• Trumper Terrorist Pleads Guilty to Sending Bomb Threat to Arizona Elect

    From 186283@ud0s4.net@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 14 02:26:28 2025
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    Commentary
    Assessing the right-wing terror threat in the United States a year after
    the January 6 insurrection
    Daniel L. Byman


    On January 6, 2021, Pro-Trump supporters and far-right forces flooded Washington DC to protest Trump's election loss. Hundreds breached the U.S. Capitol Building, aproximately 13 were arrested and one protester was
    killed. (Photo by Michael Nigro/Sipa USA)


    This piece is part of a series titled “Nonstate armed actors and illicit economies in 2022” from Brookings’s Initiative on Nonstate Armed Actors.

    The last year saw advances and setbacks in the fight against American white supremacist, anti-government, and other violent right-wing groups. The good news is that the number of deaths from terrorism and other extreme forms of violence was low, but the bad news for 2022 is that violent rhetoric and threats are becoming normalized in everyday politics.

    Let’s start with some good news. According to statistics from the New
    America Foundation, 2021 saw zero deaths in the United States from right-
    wing terrorist attacks. As discussed below, other forms of right-wing
    violence remained a problem, but there was no high-profile attack in 2021
    like the 2018 Pittsburgh synagogue shooting or the 2019 El Paso Walmart
    attack, which killed 11 and 22 people respectively.

    In a shift that will have positive long-term consequences, the Biden administration has made right-wing terrorism a priority. In June, the administration released a strategy for countering domestic terrorism, attempting to lay out both the different facets of the threat and how
    various security agencies should respond. The federal government has also launched an ambitious set of investigations, focusing on the January 6 insurrectionists and bringing hundreds of them to trial. Simply paying attention to the problem makes arrests and other forms of disruption more likely and scares many of those who might organize for violence, limiting
    their activities.

    Although white supremacy and other right-wing extremist causes have many supporters, the groups themselves are disorganized, and the movement is
    riven by infighting. They disagree on which targets to prioritize and who should lead, and many of them are unskilled in clandestine operations,
    making them easy prey for law enforcement when it decides to focus on the problem. Perhaps most heartening, their violence usually backfires,
    decreasing public support and making it more likely that the government
    will crack down.

    Yet a narrow focus on terrorism and other high-profile forms of violence against civilians misses much of the problem. In 2021, political violence
    and the threat of violence appeared increasingly common — even if terrorist attacks, narrowly defined, were not. The year began, of course, with an insurrection at the U.S. Capitol to prevent the certification of the
    election of Joe Biden as president.

    Five people died in the fracas. Police officers killed Ashli Babbitt, whom
    many Trump supporters later portrayed as a martyr, as she was climbing
    though a broken window of a barricaded door that led to the Speaker’s
    Lobby, where police officers were evacuating members of Congress. The day
    after the insurrection, Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick, whom rioters
    had assaulted and pepper sprayed, died of a stroke. Three others died from being trampled, a heart attack, and a stroke. Several officers who
    responded to the insurrection later killed themselves.

    Dishearteningly, many Republican elected officials refused to join efforts
    to investigate the violence, playing down the danger and obscuring the
    facts. Threats of political violence continued in different incarnations,
    with Donald Trump supporters threatening election officials who certified
    votes for Biden and members of school boards that pushed for COVID-19-
    related restrictions also facing threats. These and similar causes have
    found many supporters, and they are often able to spread, and even amplify, their messages on social media, which often favors extreme right-wing
    content.

    As these examples illustrate, much of the danger is in the relationship
    between mainstream American politics and its extremist edges: The Capitol insurrection involved small numbers of organized white supremacists and anti-government extremists, but also QAnon adherents and large numbers of ordinary Trump supporters. As extremism expert Seamus Hughes notes, “There
    was absolutely a spectrum of support. In many ways, Jan. 6 was a bug light.
    It brought extremists from all areas. And they all came with different
    skill sets.”

    In the past, Presidents George H.W. Bush and Ronald Reagan denounced racist figures like Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke when they tried to enter
    mainstream politics. In contrast, President Trump often uses the rhetoric
    of the far right, supports or at least condones its anti-government
    protests, and has called on it to protect him in response to imaginary
    threats. Arizona Congressman Paul Gosar is an open advocate of white supremacist and other far-right fringe groups, and Republicans refused to
    join Democrats and condemn him even after he posted on social media a photoshopped anime video showing him killing liberal Representative
    Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and attacking President Biden.

    Not surprisingly, American politics have radicalized. According to one
    recent poll, 30% of Republicans agree with the statement, “Because things
    have gotten so far off track, true American patriots may have to resort to violence in order to save our country.” This figure is especially high
    among those who believe Trump’s false claim that President Biden and the Democrats stole the 2020 election.

    Unfortunately, things may get worse before they get better. As the 2022
    midterm elections approach, gerrymandering has encouraged both sides to
    play to their political bases, fueling extreme rhetoric and discouraging centrists who would criticize extremes within their own parties. A small
    number of individuals may find encouragement, conducting extreme acts of violence, while for larger numbers threats and violent rhetoric become normalized, making politics a dangerous (or at least miserable) business
    and creating the risk of a cycle of violence, where one violent act spawns another or a broader crackdown, further increasing radicalization.

    The Biden administration and others concerned about the danger of right-
    wing terrorism should take several steps. The first is simply to continue prioritizing right-wing terrorism by resourcing the relevant intelligence
    and law enforcement agencies and continuing robust investigations into the January 6 insurrectionists and others who might use violence to undermine
    U.S. institutions. This will make it hard for the most violent individuals
    to organize to attack minorities, overthrow the government, or otherwise
    use violence.

    In addition, the military and law enforcement must remain committed to
    civil rights and other democratic values. The efforts to better screen
    members of the military, begun by Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III,
    should continue. Ideally, more would be done to ensure that local law enforcement is suitably screened and that any bad apples who slip through
    are promptly fired.

    The most important step, but the one that for now appears least likely, is
    for politicians to openly shun those who embrace white supremacist ideas
    and violent conspiracy theories. Republican leaders did so in the past,
    helping reduce the spread of hateful ideas and their political influence.
    An open rejection would in turn change the media environment by
    marginalizing extreme voices, creating a benign circle that would create a safer America.


    https://www.brookings.edu/articles/assessing-the-right-wing-terror-threat- in-the-united-states-a-year-after-the-january-6-insurrection/

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