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http://www.juancole.com/2011/01/white-terrorism.html

White Terrorism
Posted on 01/09/2011 by Juan
Jared Lee Loughner, the assassin of Federal judge John M. Roll and five others 
and attempted assassin of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ), was clearly mentally 
unstable. But the political themes of his instability were those of the 
American far Right. Loughner was acting politically even if he is not all 
there. He is said to have called out the names of his victims, such as Roll and 
Gifford, as he fired. As usual, when white people do these things, the mass 
media doesn’t call it terrorism.

It is irrelevant that Loughner may (at this point we can only say “may”) have 
been a liberal years earlier in high school. If so, he changed. And among the 
concerns that came to dominate him as he moved to the Right was the 
illegitimacy of the “Second Constitution” (the 14th Amendment, which bestows 
citizenship on all those born in the US, a provision right-wingers in Arizona 
are trying to overturn at the state level). Loughner also thought that Federal 
funding for his own community college was unconstitutional, and he was thrown 
out for becoming violent over the issue. He obviously shared with the Arizona 
Right a fascination with firearms, and it is telling that a disturbed young man 
who had had brushes with the law was able to come by an automatic pistol. He is 
said to have used marijuana, but that says nothing about his politics; it could 
be consistent with a form of anti-government, right-wing Libertarianism. I 
don’t think we can take too seriously the list of books he said he liked, as a 
guide to his political thinking. They could just have been randomly pulled off 
some list of great books on the Web, since there is no coherence to the 
choices. 

The man who had most to do with Loughner after his arrest, Pima County Sherriff 
Clarence W. Dupnik, was clearly angered by what he heard from the assassin: 
“When you look at unbalanced people, how they respond to the vitriol that comes 
out of certain mouths about tearing down the government, the anger, the hatred, 
the bigotry … it is getting to be outrageous. And unfortunately, Arizona, I 
think, has become sort of the capital. We have become the mecca for prejudice 
and bigotry.” 

When Giffords helped pass the Health Care bill, according to Suzy Khimm, 
“extremists subsequently encouraged the public to throw bricks through the 
windows of lawmakers.” Giffords had to call the police once before when an 
attendee at one of her events dropped a gun. Giffords had complained ‘ in an 
MSNBC interview that a Sarah Palin graphic had depicted her district in the 
crosshair of a gun sight. “They’ve got to realize there are consequences to 
that,” she said. “The rhetoric is incredibly heated.” ‘


Palin Crosshairs
The subtext of the angst over the shooting of Giffords is that in recent months 
Loughner was saying Tea-Party-like things about the Federal government. The 
violent language of “elimination,” “putting in the cross-hairs,” (as with 
Palin’s poster, above) “taking back,” “taking out,” to which members of that 
movement so often resort, has created a heated atmosphere that easily seeps 
into the unconscious of the mentally disturbed. That is Dupnik’s point.

There apparently is some indication that Loughner had an accomplice, and his 
arrest and identification will shed a great deal more light on the motivations 
behind this political massacre. Did Loughner have a Rasputin?

In some ways, the turn of Loughner to the themes of the American far right 
parallels what happened to Michael Enright, who slashed the throat of a 
Bangladeshi cab driver at the height of the campaign promoting hatred of 
Muslims launched last summer-fall by Rick Lazio and Rupert Murdoch. Everyone 
should have learned from that tragedy that heated rhetoric has consequences.

Those right-wing bloggers who want to dismiss Loughner as merely disturbed are 
being hypocritical, since they won’t similarly dismiss obviously unstable 
Muslims who, like the so-called “Patriots” of the McVeigh stripe, sometimes 
turn violent. (Zacharias Moussawi, for instance, isn’t playing with a full set 
of backgammon dominoes, and blaming Islam for him is bizarre). In fact, the 
right-wing Muslim crackpots and the right-wing American crackpots are haunted 
by similar anxieties, about a powerful government in Washington undermining 
their localistic ideas of the good life.



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