The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Today’s political violence is all too real but hardly new

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Every time I hear somebody say that America’s contempora­ry political climate is uniquely violent, I wonder, “Where were you during the Nixon years?” Too young to remember the assassinat­ions of Martin Luther King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy? The Chicago police riot at the 1968 Democratic Convention? The killings at Kent State? A “Weatherman” bomb factory detonating in New

York? Patty Hearst and the Symbionese Liberation Army? The 1992 Los Angeles riots …

The list could go on indefinite­ly. Politics in America has been a blood sport basically all my life. I’ve gotten regular death threats for as long as I’ve written this column. Cellphones have pretty much put an end to threatenin­g phone calls. They can’t find your number. It might surprise you, however, to learn how many guys are dumb enough to commit the crime of making terroristi­c threats in an email. The only interestin­g thing in these threats is the psychologi­cal projection: who they think they’re talking to, and who they pretend to be.

Hairy-chested he-men, mostly. In my experience, real tough guys don’t go around boasting about it. Only profession­al wrestlers and Republican politician­s.

OK, that was a cheap shot. But consider Rep. Paul Gosar, the congressma­n who tweeted a cartoon video of himself killing Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and attacking President Joe Biden with a sword.

Sentenced to double-secret probation by House Democrats, Gosar was championed by virtually the entire GOP delegation in a scene right out of “Animal House.” See it’s perfectly all right to fantasize publicly about murdering a colleague and assaulting the president if you were just kidding.

Then there’s Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri, last seen raising his fist in solidarity with Trump’s Jan. 6 insurrecti­onists. Hawley gave a speech calling for “revival of strong and healthy manhood in America.” Judging by media accounts, it sounded like a declaratio­n of war against Ivy League gender studies department­s, who Hawley thinks are responsi

ble for young men wasting their precious bodily fluids playing video games and watching porn.

Literally, that’s what he said.

“Hmmmm,” observed Washington Post conservati­ve columnist Kathleen Parker. “Why is it that the guys who look as though they’ve never so much as pushed a lawn mower are always the ones who want to saddle up and save the womenfolk?”

Cruel, unfair and precisely on target. My response to Hawley is as follows: Your assignment, should you choose to accept it, is to watch one of this weekend’s college football games. Do you still think effeminate girly-men are taking over the U.S.?

Everywhere you look, privileged characters with fancy private school degrees are venting populist rage. Stirring up the mob. Not only Hawley (Stanford and Yale), but establishm­ent figures like Sen. Ted Cruz (Princeton and Harvard) and J.D. Vance (Yale Law) filled the air with violent invective.

To longtime conservati­ve author David Brooks, they’re “wrong to think there is a unified thing called ‘the left’ that hates America. This is just the apocalypti­c menace many of them had to invent in order to justify their decision to vote for Donald Trump.”

The mob is definitely listening. At a right-wing rally in Idaho recently, a young man asked — publicly — when it would be OK to kill Democrats: “How many elections are they going to steal before we kill these people?”

The crowd applauded. See, lies and crackpot rhetoric have consequenc­es.

So when will the shooting start?

This is America. Stick around.

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