By Tod Lindberg
Thursday, October 23, 2025
Eras creep in and taper off without clear demarcation;
only in retrospect can we classify a single event as the beginning of one or
the end of another. With the two assassination attempts on Donald Trump as well
as the successful hits on United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson and conservative
activist Charlie Kirk, we must now ask whether a new era of assassinations is
upon us, an era comparable to the one that gripped the country between 1963 and
the early 1980s.
The assassination of JFK in November 1963 shocked America
to its core. The America of 1963 did not need a “visual” to be shocked; it
would be nearly 12 years before the public got a chance to see the “Zapruder
film,” the grainy, black-and-white home movie of Kennedy’s last moments as his
motorcade passed the Texas School Book Depository in Dallas and an assassin’s
bullet tore through his skull. The mere notion that anyone might kill the
president of the United States was itself borderline unthinkable—in a way,
perhaps, even for those charged with the safety of the president. Riding in the
back of a limo open to the air was as normal for presidents and politicians in
its day as it has been unthinkable ever since.
That kind of weird innocence persisted in the immediate
wake of the assassination. The authorities quickly located the assassin and
arrested Lee Harvey Oswald. They could not imagine that the open way they
disclosed plans about Oswald’s movements in custody would provide an
opportunity to a man with a gun and murderous intent to get so close.
Photographers were on hand to capture Jack Ruby firing a single shot at close
range. The best-known image of Lee Harvey Oswald is the one in which he is
already dying—a split second after being hit, a stunned expression on his face
and his mouth slightly agape.
With a president and his assassin both dead, the
conclusion of investigative commissions that Oswald was “a lone gunman acting
alone” instantly had to vie with numerous other scenarios that emerged from
elaborate chains of speculation. And does, to this day. We are used to writing
off such speculation by invoking the term “conspiracy theory,” which is a way
of dismissing those who challenge widely accepted accounts of the supposed
facts of a situation. But throughout history, assassinations have more often than
not been conspiracies. While some American killers—like “disappointed office
seeker Charles Guiteau,” who shot President James Garfield because he didn’t
get a patronage job—did the job themselves, John Wilkes Booth was not “acting
alone” when he assassinated Lincoln, just as Brutus was the leader of a
conspiracy to murder Julius Caesar.
Only 49 years before JFK was killed, numerous conspiring
individuals with bombs and guns had stationed themselves on Archduke Franz
Ferdinand’s path through Sarajevo in 1914 before Gavrilo Princip got him,
setting World War I in train. Puerto Rican nationalists worked together to try
and assassinate Harry Truman in 1950. Thus it was hardly irrational to inquire
into the possibility of a conspiracy, especially since Oswald was a known
Communist who had defected to the Soviet Union five years earlier before giving
up and returning to the United States. Law enforcement always considers the
possibility that more than one person is involved in a difficult-to-solve
murder and sometimes finds a conspiracy at work. When the conclusion is
otherwise, as it was with the Warren Commission’s finding in the Oswald case,
it’s an easy leap for conspiracy-hunters to conclude that law enforcement must
have been in on it.
The impact of the JFK assassination and its presence in
our common cultural conversation did not wane over time, in part because
assassinations and political violence started to become commonplace in its
wake. It was the first in a series of high-profile murders or assassinations,
or attempts thereof, that persisted for more than two decades.
The Kennedy assassination marked the turn as well to a
period of volatility in American politics in a bizarre conflation of the civil
rights movement, campus protest, early feminism, a new intellectual radicalism,
and the escalation of and mounting opposition to the war in Vietnam—as well as
resistance to all these trends.
There had even been a prologue to the Kennedy
assassination some months before in 1963: the assassination of civil rights
activist Medgar Evers, the NAACP’s field officer in Mississippi. Evidence
pointed to a member of the Ku Klux Klan, who in 1964 was charged and brought to
trial. All-white juries hung twice, letting him go free. (In a controversial
retrial in 1994, a mixed-race jury convicted Byron De La Beckwith of the
murder.)
After Kennedy, the next high-profile American
assassination was that of the militant black nationalist Malcom X, in 1965.
This was indeed the product of a conspiracy. Multiple gunmen opened fire on him
as he was about to give a speech. In this case, however, the deed was a product
of an internecine struggle, since the perpetrators were members of the Nation
of Islam, from which Malcom X had grown increasingly estranged in recent years.
The impression of the 1960s as an assassination spree
solidified with the slayings of civil rights giant Martin Luther King Jr. in
April 1968 and, mere months later, President Kennedy’s brother and former
Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, then himself a presidential candidate.
