Las Vegas Review-Journal

The politics of resentment

Virginia confrontat­ion a microcosm

- Kathleen M. Stone Pahrump Ardelle Bellman Las Vegas

THE weekend melee in the college town of Charlottes­ville, Va., offers a chilling reminder about the dangers of identity politics run amok. Three people were killed Saturday when a rally of “white nationalis­ts” protesting the removal of a Robert E. Lee statue clashed with counterdem­onstrators. One woman died and dozens were injured when a car driven by one of the nationalis­ts plowed into the crowd. Two state troopers were killed when their helicopter crashed as they monitored the confrontat­ion.

The ugly and destructiv­e ideology promoted by the self-described neo-nazis, Klan followers and other white supremacis­ts deserves nothing but scorn and derision. These repellent fools feast off controvers­y and confrontat­ion and spit on the ideals of human rights and freedom.

The U.S. Department of Justice announced it will investigat­e the incident. Those found to have broken the law deserve swift and sure prosecutio­n.

Plenty on the left jumped on the tragedy to attack the president — and they’re correct that Donald Trump should have more forcefully distanced himself from those who preach such abhorrent nonsense. But Mr. Trump didn’t invent white supremacis­ts. And while the 24/7 news cycle and social media drive the perception that the nation today is flooded with overt bigotry, the vast majority of Americans — including those who supported the president — adamantly reject the purveyors of racial chauvinism.

If Saturday’s brutality proves anything, it’s that modern identity politics has, as Australian author Claire Lehmann noted in a February essay, “become a plague that does not discrimina­te.” Long a staple of the progressiv­e playbook, the concept that one’s race, ethnicity, gender or sexuality in and of itself bestows some sort of inherent moral authority has now migrated to the sewers of the right.

“People who think with their epidermis or their genitalia or their clan are the problem to begin with,” wrote the late essayist Christophe­r Hitchens. “One does not banish this specter by invoking it.”

Indeed, America today is drowning in the scourge of identity politics, which erodes the notion that all human beings, regardless of their various genetic foibles, deserve to be treated equitably as individual­s, not pigeonhole­d into pre-determined boxes sorted by skin color or some other factor. Far from advocating a recipe for empowermen­t, the grievance peddlers on both the left and the right push a formula that only exacerbate­s division and conflict — and, yes, even fosters violence.

Rather than point fingers or resort to partisan rationaliz­ations to avoid uncomforta­ble truths, Americans of all political persuasion­s must embrace unity and individual autonomy over the corrosive politics of resentment and cheap exploitati­on.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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Fax 702-383-4676 didn’t the governor deploy the National Guard to protect both sides? Having Guard members activated but not deploying them is no different than not having them activated at all.

A deployment could possibly have prevented three deaths.

Further, Gov. Mcauliffe’s solution, because he didn’t agree with the views of the marchers, was to say, “Get out of my state.” This is not the Old West. He can’t order American citizens out of a state just because he’s the governor.

The most important lesson we can learn from this horrible incident is that if we don’t defend and respect the constituti­onal right to free speech for those with whom we disagree, how can we ever expect them to defend and respect our constituti­onal right to free speech? to employees and first-class trips for board members.

The authority broke its own rules for spending: thousands on bottles of wine that cost more than $100 each, almost $700,000 for alcohol, $85,000 for showgirls, $300 steaks, etc.

The additional insult to us taxpayers is that the same auditors who didn’t notice this extravagan­za will be now reviewing this obscene, lavish spending — and being paid another $15,000.

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