The actions of the guy who shot Congresswoman Giffords were, evidently, not motivated by the political rhetoric. While the right breathes a sigh of relief, and the left continues to criticize the right with the normal vitriol, we ignore the fact that political rhetoric isn't the problem.
The problem, rather, is the substance behind the rhetoric. Sarah Palin's gun picture, Olbermann implying someone should kill Hillary Clinton, are both treating a symptom. The disease isn't talking about militancy. Its talking about things that, however plainly put, should inspire militancy.
Ignore the ridiculousness of the claims, things like Obama being a jihadist, the death panel scare. Don't discuss whether or not that's true. Because that is not my point. Take out the names and the branding, and put yourself in the shoes of someone who truly believes that the ruler of their country intends to destroy it and replace it with repressing theocracy, or to institute panels where buearocrats (sp) judge who lives and who dies. Imagine that you're in a hypothetical country where those things ARE true. What would YOU do about it.
My point is that claims like that, if they WERE true, would HAVE to inspire armed revolution. If the people making them truly believed them.
If Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, or Rush Limbaugh truly BELIEVED any of the bullshit they said, they wouldn't recoil from acts of violence like this. They wouldn't be writing books, hosting radio shows, or even rallies.
The situation would clearly DEMAND an armed revolution. It would clearly demand that somebody do something.
And yet, as soon as an act of violence is perpetrated, they shake their heads and say "No, we didn't want that at all."
There are, as far as I can tell, two situations. Either they DO truly believe what they're saying, in which case they shouldn't be upset about someone trying to overthrow an illegitimate, totalitarian government. Or they know its bullshit, and they're just trying to manipulate people. They talk about how Obama is as evil as Hitler. But if they truly believed that, they would ask us to do more than Vote Republican every couple years.
I am, as has been stated, a Republican. If I believed that the President of the United States wanted to institute death panels, or turn the US into a repressive Islamic theocracy (or indeed any repressive theocracy) then I would do everything in my power to overthrow that government. Including violence.
But, I don't believe that. So I don't do that. I just vote Republican.
To explain the title, if it isn't clear, the attempted assassin was denounced as a madman. They said that anyone trying to do what he did was insane. Well, if they truly believed what they said, then what he did was perfectly logical, and should be celebrated, and encouraged. It would be logical. But they turned him away. They called him insane. But if they truly believed what they said, 'insanity' is only logical.
The problem, rather, is the substance behind the rhetoric. Sarah Palin's gun picture, Olbermann implying someone should kill Hillary Clinton, are both treating a symptom. The disease isn't talking about militancy. Its talking about things that, however plainly put, should inspire militancy.
Ignore the ridiculousness of the claims, things like Obama being a jihadist, the death panel scare. Don't discuss whether or not that's true. Because that is not my point. Take out the names and the branding, and put yourself in the shoes of someone who truly believes that the ruler of their country intends to destroy it and replace it with repressing theocracy, or to institute panels where buearocrats (sp) judge who lives and who dies. Imagine that you're in a hypothetical country where those things ARE true. What would YOU do about it.
My point is that claims like that, if they WERE true, would HAVE to inspire armed revolution. If the people making them truly believed them.
If Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, or Rush Limbaugh truly BELIEVED any of the bullshit they said, they wouldn't recoil from acts of violence like this. They wouldn't be writing books, hosting radio shows, or even rallies.
The situation would clearly DEMAND an armed revolution. It would clearly demand that somebody do something.
And yet, as soon as an act of violence is perpetrated, they shake their heads and say "No, we didn't want that at all."
There are, as far as I can tell, two situations. Either they DO truly believe what they're saying, in which case they shouldn't be upset about someone trying to overthrow an illegitimate, totalitarian government. Or they know its bullshit, and they're just trying to manipulate people. They talk about how Obama is as evil as Hitler. But if they truly believed that, they would ask us to do more than Vote Republican every couple years.
I am, as has been stated, a Republican. If I believed that the President of the United States wanted to institute death panels, or turn the US into a repressive Islamic theocracy (or indeed any repressive theocracy) then I would do everything in my power to overthrow that government. Including violence.
But, I don't believe that. So I don't do that. I just vote Republican.
To explain the title, if it isn't clear, the attempted assassin was denounced as a madman. They said that anyone trying to do what he did was insane. Well, if they truly believed what they said, then what he did was perfectly logical, and should be celebrated, and encouraged. It would be logical. But they turned him away. They called him insane. But if they truly believed what they said, 'insanity' is only logical.
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