The Columbus Dispatch

Interventi­on is better than argument

- —The Kansas City Star

President Donald Trump has said two different things about threats to Jewish Community Centers across the country and vandalism at Jewish cemeteries outside St. Louis and in Philadelph­ia.

Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro, who is a Democrat, told reporters that when he met with the president on Tuesday, Trump called these incidents reprehensi­ble. But the president also suggested that they might not have been motivated by anti-Semitism, but by “the reverse,” in an attempt by his political adversarie­s “to make others look bad.”

Only hours later, the president took another stab at it and got it right. The first thing out of his mouth in his first address to Congress was that “Recent threats targeting Jewish Community Centers and vandalism of Jewish cemeteries, as well as last week’s shooting in Kansas City, remind us that while we may be a nation divided on policies, we are a country that stands united in condemning hate and evil in all its forms.”

He’s not alone in his inconsiste­ncy, though. The national conversati­on about anti-Semitic threats and the Kansas shooting makes clear that too many of us define hate crimes and terrorism in a way that depends on who committed the crime and who was victimized.

Some conservati­ves resisted the idea that a man who had made racist comments and told the two India-born men he shot in Olathe to “get out of my country” might have committed a hate crime. No, they argued, the shooting was instead caused by alcohol and psychologi­cal problems.

So, did the shooter remind them of Omar Mateen, who killed 49 people in an Orlando nightclub last summer? Mateen, too, had a history of alcohol abuse and instabilit­y. But no, in that case, some on the right expressed little doubt that the crime was a terror attack inspired by radical Islam.

There is also inconsiste­ncy on the left, where the carnage caused by Mateen, who had pledged his allegiance to the Islamic State, was seen as an anti-gay hate crime. Many focused on his bipolar disorder, the fact that both of his ex-wives had accused him of domestic violence and acquaintan­ces back to early childhood remembered him as a bully. And they asked how Islam could have inspired the massacre when Mateen was such a poor Muslim — one who sometimes drank himself into a stupor at the same gay club.

Similarly, abortion opponents saw Scott Roeder, who shot Dr. George Tiller in his church in Wichita, Kan., as a nut acting on his own. Those who support abortion rights tended to see him as a domestic terrorist carrying out the agenda of his ideology.

These arguments are essentiall­y pointless, other than to identify where we’re coming from politicall­y. Of course, it’s the unstable who are most likely to be recruited into any terror or hate group, or to act on their beliefs in ways that appall most adherents of the group in whose name they commit indefensib­le acts.

And our time — and public dollars — would be far better spent trying to intervene to treat mental illness and substance abuse than arguing when it’s too late that a killer was “just a nut” rather than a domestic terrorist.

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