James Earl Ray, whose racist views were unconcealed, shot
King with a high-powered rifle from a building across from King’s Memphis motel
room. King and his colleagues had stepped outside onto the walkway of their
second-floor room. A photographer who was staying in a room nearby heard the
shot and rushed onto the walkway, where he captured an image of the mortally
wounded King collapsed on the floor as members of his retinue, arms
outstretched, point in the direction from which the shot came.
Riots broke out across the country, wreaking devastation
in urban areas. Ray, who fled the scene but was quickly identified as the prime
suspect, was apprehended abroad, traveling on a counterfeit passport, in June
1968. He confessed and was sentenced to 99 years, though he later recanted and
unpersuasively alleged a conspiracy. In 1975, however, Americans learned that
J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI had been surveilling King as part of its COINTELPRO
(Counterintelligence Program) activities, which let loose a fresh torrent of
conspiratorial speculation.
Bobby Kennedy was a senator from New York and, by June
1968, a leading candidate for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination. On
June 4, he was in California celebrating his primary victories that day in
California and South Dakota. As Kennedy and his entourage made their way out of
the hotel through its kitchen shortly after midnight, Sirhan Sirhan, 24 years
old, rushed RFK, shooting the senator three times, including once at close
range in the head. Sirhan wounded several others before he was subdued.
Photographers captured iconic images of a busboy kneeling next to the fallen
RFK trying to comfort him. Kennedy died in a hospital 26 hours later.
Sirhan was a Palestinian Christian who had emigrated with
his family from Jordan to the United States after Israel’s War of Independence.
He was blunt about his anti-Semitic motive. As Sirhan saw it, RFK’s support for
Israel in the Six-Day War in 1967 and for sending Phantom fighter jets to the
Jewish state in its aftermath warranted his murder. Convicted at trial, he
received a sentence of death, later commuted to life in prison. Though eligible
for parole, he has been denied every time, most recently by Governor Gavin
Newsom in 2023. He was also repeatedly denied motions for a new trial, alleging
that he had been drugged or brainwashed as part of a conspiracy.
In May 1972, Alabama Governor George Wallace was on the
presidential campaign trail in Laurel, Maryland. With television cameras
rolling, Wallace took off his suit coat and began to work the crowd. Arthur
Bremer, 21, stepped up and fired multiple times, gravely wounding Wallace, who
survived but remained paralyzed from the waist down. The television footage,
captured at close range, is graphic. Wallace falls to the blacktop on his back,
and blood spreads on his white shirt. Bremer’s diary, which Harper’s published
to substantial controversy as a self-portrait of a sociopath living in troubled
times, claimed he had shot Wallace in pursuit of notoriety. Once again,
conspiracy theories abounded, including one advanced by the left-wing literary
provocateur Gore Vidal. He claimed the diary had been a plant by the Nixon
White House. The jury rejected Bremer’s insanity defense, and he spent 35 years
in prison.
Assassinations were only one part of the broader story of
political violence in the United States and abroad in this period. U.S. troop
deployment in Vietnam peaked at more than 530,000 in 1968, and protests began
to accelerate. During the Democratic National Convention in 1968, the streets
and parks of Chicago saw violent clashes between police and thousands of
demonstrators protesting the war. The revolutionary Black Panther Party, which
espoused a doctrine of armed resistance, was involved in shoot-outs with police
in Oakland, Chicago, Los Angeles, and New Orleans. Members were also charged
with plotting to plant bombs in public buildings. To “bring the war home,” the
Weather Underground, a revolutionary spin-off of the left-wing Students for a
Democratic Society, launched a bombing campaign targeting police stations and
government buildings, including the Pentagon and the Capitol. Police who found
themselves the target of rocks generally broke up protests with tear gas, but
in the case of Kent State University in 1970, members of the National Guard
opened fire on student protesters, killing four.
Nor was the United States alone in political violence. At
the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, the Palestinian group Black September took
Israeli athletes hostage and killed 11 with the world watching. “Bloody Friday”
in Northern Ireland involved more than 20 separate bombings orchestrated in
Belfast by the Irish Republican Army in little more than an hour. Prime
ministers of Jordan and Spain were among the more prominent victims of
assassins in 1971 and 1973, respectively. The first president of Bangladesh was
slain alongside most of his family in a coup in 1975.
Meanwhile, in the course of less than three weeks in
September 1975, there were two attempts on the life of President Gerald R.
