Chattanooga Times Free Press

WEAPONIZIN­G THE DEAD OF EL PASO, DAYTON

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Those angry loner white boys with guns, this time in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, have again erupted on the body politic.

And those with eyes to see are reminded that the American culture is ill.

But what of the mass shootings in Chicago, the 55 people shot over the weekend, with seven hit near a park and then eight more not far away?

You might think these are

“mass shootings” too, but, in political/media terms, they’re not treated as such. The victims, and in all likelihood the shooters, are black. And Democratic politician­s find no political advantage in weaponizin­g the victims of everyday street violence in a Democratic town. So Chicago’s dead are stepped over by national media and national Democrats on the way to 2020.

Republican­s want the focus moved from President Donald Trump and his idiotic, often incendiary tweets to the violence in Baltimore and Chicago. Presidenti­al daughter Ivanka Trump tweeted, somewhat desperatel­y, “we mustn’t become numb to the violence faced by inner city communitie­s every day.”

Nice try, but she failed, and she was immediatel­y condemned. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, under pressure to do something, anything, about the slaughter, must be thankful that the Trumps give her cover and a target for sarcasm. Lightfoot dismissed Ivanka Trump’s tweets as “nonsense.”

In political terms it’s all about those white boys with their guns.

Democrats wrap them around Trump’s neck, focusing on a key voter block, suburban white women with those “Hate Has No Home Here” signs.

The white boys are indeed domestic terrorists, some white supremacis­ts, like the one charged with slaughteri­ng innocents in El Paso, hating on Latin immigrants, legal and illegal, echoing Trump’s use of the word “invasion,” and writing a bizarre manifesto.

And while politician­s of both parties argue endlessly about how many devils can fit on the edge of a knife, America knows there are more of them out there, waiting to pop.

For now they are lost in schools that teach them about their toxic masculinit­y, they are loners, they are armed, in a culture that turns its face away from God.

But Trump is president now, and his constantly belligeren­t rhetoric, used to wage war against the corrupt status quo, has given the left great license to conflate complicate­d issues. They see opportunit­y and power to be had, and before the victims from El Paso and Dayton were buried, the dead were weaponized.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Beto O’Rourke blamed Trump for El Paso and pronounced the president a racist. The crazy white madman who stalked those Republican Congressme­n as they played baseball in 2017 was a Bernie Sanders supporter. The shooter in Dayton was, reportedly, of the political left and a supporter of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, but you don’t hear much of that, do you?

In other, saner times, leveraging the political persuasion­s of absolute madmen against a political opponent would be a signal for a gentleman to rise from the table and leave the room without comment. Now it is the blood of our politics.

Yet whenever I feel that our politics and culture are beyond redemption, someone comes along to prove me wrong, like U.S. Army Pfc. Glendon Oakley Jr. He was at that Walmart in El Paso when the shooting began. Oakley, who has a concealed carry license, ran toward the sound of gunfire, to save as many children as he could. Later, talking about what happened, he sought to direct the media spotlight away from himself and toward the grieving families. And he began to weep.

“I want to look out to the families that were lost and families that lost their children,” he said in El Paso, “because the focus should not be on me, it should be on what happened in Ohio, and what happened in Chicago and what happened yesterday.”

But the focus is not on them. Nor is it on the moral courage of Pfc. Oakley.

Those who can be used in death will be used. And that who cannot be used will be stepped over. Politics doesn’t focus on moral virtue. Politics focuses on power.

 ??  ?? John Kass
John Kass

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