Daily Times (Primos, PA)

It’s time to defuse our heated political rhetoric

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We’re better than this. We have to be. We used to engage in political debate. Yes, it was at times heated. But it was debate. Not violence.

We no longer exchange political ideas.

Now, stoked by the overheated rancor that has become the underpinni­ng of our discourse, we build pipe bombs filled with shards of glass and deliver them to those with whom we disagree politicall­y.

Our ugly, course, bitter partisan bickering reached a boiling point Wednesday.

A criminal one.

The nation reeled as one after one, a series of pipe bombs were mailed to key Democratic leaders, including former President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former President Obama and the offices of cable news giant CNN in downtown Manhatttan.

We watched this new level of discord play out right in front of our eyes, as anchors at CNN joined fellow employees in evacuating their headquarte­rs.

All the devices seemed similar. Luckily, none of them detonated.

The devices showed up just one day after a similar device was discovered at the suburban New York home of Democratic mega-donor George Soros.

Later Wednesday, two additional packages were intercepte­d that were addressed to U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters.

Thursday morning the onslaught continued, with a suspicious package being removed from the New York City home of actor Robert DeNiro. Then word was received that two devices meant for former Vice President Joe Biden were intercepte­d.

All the intended targets share a common theme. All are noted Democratic leaders or supporters. And all have found themselves the targets of President Donald Trump’s heated diatribes. Two years after taking office by defeating Hillary Clinton, the president still brings her up at rallies while his supporters chant, “Lock her up.” He has accused Soros of paying Democratic protesters he sometimes refers to as “mobs.” He routinely goes after CNN and much of the media as “fake news” and the “enemy of the people.” He has come glaringly close to encouragin­g violence.

Later in the day, at least for a few hours, the president adopted a different tone.

“Let’s get along,” he said to a rally of his faithful who just minutes before had engaged in the same taunt of Secretary Clinton. At the same time he vowed to bring those responsibl­e for the explosive devices to justice. The president also challenged the news media to join him in taking this new approach.

Earlier in the day he had condemned what many considered to be acts of terror targeting top Democratic officials.

“Acts or threats of political violence have no place in the United States,” the president said. “This egregious conduct is abhorrent.”

All of this continues to play out in the increasing­ly bitter, angry run-up and debate leading to the mid-terms elections now less than two weeks away.

Lots of fingers were pointed, with many of them singling out the president’s increasing­ly harsh tone at a series of rallies hoping to avoid what many see as a “Blue Wave” in the mid-terms.

Former CIA Director John Brennan, himself the target of one of the pipe bombs mailed to CNN, where he offers analysis that has often been critical of the president, referred to the spate of suspicious devices as “a very unfortunat­e turn of events,” before

turning his sights on Trump’s increasing­ly volatile rhetoric.

“Unfortunat­ely, I think Donald Trump, too often has helped to incite some of these feelings of anger, if not violence, when he points to acts of violence or also talks about swinging at somebody from the press, the media,” Brennan said.

CNN Worldwide President Jeff Zucker seemed exasperate­d by the White House’s stance, calling the situation “a total and complete lack of understand­ing at the White House about the seriousnes­s of their continued attacks on the media.”

To be fair, this is an equal opportunit­y cauldron. Democrats such as Waters have encouraged publicly confrontin­g Republican­s. Republican officials have been chased out of restaurant­s. Former Attorney General Eric Holder

suggested that instead of the old standard of when they go low, we go high, to instead “when they go low, we kick them.”

We endorse the sentiment of New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio.

“Don’t encourage violence,” he said simply, issuing a declaratio­n to “all public officials of all partisan affiliatio­ns. Don’t encourage hatred. Don’t encourage attacks on media.”

It’s not as if this has to be the depths to which political campaignin­g has sunk.

Right here in Delaware County, two recent examples can be cited. Wednesday night, incumbent Republican Sen. Tom McGarrigle, R-26 of Springfiel­d, and Democratic challenger Swarthmore Mayor Tim Kearney engaged in a spirited debate.

Last night it was the two candidates

for the 5th District seat in Congress. Democrat Mary Gay Scanlon and Republican Pearl Kim focused on the issues, without the kind of rancor that seems to be engulfing so much of the nation.

There is still much we don’t know about the recent rash of suspicious devices. We don’t know who was responsibl­e, or why.

We do know this: They are the latest – most sinister – element in the overheated bombast that has taken our political discourse over the edge of any sense of civility.

We’ll remind all involved of something we learned a long time ago.

Words matter.

Now more than ever.

We can be better than this. Our democracy depends on it.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks at a rally at Central Wisconsin Airport in Mosinee, Wis., Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018.
SUSAN WALSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks at a rally at Central Wisconsin Airport in Mosinee, Wis., Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018.

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