Hemodoc, hold up...I was just making an innocuous observation. I was just quoting what her campaign manager said, that she was the very definition of "moderate". I have reread my post 3 times, and not once could I fathom where anyone could get the idea that I was pointing the blame at any one political group. Since she is a "moderate", the killer could have been a LEFT wing extremist for all I know!Look, it is all speculation, but the value of the conversation for this whole nation right now is that we are recognizing that our political tone is harsh. OUR CURRENT POLITICAL CLIMATE MAY HAVE NOTHING TO DO...PROBABLY HAS NOTHING TO DO...WITH WHAT HAPPENED IN ARIZONA. But at least politicians from Obama to Boehner are ALL saying that we need to be more civil with each other. The congresswoman had just emailed a Republican friend of hers (the loser to Rand Paul in Kentucky) congratulating him on the new job he DID get and telling him she wanted to discuss with him ways to calm the current political atmosphere.Maybe I don't understand the definition of "extremism", but to me, extremists are usually nutjobs. IF IT IS TRUE that this kid killed Ms Giffords because he didn't like the answer to one of his questions asked at a political gathering, then I don't think it is completely bonkers to consider the possibility that this guy didn't like her policy on a specific issue, and if he killed her because of that, then that's "extremism", don't you think? It's irrational, sure, but it is also awfully extreme.I'm really sorry that you've taken anything I've said and took it to mean that I was pointing fingers at any group of people. I've spent a lot of time and thought in doing exactly the opposite. And I'm not just making this stuff up. This is what the whole nation is talking about. You yourself have stated so many times that you hate the nasty rhetoric, and from what I can see, that seems to be the general consensus of the vast majority of people!I thought we were having a really interesting discussion, so I am baffled by this sudden turn. I don't think I've fundamentally disagreed with you on any point you've made. I really honestly thought we were having the kind of discussion that we are hoping that this nation will have going forth...open, respectful and thoughtful.God Bless.
Quote from: cariad on January 10, 2011, 03:36:56 PMQuote from: Bill Peckham on January 09, 2011, 11:15:53 AMI think this review of political violence is very helpful.http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/01/the-cloudy-logic-of-political-shootings/69147/Peter I think you're putting forward a false equivalencey to say the rhetoric is the same on both sides of the aisle. That Cantor situation case in point: "A Richmond Police detective was assigned to the case. A preliminary investigation shows that a bullet was fired into the air and struck the window in a downward direction". A bullet is randomly fired in the air somewhere in Ohio Virginia and the left is as vitriolic as the right? The rhetoric on the right, from the most prominent figures on the right, is of a magnitude difference than anything that was said by the left against Bush through an election decided by the Supreme Court, and the long 8 years of improbable bungling. The language of delegitimization and demonization of Barack Obama are in a different league.That is the milieu that this happened in, just as the Kennedy assassination happened in the milieu of hatred that was Dallas 1963.This is very nicely stated and I agree with it totally. I was in hospital following my transplant when all of this was unfolding and watched CNN for roughly 10 hours a day, so remember this better than most news stories. Eric Cantor seemed a little too eager to prove that the right were also targets of extremism.This false equivalancy has been the talking point of the day on this thread. But really the most astonishing spin is that Palin is a victim in all this and if only we of the left understood guns we'd be in on the joke and know that having campaign events featuring assault rifles and silhouetted targets isn't meant to be taken literally and we should just lighten up.David Frum makes some good points in this post:Palin failed to appreciate the question being posed to her. That question was not: “Are you culpable for the shooting?” The question was: “Having put this unfortunate image on the record, can you respond to the shooting in a way that demonstrates your larger humanity? And possibly also your potential to serve as leader of the entire nation?”He then goes on to run through the elements of a response that would have met todays low bar of political leadership.It isn't a question of civility. It's what Kruegman called today the eliminationist rhetoric of the right that is dangerous. It was dangerous on Friday and it continues to be dangerous today. I think it is centered on the delegitimization and demonization of Barack Obama but it extends to local members of Congress and any other federal official who gets their name in the paper.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on January 09, 2011, 11:15:53 AMI think this review of political violence is very helpful.http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/01/the-cloudy-logic-of-political-shootings/69147/Peter I think you're putting forward a false equivalencey to say the rhetoric is the same on both sides of the aisle. That Cantor situation case in point: "A Richmond Police detective was assigned to the case. A preliminary investigation shows that a bullet was fired into the air and struck the window in a downward direction". A bullet is randomly fired in the air somewhere in Ohio Virginia and the left is as vitriolic as the right? The rhetoric on the right, from the most prominent figures on the right, is of a magnitude difference than anything that was said by the left against Bush through an election decided by the Supreme Court, and the long 8 years of improbable bungling. The language of delegitimization and demonization of Barack Obama are in a different league.That is the milieu that this happened in, just as the Kennedy assassination happened in the milieu of hatred that was Dallas 1963.This is very nicely stated and I agree with it totally. I was in hospital following my transplant when all of this was unfolding and watched CNN for roughly 10 hours a day, so remember this better than most news stories. Eric Cantor seemed a little too eager to prove that the right were also targets of extremism.