Ford. The first was by a follower of the notorious cult leader and convicted
murderer Charles Manson. Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme pointed a gun at Ford but
didn’t fire it. She said she wanted to draw attention to environmental causes.
The second would-be assassin, Sara Jane Moore, who later said she sought to
spark a violent revolution, got a shot off but missed. A man nearby grabbed her
arm as she fired a second time, deflecting the shot, which wounded a bystander.
Film crews captured both attempts, and the first impression the footage leaves,
when viewed 50 years later, is of a sudden outburst of confusing motion. If one
didn’t know what one was seeing, one wouldn’t. Fromme and Moore each received
life sentences and won parole after serving more than 30 years. (Moore died in
September at the age of 95.)
In the mid-to-late 1970s, the Red Army Faction in Germany
murdered 34 politicians and industrialists, while the Red Brigades in Italy
kidnapped and slaughtered leading Italian politician Aldo Moro. In the United
States, following the resignation of President Nixon, the brief Ford
administration, and the 1976 election of Jimmy Carter, American history
journeyed through a truly dismal period, one that prominently featured the
assassination of San Francisco Mayor George Moscone by political rival Dan
White in 1978. Moscone had won the election only with the support of a radical
minister named Jim Jones, who later fled to Guyana along with nearly 1,000
members of his People’s Temple. When Representative Leo Ryan went to the Jones
compound to make sure his constituents weren’t being held captive, he was
murdered on Jones’s orders. Jones then coerced his flock into consuming a
poisoned fruit drink—a mass murder-suicide that took more than 900 lives.
The sense that America had been spinning out of control
helped put Ronald Reagan in the White House by a staggering margin of 10 points
and 40 states in 1980. Though a victory of such magnitude indicated an
electorate deeply fatigued by the period’s malaise, there would be no
instantaneous exit. Barely three months after Reagan took office, John W.
Hinckley shot Reagan as he was leaving an event at the Washington Hilton.
Network news cameras captured the shooting, and the footage aired within
minutes. Reagan recovered, but his injuries were far more grave than initially
reported. A jury found Hinckley not guilty by reason of insanity (he had
committed the crime to attract the attention of the teenage actress Jodie
Foster), and he was institutionalized at Saint Elizabeth’s Hospital in
Washington and released in 2016. Federal law at the time of the shooting
required the government to prove the defendant was compos mentis rather than
requiring the defendant to prove he wasn’t. After the Hinckley verdict, lawmakers
reversed the burden.
Less than two months later, Mehmet Ali Agca shot and
critically wounded Pope John Paul II in Vatican City’s St. Peter’s Square.
Video captured John Paul II collapsing in the open-air Popemobile as it sped
off. Agca, a Turkish national, had previously been imprisoned for the 1979
murder of a Turkish newspaper editor. He then escaped. Agca told multiple
conflicting stories about the motive behind the assassination attempt. Italian
authorities quickly determined that Agca did not act alone. His lengthy stay in
a luxury hotel in Sofia established a “Bulgarian connection” that
pointed back through Bulgarian intelligence and perhaps the East German Stasi
to the KGB—and thus to the highest levels of the Soviet Union. The danger the
Polish pope posed to the Soviet bloc was undeniable, but Soviet apologists
denied any such connection, of course, and the evidence was pooh-poohed or
simply ignored by many on the grounds that it would aggravate U.S. relations
with Moscow. The Pope, for his part, forgave Agca, met him in prison, and urged
his release.
One more stop abroad will suffice in this account: In
1984, the Irish Republican Army set off a massive bomb targeting UK Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher in her hotel at a Tory party gathering in Brighton.
It killed five people, and Thatcher herself was a narrow miss. Images of the
hotel in the aftermath of the blast show a ragged V-shaped crater in the upper
floors of the hotel and just to the left of the center of the façade. Patrick
Magee, the IRA bomber, had planted the bomb and its timer during a stay at the
hotel four weeks before. In this case, neither the perpetrators nor their
motive was in doubt: The IRA issued a statement claiming responsibility and
promising to try again. Police arrested Magee and other IRA members in London
in 1985.
***
And then the assassination era came to an end, after two
decades in which it was one of the dominating facts of our common life. Of
course, political violence didn’t end altogether, nor will it ever. Consider
the anti-government bombing of the federal Murrah Building in Oklahoma City in
1995, which claimed 168 lives and injured hundreds more. Horrific it was, but
thankfully, it proved to be a one-off. (The 9/11 attack six years later belongs
in a separate category.)
