Freedom
by digby
There have been now 74 school shootings since Sandy Hook, roughly 9.5 a month
— Sam Stein (@samsteinhp) June 10, 2014
74 school shootings since Sandy Hook.
117 total mass shootings in 2014.
— igorvolsky (@igorvolsky) June 10, 2014
Yes, conservatives do need to tone down extremist and dehumanizing rhetoric aimed at liberals of agents of the federal government, as Beutler suggests. But I strongly believe the more immediate demand liberals are justified in making of our conservative friends is a repudiation of the kind of self-defined “right of revolution” that can serve as dynamite in the minds of the self-deluded. As I argued (also at TNR) in the wake of the Tucson shootings back in 2011:
I’d like to think the tragedy in Tucson would convince conservatives (and anyone on the left with similar tendencies) to begin showing more respect for the rule of law and democratic processes even if they produce results they don’t like—which would mean no more talk about liberals or Democratic politicians or “bureaucrats” as if they belong to a different country or even a different species, and no more suggestions that conservative policies are mandated by some higher law, divine or natural.
But at a minimum, I think circumstances call for this: an absolute self-disciplinary ban among conservatives against revolutionary rhetoric, particularly in conjunction with defense of the right to possess lethal weaponry.
Unfortunately, we’ve heard nothing of the kind, even as the death toll of political violence slowly rises.