Alex Shepherd of The New Republic wrote an outstanding article about the linkage between Trump and violence. He threatens it, he encourages it, he revels in his threats. He likes to play the role of the tough guy. I recall a clip from one of his campaigns where he was portrayed at a wrestling match beating up a cartoon figure labeled CNN. I recall him at one of his rallies encouraging the crowd to beat up any infiltrators and he would pay the court costs. I remember the cruel taunts that he directed at others, including Paul Pelosi. He is a bully and he wants to be feared.
Yet when yet another gunman was captured before shooting at him, Trump was quick to blame Harris and Walz, who have repeatedly called for unity.
Shepherd writes:
Three hours before a would-be assassin was spotted hiding in the bushes of his golf course in West Palm Beach, Donald Trump posted, in all caps, “I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT” on Truth Social, his wildly unprofitable social network. At roughly the same time, his running mate, Ohio Senator J.D. Vance, was touring the Sunday shows to proudly admit that he and Trump were knowingly spreading racist lies about Haitian immigrants eating pets, in service of an even bigger lie—that immigrants pose an existential threat to the country itself.
It was a banner day for the Trump campaign: a feud with the country’s most popular pop star, a vile lie about a vulnerable population, yet another close call with an attempted assassin. But it also felt oddly familiar, bordering on routine—especially given how the former president and his allies reacted to the golf course scare. There were no fleeting calls for “unity” or hollow promises to turn down the temperature; instead, they were quick to blame their political opponents.
In a speech on Monday, Vance noted that the two attempts on Trump’s life were “pretty strong evidence that the left needs to tone down the rhetoric or somebody is going to get hurt.” He further argued on X that the captured suspect, Ryan Routh, was inspired by the Harris campaign’s insistence that Trump is a threat to democracy. Trump, meanwhile, said his opponents’ inflammatory rhetoric was endangering him, and that “these are people who want to destroy this country.”
“It is called the enemy from within,” Trump continued. “They are the real threat.” If that wasn’t subtle enough, his campaign then released a lengthy list of people it blamed, without evidence, for inspiring Routh, including Harris and her running mate, Governor Tim Walz, as well as Representative Nancy Pelosi, Representative Adam Schiff, and even Walz’s wife, Gwen.
It would be foolish to blame any politician for either assassination attempt; both Routh and Thomas Crooks, the deceased Pennsylvania shooter, were mentally troubled and politically confused. But it’s important to acknowledge a simple and obvious truth: No one in this country has done more to sow division, create chaos, and, yes, encourage violence over the past decade than Trump. It was only a matter of time before that boomeranged on him.
Criticisms of Trump that rightfully note that he is a threat to the future of American democracy are hardly incitement to violence. They are recognition of the fact that Trump has used and will continue to use any means at his disposal to gain and hold onto power. His own paranoia and deluded ravings about his political enemies, meanwhile, have created a combustible climate—one made more dangerous by the lax gun laws that Trump and his allies have embraced.
These are people who egg on violence against their enemies at every turn. As The New York Times’ Peter Baker put it on Monday, Trump has “long favored the language of violence in his political discourse, encouraging supporters to beat up hecklers, threatening to shoot looters and undocumented migrants, mocking a near-fatal attack on the husband of the Democratic House speaker and suggesting that a general he deemed disloyal be executed.” Let’s not forget that he also directed his supporters to attack the U.S. Capitol and allegedly expressed support for hanging his vice president, Mike Pence.
And then, Trump cries victim when he finds himself in the crosshairs. But increasingly, it seems, Americans aren’t buying it. For the last two months, the Trump campaign has whined incessantly about the fact that the country quickly moved on following the first attempt on his life, in mid-July. They’re right about that; his near-death experience was out of the news within a few days, and Trump received no noticeable bump in the polls. The incident is now an afterthought in the election—it’s almost as if it never happened at all. The second assassination plot, meanwhile, barely registered on NFL Sunday.
The country has moved on because it has grown accustomed to the chaos that Trump effortlessly generates. It has moved on because Trump himself moved on almost immediately. The Trump that stood onstage at the Republican National Convention, rambling about his grievances for almost two hours, was not changed by his recent brush with death in the slightest. He was, if anything, even morederanged and vengeful. And since then, he has said that Kamala Harris is a “fascist,” Walz wants to force young children to have gender reassignment surgeries, and that Haitian immigrants who are in the country legally are pet-eating criminals intent on murdering downtrodden Rust Belt whites.
Years before Trump’s political career began, the British photographer Platon found himself shooting Trump in the boardroom where he fired people on The Apprentice, the show where he played an idealized version of himself—wealthy, important, competent. Platon tried to connect with his subject. “Let’s be human together,” he said to Trump. “There’s always an air of tension and controversy about the things you say and do in public. I’m sure it’s intentional on your part but it feels to me like you’re in the middle of an emotional storm. I can’t live with that anxiety all the time. As a fellow human being, I’d like to know how you weather the storm.”
Trump calmly looked back at him and responded: “I am the storm.”
Trump is one of the least self-aware people in American political history—maybe in history, period. But this was an eerily prophetic statement. For eight years, Trump has been the storm. He unleashed dark forces in our society—making America more violent, more menacing, more chaotic—and rode them to the height of power. Now, he’s trying to do it all over again. But that’s the thing about storms, no matter their origin. Sometimes there’s no escaping them.

Trump is UNFIT to serve anyone or anything. He lies and lies, incites stupid people to do violence, and cheats, cheats, cheats.
I am sick and tired of trump and his shenanigans of hate and lies.
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Read the history of the means by which Mussolini and his protege Hitler came to power: Chaos and fear.
Our nation is at a crossroad: Do we learn the lesson from History, or do we allow the chaos and fear to drive us into fascism?