I think this review of political violence is very helpful.http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/01/the-cloudy-logic-of-political-shootings/69147/Peter I think you're putting forward a false equivalencey to say the rhetoric is the same on both sides of the aisle. That Cantor situation case in point: "A Richmond Police detective was assigned to the case. A preliminary investigation shows that a bullet was fired into the air and struck the window in a downward direction". A bullet is randomly fired in the air somewhere in Ohio Virginia and the left is as vitriolic as the right? The rhetoric on the right, from the most prominent figures on the right, is of a magnitude difference than anything that was said by the left against Bush through an election decided by the Supreme Court, and the long 8 years of improbable bungling. The language of delegitimization and demonization of Barack Obama are in a different league.That is the milieu that this happened in, just as the Kennedy assassination happened in the milieu of hatred that was Dallas 1963.
http://granitegrok.com/blog/2011/01/if_dean_and_the_other_boohoo_hampsters_w.htmlhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqB4tyvxWKA&feature=youtu.behttp://thespeechatimeforchoosing.wordpress.com/2011/01/09/listen-up-lefties-the-difference-between-the-dncs-bulls-eyes-and-sarah-palins-surveyors-crosshairs/
Quote from: Bill Peckham on January 10, 2011, 06:03:16 PMQuote from: cariad on January 10, 2011, 03:36:56 PMQuote from: Bill Peckham on January 09, 2011, 11:15:53 AMI think this review of political violence is very helpful.http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/01/the-cloudy-logic-of-political-shootings/69147/Peter I think you're putting forward a false equivalencey to say the rhetoric is the same on both sides of the aisle. That Cantor situation case in point: "A Richmond Police detective was assigned to the case. A preliminary investigation shows that a bullet was fired into the air and struck the window in a downward direction". A bullet is randomly fired in the air somewhere in Ohio Virginia and the left is as vitriolic as the right? The rhetoric on the right, from the most prominent figures on the right, is of a magnitude difference than anything that was said by the left against Bush through an election decided by the Supreme Court, and the long 8 years of improbable bungling. The language of delegitimization and demonization of Barack Obama are in a different league.That is the milieu that this happened in, just as the Kennedy assassination happened in the milieu of hatred that was Dallas 1963.This is very nicely stated and I agree with it totally. I was in hospital following my transplant when all of this was unfolding and watched CNN for roughly 10 hours a day, so remember this better than most news stories. Eric Cantor seemed a little too eager to prove that the right were also targets of extremism.This false equivalancy has been the talking point of the day on this thread. But really the most astonishing spin is that Palin is a victim in all this and if only we of the left understood guns we'd be in on the joke and know that having campaign events featuring assault rifles and silhouetted targets isn't meant to be taken literally and we should just lighten up.David Frum makes some good points in this post:Palin failed to appreciate the question being posed to her. That question was not: “Are you culpable for the shooting?” The question was: “Having put this unfortunate image on the record, can you respond to the shooting in a way that demonstrates your larger humanity? And possibly also your potential to serve as leader of the entire nation?”He then goes on to run through the elements of a response that would have met todays low bar of political leadership.It isn't a question of civility. It's what Kruegman called today the eliminationist rhetoric of the right that is dangerous. It was dangerous on Friday and it continues to be dangerous today. I think it is centered on the delegitimization and demonization of Barack Obama but it extends to local members of Congress and any other federal official who gets their name in the paper.Bill, not to beat a dead horse, but I agree, we shouldn't be using cross hairs or targets as symbolisms in politics. Yet, it just occurred to me that one of the latest websites on dialysis uses cross hairs as its logo!! Fix Dialysis!! http://www.fixdialysis.com/Art/fix-dialysis.jpgCrosshairs DesignA key feature of the four-quadrant model is the crosshairs that separates the quadrants. The severity of its distortion also represents the severity of dysfunction in the dialysis care system. The model is especially powerful for exploring how to return the crosshairs to a more balanced position.http://www.renalweb.com/writings/New_Model-Oct10f.htm
I have to admit that I didn't "get" the "blood lust" reference. I guess I'm culturally ignorant.The only real quibble I have with her statement is that I fundamentally disagree with her/President Reagan's sentiments about how it's the individual to blame, that every time the law is broken, it doesn't mean that society is collectively guilty. We may not be "guilty", but perhaps as a society we are "responsible." I understand the idea behind "personal responsibility", and it is a laudable one, but not all of us are all the time able to be "personally responsible". Sometimes we have a responsibility to each other and to our society as a whole.Sometimes you have to get past the noise in order to hear the message. I'd wager at this time that this was not a political assassination as we would normally define it, rather, it was the action of someone who was mentally ill. Many, MANY people thought that this person was unwell, and perhaps the message is that our mental health system is broken, tainted with shame and lack of education and lack of proper funding.
blood libel ... very different usage history than blood lustHow could both of these statements be true? Either words and actions are connected or they are not:1. "Acts of monstrous criminality stand on their own. They begin and end with the criminals who commit them."2. "Especially within hours of a tragedy unfolding, journalists and pundits should not manufacture a blood libel that serves only to incite the very hatred and violence they purport to condemn."However, if she goes with #1 then I suppose it means she'll come out in support of the lower Manhattan mosque, which would be good.
Wow. Just wow.Wouldn't you think that before using the term "Blood Libel' in this context the person who writes Sarah Palin's stuff would have Googled the term?