The new source of recurring violent shock to the American
psyche was the mass shooting, especially school shootings, which are
distinctive not for high-profile victims but for the random ordinariness of the
mise-en-scène. The Columbine High School shooting in Colorado in 1999 brought
the matter home to the suburbs, where it remains. Anti-Semitic violence is a
more recent recurring disruption.
Now, however, we are at least several attempts, some of
them successful, into what may be a new era of assassinations. The dramatic
near miss against Trump at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, in July
2024 was Exhibit A. Next was a second, fortunately bullet-free, attempt on
Trump at his golf course in Florida. Third was the slaying of
UnitedHealthcare’s Thompson in midtown Manhattan in December 2024. Finally, and
most dramatically, was the assassination of Charlie Kirk at a college campus
event in Utah in September. Other noteworthy recent entries include the slaying
of the Minnesota state house’s Democratic majority leader in June 2025, an
aborted attempt on Justice Brett Kavanaugh in June 2022, and an arson attack in
April 2025 on the governor’s mansion in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, intended to
kill the state’s governor, Josh Shapiro, as he and his family slept. At a
further remove, mass shootings took place at a GOP congressional baseball
practice in 2017 and at a constituent meeting in Arizona with Democratic
Representative Gabby Giffords in 2011. Though some were wounded in these
events, the lawmakers survived.
If a new era of assassinations is underway, it has not
supplanted but rather overtaken the era of mass shootings. These have
continued, with churches and Jews increasingly prominent among the targets.
But why assassinations then? And why now?
The potential victims of assassins haven’t changed. They
are prominent individuals whom assassins have targeted specifically. (Political
violence in the form of terrorism typically doesn’t have a particular
individual as a target; its design is to terrify large populations.) Among the
would-be assassins themselves, certain commonalities also emerge: a desire for
notoriety, to leave an otherwise unattainable mark on history, and to pursue a
political agenda.
On the latter, it’s worth noting that animus among the
killer or killers toward the victim is about as close to an inescapable feature
of assassination attempts as one gets. This is true of necessity in the case of
a conspiracy. “Loners seeking notoriety” don’t work for groups operating
secretly. But it must hold true for the loners as well. The prominence of the
victim has specific qualities, and the murder, or attempt, can’t be separated
from animus related to what has made the intended victim famous. Supposedly,
John Hinckley was willing to try to kill Jimmy Carter, but he actually did try
to kill Reagan. Bremer said he would kill Wallace or Nixon—but not George
McGovern or Hubert Humphrey, the top two Democrats in the race for their
party’s nomination. The efforts to deny the leftward orientation of the
political motivation in the assassination of Charlie Kirk would be laughable
were they not a symptom of our current era. In general, it’s hard to find a
would-be assassin who professed undying love and support for the individual he
was attempting to kill. The will to annihilate is specific—the target is not a
president but this one.
If assassins are trying to change the course of history,
which of course many are, they are attempting to do so by eliminating an
obstacle that stands in the way of their vision, whatever it may be. The living
JFK was an obstacle Oswald could and did overcome, leaving an indelible stamp.
But how did history change? In ways we can never really know, and certainly not
in ways that could be known in advance by an assassin. What if Lincoln or
Kennedy had lived? The question invites those reflecting on it to project onto
the past their current-day political preferences for how history might have
been different. The deed may have been undertaken in pursuit of sweeping
change, but in most cases, we are left with only the deed itself and the
consequences that flow from it directly: better presidential security after
JFK, the extension of Secret Service protection to presidential candidates
after RFK, a national holiday and memorial on the National Mall for MLK. But
would the Vietnam War or race relations have turned out differently? No one can
know. The melodramatic assertion that the assassination of Franz Ferdinand caused
World War I doesn’t survive the reality of a chain of decisions that could
have gone differently after the assassination.
That political violence in the form of assassination has
political motives, and that they are often wildly out of sync with what the
assassination will achieve, are constants not just in the recent American
experience but throughout history. The big difference between the
late-20th-century era of assassinations and the present is that the former was
largely a story of the targets and the perpetrators (whether an individual or a
conspiracy). Now, however, the story is about the targets on one side—and the
perpetrators (alone or in conspiracy) and the supporters of the
perpetrators on the other.