Unfortunately, while Mussolini and Hitler expertly used the mass media of their time — movies and radio — we are today faced with myriad media, especially so-called “social media”, which greatly multiply the power of the sowers of chaos and fear far beyond what Mussolini and Hitler had at their disposal.
Naive and bought-and-paid-for members of Congress allowed “social media” to become a weapon of chaos and fear when Congress gave these media a get-out-of-jail-free card in the form of Section 230 in the laughingly-titled Communications Decency Act, wherein Section 230 has allowed indecency to flourish.
An unavoidably essential move toward greatly reducing the spread of fear and chaos not only in the U.S., but also worldwide, is for Congress to delete Section 230 from the Act.
The fake news cancer spawned by so-called “social media” has metastasized to the traditional media, endangering our republic and inflicting savage psychological harm on our nation.
No new laws restricting social media need to be passed to remedy this situation, thereby eliminating any legitimate claim of impinging of free speech: Congress need only delete Section 230 from the Act.
Deleting Section 230 will simply allow the free market to work its magic: If social media allow hate and lies to be posted, then the social media can be sued. Faced with the prospect of myriad lawsuits, ocial media will very quickly begin removing the hate and lies that are destroying our nation and plunging our children into despair.
Most “social media” claim to be only “platforms” and not a news organization; yet, these media provide “news feeds” for subscribers — and the news feed is compiled from wire services and other news sources, just as newspapers and other news organizations do when they publish news from wire services and other news sources.
That makes social media news PUBLISHERS, not mere “platforms” — and THAT makes them subject to the same civil liability laws as newspapers, magazines, and television news when it comes to the lies they publish that are dividing our nation and sending our teenagers into despair.
TELL CONGRESS TO DELETE SECTION 230!!!
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I was glad that CNN aired a news piece where they showed a bunch of times that Trump during speeches was calling Democrats fascists (and worse). Right after they showed JD Vance being interviewed demanding Democrats stop calling Trump fascist. The Republicans have no shame whatsoever.
I am not even sure that Harris or Walz even use the kind of name-calling that Trump and Vance have used. There always seems to be a false equivalency between what Republican LEADERS say versus what some marginalized person on the left says.
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Traitor Trump also threatened California recently when he was in California talking to the Orange Toddler’s MAGA faithful.
California fires: Trump threatens to pull federal aid (bbc.com)
More proof that Traitor Trump “is one of the least self-aware people in American political history—maybe in history, period. “
Most of the counties in California with the most forest-fire risk voted for Trump overwhelmingly in 2016 and 2020.
The next link shows the results of the election in 2020. The same site has another map for 2016. Hover curser over a county and see the voting results.
California Election Results 2020 | Live Map Updates | Voting by County & District (politico.com)
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Trump is an appalling man.
He has no principles. His only interest ishis own self-agrandizement.
I really fear that innocent people are going to die as a result of the hatred and prejudice that he and Vance stoke so recklessly.
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Birdchum: Trump is an attention junky, which means he will do and say ANYTHING to get his fix. I think this is the very thing that his handlers overlook. He’s in it to win, but it’s the attention he so badly . . . and obviously . . . needs. CBK
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Another thing about storms is that they are temporary. They don’t last forever: they hit, they pass and then they die out. This one has already outlived the normal life of storms by far and is set to go away, too –starting at the ballot box. That will be followed by the upcoming trials for his crimes (that he’s running for office again in order to delay) and then will come their consequences. It’s not going to happen today, but I do think and pray that he IS going to go away soon. That’s because, contrary to what he would have people believe, he is not a superhero and WE are his kryptonite!
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Ours is an extremely corrupt system. Imagine, for example, the level of corruption (both in depth and breadth) that it took for the first case against Epstein to be handled the way it was and, in the second case, for all the evidence of Epstein’s crimes and of his clients’ complicity to disappear, poof, like magic and for the trial of his co-conspirator, Ghislane Maxwell, to be conducted without allowing anyone who could name new names to testify and for him to die in jail after one attempt on his life had already failed. The powers in this corrupt system must think we are all idiots and, indeed, given the credulity of folks about this stuff, they are right about a lot of us. The media? They keep saying that Epstein committed suicide. Yeah, and unborn babies sometimes sing like Elvis.
I have been entertaining the following possibility: that the cases against Trump have so far gone nowhere because via Russian intelligence Trump has dirt on a lot of folks. Consider this, all the little Bubbas and Bubbettes who participated in the Jan. 6th Cuckoo Coup have been arrested, tried, and convicted. Many have already served their sentences. But Orange Clown Man Donnie spends his days ranting to his Trumpanzees, golfing, and stuffing is maw with cheeseburgers. He has, so far, suffered no punishment for a lifetime of egregious crimes, some of them extremely serious. And the Extreme Court has been laying the groundwork for letting him go scot free. If you or I were in possession of top secret classified information and had shared it with others, would we still be walking around? Uh, no.
One law for the rich and powerful. One for the rest of us schlimazels.
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I’m sure you are right, but there is a way to turn alot of that around at the ballot box. It could happen by taking POTUS, the House AND the Senate. That would increase the likelihood of being able to change the Supreme Court, such as by increasing the size and by setting term limits instead of lifetime appointments.
Maybe it sounds like just wishful thinking but our votes do have the power to facilitate changes in many positive ways. That can happen by electing people in our states who will pass the National Interstate Popular Vote Compact and/or eliminating the Electoral College. And also by voting for people who will pass legislation federally which will take back our country from the billionaire oligarchs who own both political parties. And by electing those who will pass laws that will make our nation more fair for the working class and the historically marginalized, such as women, people of color, etc.
I recognize that many problems exist, but I prefer to have a positive outlook and see hope in being able to ameliorate the human condition –even though I know that all the needed changes might not occur in my lifetime.
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