By Robert Tracinski
Monday, August 13, 2018
So the mainstream pundits are finally right. They said
there was only one side behind the violence in Charlottesville last year,
despite extensive reports of black-clad, far-left “Antifa” eagerly brawling
with the white nationalists. This has since been cemented as an article of
dogma among mainstream “liberals,” who seem determined to run interference for
Antifa, even though Antifa is likely to go after them first.
But this year it looks like it’s really true. There is
only one side in Charlottesville. As The
New York Times summed it up, “With no sign of white supremacists there,
tensions were confined to interactions between the left-leaning protesters and
law enforcement.” Or, as I speculated on Friday, “It would be a supreme irony
if the only news out of Charlottesville this weekend turns out to be scuffling
between two groups — the police and Black Lives Matter or Antifa — who are both
there to guard against the empty specter of neo-Nazis.”
So far, it looks like no more than scuffling. With no
Nazis to serve as an excuse — even at their event in DC, where they managed to
get a permit and a lot of police protection, it looks like no more than a
handful of white nationalists showed up — the far left in Charlottesville faced
only the hard target of police in riot gear, so they mostly contented
themselves with slinging hateful words.
Whom do they hate? Well, mostly they’ve been “screaming
at police.” The Washington Post puts
this in a way intended to excuse the protesters, describing it as “confusion
over an extraordinary police presence” that “turned into anger,” but that
doesn’t fly when you look at the protesters’ actual message, in which they
“chanted slogans … against the police, against white supremacy, and against the
University of Virginia. ‘Last year they came with torches,’ said a large banner
in front of a monument of Thomas Jefferson. ‘This year they come with badges.'”
You can see that banner in a photo in the article, and
it’s clear that this was not just thrown together as a spontaneous reaction to
the police. It was the planned message of this year’s protests. “Dozens of
Antifa members, who had come from chapters all over the country … held signs
that condemned the university and the police, along with white supremacists.”
Actually, it would be more accurate to say that they
denounced the university and the police as
white supremacists, with one protest group insisting that the police are
inherently racist because “the institution of policing was created from the
system of slave patrols.” It appears that the history taught to today’s kids no
longer includes Sir Robert Peel.
In addition to hating higher education and law
enforcement, the far left also hates the free press. I hear that it’s a really
bad thing when Donald Trump denounces the media, but he can take solace that he
is joined in this contempt by Antifa, which spent its protests hurling
obscenities at reporters, calling them “vultures” and “snitches,” and
assaulting a camera crew for the local NBC affiliate.
Having the radical left as the only side at this year’s
demonstrations clarifies a few things. It shows that this was never really
about statues of Confederate generals. Those statues are still up, and the
“statue burqas” covering them were removed months ago without fanfare and
without the city exploding into conflict.
It wasn’t about the Nazis, either. “Antifa” and the far
left don’t need the specter of white nationalists to condemn anyone and
everything as racist. As one chant at Saturday’s Charlottesville protests put
it, “Old Jim Crow, new Jim Crow, this racist system’s got to go.” They aren’t
against Nazis. They’re against the entire
American system of government, which they will tell you if you bother to
listen.
The far left is not “anti-fascist” but pro-Communist,
which makes them just another enemy of free speech, liberty, and the rule of
law. That’s the broader sense in which there is only one side we need to worry
about: the enemies of freedom, of which the far left and the fascists are just
two sub-factions.
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