death marginally
more alluring.
In sum, this guy was an addled lunatic. Indeed, the
community of like-minded lunatics on the internet with whom the alleged bomber
associated is busily disassociating itself from his delusions — that is, when
its members aren’t furiously
banning those who confirm that his violent misanthropy
perfectly reflects their estrangement from the human race.
You cannot call the outlook of this would-be killer
anything other than deranged. If, however, you were a rank political
opportunist, you could make the case that this antisocial outlook is a slightly
more extreme version of the belief that the planet cannot sustain its current
population (an outlook that led to some of the worst eugenicist abuses of the human species since
the end of World War II). You could say that it looks a lot like the environmentalist left’s “de-growth” agenda, which is quick
to emphasize the environmental benefits associated with less human activity
and, logically, fewer people. You might see in “negative utilitarianism” shades
of a left-of-center outlook that emphasizes the spiritual fulfillment found in discomfort,
privation, and abnegation — at least insofar as those
sacrifices advance the left’s broader ideological objectives.
It wouldn’t be difficult for a sufficiently talented
polemicist to draw these connections, if only to terrorize Americans in ways
this failed bomber could not. It might advance the right’s political objectives
to insist that this delusional person and the fringe malcontents with whom he
found kinship represent the vanguard of a movement that is coming for you next.
But that would be terribly dishonest, wouldn’t it?
No comments:
Post a Comment