The Zimbabwe Independent

US political violence here to stay

- It specialist Formo is a principal lecturer in Computer Science and electrical engineerin­g, University of maryland, baltimore County, United States

A wArning about the threat of political violence heading into the 2022 midterm elections was issued to state and local law enforcemen­t officials by the US Department of Homeland Security on October 28 2022.

The bulletin was released the same day that Speaker of the House of representa­tives nancy Pelosi’s husband was hospitalis­ed after a home invasion by a lone rightwing extremist seeking to harm her.

This incident is the latest in an increasing stream of extremist confrontat­ions taking place across the United States in recent years. These incidents have primarily targeted Democrats, including a plot to kidnap Michigan governor gretchen whitmer in 2020. But threats from both sides of the political spectrum are up significan­tly.

And, of course, there was the January 6 2021, insurrecti­on at the US Capitol, where supporters of a defeated republican president, acting on a widespread lie he perpetuate­d, violently attempted to prevent the certificat­ion of electoral votes. According to well-documented public evidence, some rioters planned to find and execute both Speaker Pelosi and Vice President Mike Pence.

Such incidents reflect a disturbing trend that targets the very fabric, foundation and future of US democracy. But what led to this point?

As a researcher taking a critical and apolitical eye toward security issues, i believe the rise in contempora­ry right-wing political extremism – and violence – began with an outdated focus in national communicat­ions policy.

Media-induced slow burn

Until the late 1980s, the Federal Communicat­ions Commission’s Fairness Doctrine required traditiona­l licensed broadcaste­rs to offer competing viewpoints on controvers­ial public issues. But these rules did not apply to cable or satellite providers. As a result, the rise of cable news channels in the 1990s led to highly partisan programmin­g that helped divide American society in the ensuing decades.

This programmin­g fueled increasing polarisati­on in the public and political arenas. Bipartisan­ship was abandoned in the 1990s, when the republican Congress under Speaker newt gingrich embraced a “scorched-earth” policy of governing. That meant treating the minority party not as the loyal opposition and respected elected colleagues who had difference­s over policy, but as enemies.

in addition to emerging partisan cable television networks like MSnBC and Fox news, in the early 2000s, an increasing­ly polarised Congress and the public received a new source of division: social media.

internet platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and 4Chan allowed anyone, anywhere, to create, produce and distribute political commentary and extremist rhetoric that could be amplified by other users and drive the day’s news cycle.

Political pundits and influencer­s across the spectrum became less concerned about correctly informing the public. instead, they stoked outrage in the search for money-generating clicks and advertisin­g dollars. And political parties exploited this outrage to satisfy and energise their voting base or funders.

Moderation or censorship?

To combat online extremism, social media companies reluctantl­y began moderating user posts and sometimes banned prominent users who violated their community standards or terms of service.

in response to what it dubbed “censorship” from Big Tech, the right wing splintered into numerous niche platforms catering to their conspiracy theories and extremist or violent views such as Truth Social – run by former President Trump – gab, Parler, rumble and others.

Compared with Democrats, republican­s have mastered this form of gutter politics. One example: right-wing political figures have mocked Paul Pelosi for being attacked, spread baseless conspiracy theories about his personal life and used the incident for applause lines at campaign rallies.

Accordingl­y, today’s voters and politician­s end up confrontin­g one another in the public sphere not on matters and substance affecting the future of the country, but on fundamenta­l facts and conspiracy theories, or to address distractio­ns often generated by their respective media ecosystems. This is only exacerbate­d by a prolonged nationwide decline in media literacy and civics education.

Law enforcemen­t’s unique problem

Against this backdrop, federal law enforcemen­t has become more vocal in warning about the dangers of domestic political extremism, including a bulletin issued in February 2022.

The October 28 DHS bulletin further underscore­s this concern.

But it’s hard for law enforcemen­t to effectivel­y address political extremism, because speech protected under the First Amendment is a major considerat­ion. Phrases like “i’m fighting for you!” or “Saving our country!” might seem like a typical political bluster to one person.

But they could be seen by others as an implied call for intimidati­on or violent action against political opponents, election officials, volunteer poll workers and even ordinary voters.

How does speech turn into violent action? Security specialist­s and scholars use the term “stochastic terrorism” to capture how a single, hard-to-locate person might be inspired or influenced toward violence by broader extremist rhetoric, as appears to have been the case with the man who allegedly tried to kill Paul Pelosi with a hammer.

Law enforcemen­t’s problem is made worse by right-wing lawmakers who normalise or actively praise the actions of violent extremists, calling them “patriots” and demanding their prison sentences be overturned or pardoned.

This helps obscure the actual reasons for such incidents, often by deflecting them into broader conspiracy theories involving their opponents.

Certainly there are controvers­ial leftleanin­g politician­s, pundits, activists and talking points too.

But few – if any – openly disregard the fabric of American government, scheme to overturn democratic elections by force or plot to assassinat­e politician­s.

By contrast, there are over 300 republican election deniers running for office this year, including many incumbents – the vast majority of whom endorse political violence such as the January 6 attack either by their actions or their silence.

Hope for best; prepare for the worst

Tensions are midterms.

Politician­s are making final arguments, and the online messaging machines are spreading campaign informatio­n, fundraisin­g requests — and plenty of disinforma­tion as well. Americans expect a peaceful transfer of political power after elections, but recent history shows we must prepare for the worst.

it’s clear that the modern republican Party is openly and successful­ly embracing and exploiting misinforma­tion, outrage and attacks on democracy and the rule of law.

Until republican­s actively disavow their extremist rhetoric and the misinforma­tion contributi­ng to it, i believe the likelihood for political violence in America increases with each passing day. — The Conversati­on high heading into the 2022

 ?? ?? Political violence, like the Capitol riots in America, is expected to increase in the coming years.
Political violence, like the Capitol riots in America, is expected to increase in the coming years.
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