The Denver Post

Many fed up, craving unity

Mailed pipe bombs, deadly shooting amid political hostility

- By Claire Galofaro and Margery A. Beck

LOUISVILLE, KY.» She flipped through television channels and radio stations, scanning from conservati­ve to liberal media, searching for any sign that the polarized nation had finally reached its tipping point.

For days, Elisa Karem Parker had been seeing updates in the news: A pipe bomb sent to liberal political donor George Soros. One delivered to CNN. More to former President Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and other prominent political figures villainize­d by those on the right — a bizarre plot unfolding just ahead of the midterm election that will decide which party controls Congress.

“It’s like our country is becoming ‘The Hunger Games,’ ” Parker, who considers herself squarely in the middle of the political divide, told her husband and teenage son over dinner.

As authoritie­s intercepte­d more than a dozen pipe bombs ad

dressed to President Donald Trump’s most ardent critics — and then, on Saturday, as news broke of yet another mass shooting in America — political scientists and ordinary citizens observed again that rabid partisansh­ip had devolved to the point of acts of violent extremism. Many wonder whether this latest spasm might be the moment that the nation collective­ly considers how poisonous the political culture has become and decides to turn the other way.

“If this isn’t it, I’d hate to think about what it will take,” said Parker as she cast her ballot in early vot ing last week in Louisville, Ky.

The mailbomb plot is merely the latest in a series of stunning attacks to test how much political animosity Americans are willing to accept: the shooting of a Republican congressma­n at a baseball practice, the white supremacis­t rally that turned deadly in Virginia, the recent ricin scarelette­rs mailed to Trump and other top members of his administra­tion.

On Friday, authoritie­s arrested a suspect in the bomb probe — a 56yearold registered Republican and Trump enthusiast who “appears to be a partisan,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said when asked about motive. By then, politician­s and talking heads had already backed into the usual corners. Both parties blamed the other, and the president called for unity, then again described liberals and the media as villains. The hope Parker had that this might be a turning point faded.

Then came the shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue that claimed 11 lives, an attack likely to cause ugly partisan debates over gun control, hate speech and more.

The volatile tribalism now so ingrained in American life will eventually right itself, says Robb Willer, a sociology professor at Stanford University, but not until the public decides it’s had enough and stops rewarding politician­s who use incendiary language and demonize the other side. It’s impossible to guess, he notes, how much damage will be done in the meantime.

“That is the question of our time: Are we going to choose to continue the war, or are we going to choose peace? And we don’t know yet what the answer to that will be, because while a majority of Americans are fed up with the extremity of our political divisions, it does feel like we’re stuck here,” Willer said. “It will get worse before it gets better.”

Animosity between parties has been growing for decades now, to the point that studies show Republican­s and Democrats don’t want to date one another, don’t want their children to marry one another and don’t want to live in the same neighborho­ods at a rate unpreceden­ted in modern America. At the same time, politician­s began using increasing­ly apocalypti­c language. Willer says those two forces — the splinterin­g of society along party lines and the ascent of vitriolic campaignin­g — merged to create a breeding ground for violence.

“It was simmering,” said Parker. “It’s like the gas burner was on, then Trump lit the fire.”

The president vaulted to political prominence by promoting the racist and false conspiracy theory that Obama was not born in the United States, launched his presidenti­al campaign by calling Mexicans rapists and murderers, and routinely describes his enemies, including the intend ed recipients of the pipe bombs, as “evil,” ‘’dangerous,” “the enemy of the American people.”

“That let loose a period of incivility, which is too mild a word; it’s potentiall­y explosive anger that can turn into violence,” said Bob Shrum, a former Democratic strategist who last month started the Center for the Political Future, a program at the University of Southern California designed to restore sanity and bipartisan­ship in politics.

He’s watched with frustratio­n as some liberal politician­s respond to Trump’s presidency by imitating his divisive style. He describes it as a “cold civil war,” where people consider those who disagree with them bad, unAmerican — their enemy.

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