Massacre, Followed by Libel

· Wednesday, January 12, 2011

WASHINGTON -- The charge: The Tucson massacre is a consequence of the "climate of hate" created by Sarah Palin, the tea party, Glenn Beck, Obamacare opponents and sundry other liberal betes noires.

The verdict: Rarely in American political discourse has there been a charge so reckless, so scurrilous, and so unsupported by evidence.

As killers go, Jared Loughner is not reticent. Yet among all his writings, postings, videos and other ravings -- and in all the testimony from all the people who knew him -- there is not a single reference to any of these supposed accessories to murder.

Not only is there no evidence that Loughner was impelled to violence by any of those upon whom Paul Krugman, Keith Olbermann, The New York Times, the Tucson sheriff and other rabid partisans are fixated. There is no evidence that he was responding to anything, political or otherwise, outside of his own head.

A climate of hate? This man lived within his very own private climate. "His thoughts were unrelated to anything in our world," said the teacher of Loughner's philosophy class at Pima Community College. "He was very disconnected from reality," said classmate Lydian Ali. "You know how it is when you talk to someone who's mentally ill and they're just not there?" said neighbor Jason Johnson. "It was like he was in his own world."

His ravings, said one high school classmate, were interspersed with "unnerving, long stupors of silence" during which he would "stare fixedly at his buddies," reported The Wall Street Journal. His own writings are confused, incoherent, punctuated with private numerology and inscrutable taxonomy. He warns of government brainwashing and thought control through "grammar." He was obsessed with "conscious dreaming," a fairly good synonym for hallucinations.

This is not political behavior. These are the signs of a clinical thought disorder -- ideas disconnected from each other, incoherent, delusional, detached from reality.

These are all the hallmarks of a paranoid schizophrenic. And a dangerous one. A classmate found him so terrifyingly mentally disturbed that, she e-mailed friends and family, she expected to find his picture on TV after perpetrating a mass murder. This was no idle speculation: In class "I sit by the door with my purse handy" so that she could get out fast when the shooting began.

Furthermore, the available evidence dates Loughner's fixation on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords back to at least 2007, when he attended a town hall of hers and felt slighted by her response. In 2007, no one had heard of Sarah Palin. Glenn Beck was still toiling on Headline News. There was no tea party or health care reform. The only climate of hate was the pervasive post-Iraq campaign of vilification of George W. Bush, nicely captured by a New Republic editor who had begun an article thus: "I hate President George W. Bush. There, I said it."

Finally, the charge that the metaphors used by Palin and others were inciting violence is ridiculous. Everyone uses warlike metaphors in describing politics. When Barack Obama said at a 2008 fundraiser in Philadelphia, "If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun," he was hardly inciting violence.

Why? Because fighting and warfare are the most routine of political metaphors. And for obvious reasons. Historically speaking, all democratic politics is a sublimation of the ancient route to power -- military conquest. That's why the language persists. That's why we say without any self-consciousness such things as "battleground states" or "targeting" opponents. Indeed, the very word for an electoral contest -- "campaign" -- is an appropriation from warfare.

When profiles of Obama's first chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, noted that he once sent a dead fish to a pollster who displeased him, a characteristically subtle statement carrying more than a whiff of malice and murder, it was considered a charming example of excessive -- and creative -- political enthusiasm. When Senate candidate Joe Manchin dispensed with metaphor and simply fired a bullet through the cap-and-trade bill -- while intoning, "I'll take dead aim at (it)" -- he was hardly assailed with complaints about violations of civil discourse or invitations to murder.

Did Manchin push Loughner over the top? Did Emanuel's little Mafia imitation create a climate for political violence? The very questions are absurd -- unless you're The New York Times and you substitute the name Sarah Palin.

The origins of Loughner's delusions are clear: mental illness. What are the origins of Krugman's?

(c) 2011, The Washington Post Writers Group


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Comments

Hard Thought

Liberal progressives profess to abhor violence and talk of hate. Then they express exactly those traits. Witness Obama's exhortation of one upmanship in telling followers to bring a gun to a knife fight. The same can be said for Bill Clinton staint "I loathe the military."

How can a philosophy supposedly steeped in consideration and diversity attack "the rich", whoever they are today, as the enemy of the common man?

How can a politician claim that sommone should be stuck up against a wall and shot as an enemy of the people as the ex-Congressman from Florida did?

Hou can these same people profess compassion yet support murderers like Che Quevera, Castro, Lenin, Stalin and Mao?

Double speak and double standards abound on the left and they never notice their inconsistency.

Posted January 12, 2011 at 6:44:03 AM


g.wegmann

The Democrats reactionto the the killing of those in Tucson is an example of a desperate looser that has just been rejected at the polls in November. They are grasping at straws to find a way to stop the wave of disgust of the majority of American people have demonstrated for the way Ombama and his ilk are trying to take this country to the far left!

Posted January 12, 2011 at 9:43:16 AM


Hard Thought

Sorry for the misspellings in the previous post.

Should be saying not staint, someone instead of sommeone, how instead of hou.

The ex-congressman in question is from Pennsylvania commenting on the Florida governor's race.

Posted January 12, 2011 at 9:44:02 AM


Ken W

Excellent blog Dr. Krauthammer, very well put.

Posted January 12, 2011 at 12:18:23 PM


Abu Nudnik

Thank you. Finally a well-reasoned and effective commentary on the lunacy of the gunman whose thoughts seemed to think him rather than the other way round. One small point: he consistently misspelled "conscious dreaming," as "conscience dreaming." It is one of those strange facts about this type of psychopath that they are profoundly ignorant and simultaneously contemptuous of what they perceive as the ignorance of their opponents.

Re: war metaphors, also right on. Politics is war in civil form, revolutions without blood. "Targeting" a district is not "targeting" a person. It's absurd.

Posted January 12, 2011 at 12:46:45 PM


Stuart (Austin, TX)

Great column today, Dr. Krauthammer. The reason for liberals' histrionics is obvious: opportunism. And conservatives take advantage, too, when a real outrage is perpetrated. It's an inevitable part of politics. The noteworthy distinction between liberals and conservatives is not how they decry the outrage, but what they propose to do about it. Liberals always seek to enact laws, codes and regulations to punish offensive speech. Conservatives, on the other hand, always try to persuade people to turn away from offenders, using the free market to deny them sustenance. Crime versus shame. Which is more commensurate with ordered liberty and freedom? Do we really have to ask? I mean, are we adults?

Posted January 12, 2011 at 12:47:36 PM


GordAuch

"Crime versus shame. Which is more commensurate with ordered liberty and freedom?" --Stuart (Austin, TX)

A sense of shame requires a moral center, but the progressive liberals have done away with that long ago. Hence their cry that there oughta be a law.

Posted January 12, 2011 at 1:56:00 PM


Richard J. H.

When I saw the works, Liberal Psycopathology, I chuckled. Now, after the rantings of the MSNBC, and the other liberals in the press, I find this to be very descriptive. What nonsense they are spewing, hatred, and lies! Liberal Psycopatology at work once again!

Posted January 12, 2011 at 2:00:18 PM


Sam

Interesting fact, which the IBD publication of this column makes note of:

"Before becoming a political commentator and syndicated columnist, Dr. Krauthammer was chief resident in psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital."

Dr. Krauthammer's indignant remarks toward those who blame the Tucson tragedy on the right stems from much more than being a right-winger himself; the man is more than qualified to point out mental illness when he sees it.

Posted January 13, 2011 at 1:42:08 PM


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