By Jim Geraghty
Wednesday, September 24, 2025
When news broke of the shooting at the Dallas ICE
facility Wednesday morning, the shooter’s motive was not initially clear. The
shooter killed two detainees and critically injured a third, according to
officials, while no law enforcement agents were injured. It was conceivable
that the perpetrator was some nut who hated illegal immigrants and wanted to
harm them, although one could reasonably ask why somebody who hated illegal
immigrants would shoot people who were in the process of being removed from the
country.
But the authorities declared late this morning that rounds found
near the body of the suspected shooter in the attack on a Dallas ICE facility
Wednesday morning “carried anti-ICE messages.” Considering how quickly a false
narrative that a right-wing lunatic had killed Charlie Kirk spread, I wonder if
authorities were eager to fill the vacuum with clear facts about the crime and
likely motive.
And while everyone has the right to criticize our
immigration polices and ICE is not above criticism, you start to wonder whether
months and months of calling ICE agents “fascists”
and “jackbooted thugs” are convincing left-wing nutjobs that
this really is the time for violent resistance to the U.S. government. It’s not
hard to find figures on the left arguing that “ICE agents deserve no privacy.” I’m not a particularly big
fan of federal agents wearing masks as they perform their duties, but it’s
undeniable that there are people out there who would like to harm ICE agents,
who thus have a reasonable concern that exposure of their faces might make them
easier targets.
A rare kudos to The Atlantic for running an article and a headline that left-of-center
readers would prefer not to encounter: “Left-Wing Terrorism Is on the Rise: For
the first time in more than 30 years, attacks by the far left outnumber those
by the far right.”
And I think many conservatives will dispute Daniel Byman
and Riley McCabe’s characterization of the right-wing violence that occurred
this year:
This year, however, violence on the
right has plummeted. Only one right-wing-terrorist incident occurred in the
first six months of 2025: the June assassination of the Minnesota state
legislator Melissa Hortman and her husband. This extraordinary drop-off is too
recent to allow for any definitive explanations—and the number of terror
incidents often fluctuates over short periods—but Trump’s reelection could be a
key factor. His victory deflated election conspiracies that had once motivated
many extremists.
Okay, except the perpetrator of the Hortman
assassinations is more accurately characterized as a delusional maniac, not
as someone driven by a right-wing political agenda:
In the letter, Boelter allegedly
wrote that he had been secretly trained by the U.S. military and had
participated in secret overseas missions “all in the line of what I thought was
doing right and was in the best interest of the United States.” The letter
claimed he had been “approached” by Gov. Tim Walz (D) and ordered to kill the
state’s two U.S. senators, Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith, because “Tim wants to
be senator.”
Considering how many progressives chose the more pleasant
alternative realities where Kirk was killed by an “ultra-MAGA” or a “White Supremacist Gang Hit,” I think we’ll see a lot of
denial that this perpetrator was doing so in the name of the left as well.
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