Consider the JFK assassination. This is high history, an
individual inserting himself indelibly into the nation’s story via the act of
assassinating the president. The nation is an onlooker (which is the reason I
made so much, in my brief catalogue of the previous period, of the visuals we
have from these assassinations and attempts). We, the people, were not
involved. We absorbed the information about events, and we responded
accordingly, typically and normally with distress and outrage. Now, we mustn’t
be naive. There were, no doubt, Americans whose black hearts welcomed the death
of one or both Kennedys, and that’s likely all the truer in the case of King.
But if so, they mostly kept it to themselves or articulated it only in the
presence of intimates. You could say that the public square, notwithstanding
the First Amendment and broader commitments to free speech, placed a cordon
sanitaire around permissible opinion, keeping out such noxiousness as
assassination celebration and consigning it to a fringe communicating through
the mails with mimeograph sheets, and to private homes. A public culture of
good manners also has the effect of cultivating well-mannered people and
perhaps as well a moral sensibility of actual decency.
In the previous era of assassinations, Americans also had
at their disposal a social resource that went largely unappreciated at the
time—the ability to ignore. If you were the craziest person out of a million
Americans in the 1980s, when there were 250 million Americans, you were pretty
socially isolated from the 250 or so people who were just as crazy as you. Or
make it the craziest in 100,000: isolated from your 2,500 peers nationwide. The
latter might have proved sufficient for a gathering in a windowless big-city
room. But that’s not quite enough to make a revolution.
Now, through social media of all kinds, the 2,500 worst
among us can easily find and interact with each other on a regular basis,
exchanging views on whom to hate and perhaps who constitutes the gravest peril
to the life they want to live. But now this is not a matter of just a single
set of 1-in-100,000 sociopaths, nor is it obvious that sociopathy becomes
dangerous only as it affects the 1-in-100,000 worst. Perhaps 8 million to 10
million people in America have been or are incarcerated for violent crimes. Out
of 260 million adults, that’s at least 1 in 50. Meanwhile, there are multiple
overlapping and non-overlapping sets of sociopathic individuals based on the
particulars of the sociopathy. In addition, the term “sociopath” may not
describe a fixed quality, in the sense that one either is or is not
sociopathic—or evil. Someone on the fence can be cultivated by a sociopath to
turn sociopathic. One can even imagine an individual who has no intention of
personally killing a member of some specified “out group” nevertheless
encouraging someone else to kill through the mere addition of a “like” click on
social media. In the context of terrorism, this process is generally known as
“radicalization.” In the context of American polarization and the ways in which
we increasingly dehumanize those with whom we disagree, we might call this
“sociopathization.” I think, given recent examples, these processes do produce
would-be assassins, including successful ones. But I also think they have
produced something of significantly broader importance—in fact, the defining
characteristic of the new era.
It’s the assassination fan base.
The wounded Reagan quipped to the lead doctor on his
trauma team, “I hope you’re all Republican.” What made the quip amusing is that
both Reagan and the team knew it mattered not in the least whether its members
were Republican. The doctor, a Democrat, amusingly but perhaps a bit solemnly
replied, “Today, we’re all Republicans.”
I think most Americans would like to live in a world
where such an exchange is still possible. I’m not sure it is.
A significant number of Americans took to Bluesky,
TikTok, Reddit, and the streets to express their regret that Trump’s would-be
assassins had been unsuccessful and to praise the assassins of Charlie Kirk and
UnitedHealthcare’s Thompson. In the case of the latter two, many asked or
offered their opinion on who should be next. (I won’t cite any examples. If you
are at all online, you have seen them in abundance, and if not, you may want to
spare yourself.)
At present, the assassination fan base is pretty much a
left-wing subculture. So far, it has applauded attempts on the lives of a
former president, a conservative activist, a corporate CEO, and a conservative
Supreme Court justice. The closest thing on the right is the online coterie
claiming that Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021, did
nothing wrong, either because they were let in or were duped into entering by a
government plot. But to speak up on behalf of J6 defendants, even to the point
of alleging conspiracies, is not the same as celebrating the assassinations of
Kirk and Thompson and lamenting the misses on Trump. I hope no comparable
figure on the left becomes a target that thereby allows us to ascertain whether
there is a comparable fan base for assassination on the right.
We should also note that even “lone gunmen, acting alone”
have to get their ideas about whom to target from somewhere. They, too, have
social networks, which likely traffic in in-group suggestions about who in the
out-group are the worst of the worst. So we are now living in a political
culture in which a potential would-be assassin can count on a social network
for inspiration and an outpouring of public support after the fact. This is
fertile ground for evil, perhaps because assassins always believe they are
doing good. And we may be cultivating more and more of them.
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