Thursday, April 01, 2010

Fearing the Right

Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson wants us to fear the right. While he admits that there was violence from the left in the 1960s and 1970s, he insists that this is a thing of the past.

But for the most part, far-left violence in this country has gone the way of the leisure suit and the AMC Gremlin. An anti-globalization movement, including a few window-smashing anarchists, was gaining traction at one point, but it quickly diminished after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. An environmental group and an animal-rights group have been linked with incidents of arson. Beyond those particulars, it is hard to identify any kind of leftist threat.

By contrast, there has been explosive growth among far-right, militia-type groups that identify themselves as white supremacists, "constitutionalists," tax protesters and religious soldiers determined to kill people to uphold "Christian" values. Most of the groups that posed a real danger, as the Hutaree allegedly did, have been infiltrated and dismantled by authorities before they could do any damage. But we should never forget that the worst act of domestic terrorism ever committed in this country was authored by a member of the government-hating right wing: Timothy McVeigh's bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City.

Robinson has selective memory. The Unabomber was still mailing bombs for environmental causes until he was caught in 1995. More recently there was the university professor and Obama supporter who shot up a faculty meeting.

Robinson mentions the anarchists who vowed to trash any city that dared to host a World Bank or G8 meeting. He minimizes then as being just a few people breaking windows but they actually caused millions in damages. True, they faded away after September 11 but they made a comeback in the last year.

Violence from the left is so common and the press so complacent, it is under-reported. Much has been made over a Congressman's brother's gas grill line being cut but it was hardly reported that anti-Republican protesters were dropping things on the delegates' shuttle buses or throwing bricks at the buses' windows.

Deep Ecology groups like Earth First were bigger and more fashionable 20 years ago but they never went away and the continue to commit acts such as arson. For that matter, petty eco-terrorism is widespread. Hummers and other large SUVs are often vandalized. Who on the right does anything like this?

Maybe we should only look at plots by religious extremists to kill multiple people. I will admit that this standard lets the left off the hook (at least during the last 25 years or so). There is still a problem with Robinson's assertion that we should fear the right. In the last decade, several similar plots have been broken up. Prior to this one, they all involved Muslims planning on killing Americans in general or American soldiers specifically. There have been multiple arrests for similar plots just since President Obama was inaugurated. How many columns has Robinson written telling us to fear Muslims? Or from any other left-leaning columnist? None. Their silence was deafening. More likely they wrote a column excusing the terrorists as big-talkers who would never have acted on their plans. Sometimes they blamed the Bush administration for planting an informer who was the first one to suggest violence. Which is more likely - a pizza delivery man who often delivers to a military base smuggling some co-conspirators in with guns and shooting unarmed soldiers or somehow planting bombs to kill a spread-out column of mourners? The answer appears to be "Whichever group is Christian."

I just checked Robinson's columns for the last three years. This is the only column he wrote about domestic terrorism. Ironically, he wrote more than one column on prejudice.

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