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A dark day for Arizona, a dark future for America ?
Total Views: 167 - Total Replies: 1
Jan 10 2011, 7:45 pm - by Wolfsbane

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On Saturday Jan. 8 2011 near a score of people were shot at a supermarket center in Tucson, the fatally wounded victims include John Rolls, serving as a Federal Judge since 1991, Phyllis Schneck, a 79-year-old widow and great-grandmother was the oldest and Christina Taylor Green, 9, a third-grader was the youngest murdered. The terror ended when several people from the crowd tackled and disarmed Jared Loughner.

Investigators have found evidence that the 22-year 'suspect' intended to assassinate Congresswoman Gabrielle Gifford, that his animus for her reached back three years or more for which she was shot in the head at point-blank range from behind. 

Naturally in such a mass-casualty event there was confusion, the earliest reportage indicated the Congresswoman had died at the scene ... while opening an informal  "Congress on the Corner" public event where dozens were lined up to speak with her.My wife and I were rocked by the news that swelled to fill every broadcast, cable and internet portal, certainly a sad day for our country and we are "keeping them all in our thoughts and prayers".

However, literally within minutes what I saw developing from the Left and its slavish, lapdog Media was a concerted effort to create a martyr. The 'narrative' was that  Gifford was murdered by Right-Wing forces, a "tea-party" assassin! Never mind that she really wasn't dead, and that a Federal judge (about as rare as a member of Congress and arguably more powerful since such judges set aside laws passed by Congress all the time) had certainly been killed  Within hours there was strong indications that the 'shooter' in custody was an all too typical product of the modern Progressive-poisoned culture; a stoner, a loser, narcissist and nihilist, believing his 'lucid dreams' were paramount, mis-educated by a school system that spent more time talking about Ceasar Chavez, Joan Baez, Kwanza, and Gay Rights then inculcating effective citizenship in the republic. His social media Pages shout "Head-case" to anyone who cares to look (before the evidence is suppressed). 
Jan 10 2011, 7:48 pm - Replied by: Wolfsbane

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From the Wall Street Journal -

By GLENN HARLAN REYNOLDS

Shortly after November's electoral defeat for the Democrats, pollster Mark Penn appeared on Chris Matthews's TV show and remarked that what President Obama needed to reconnect with the American people was another Oklahoma City bombing. To judge from the reaction to Saturday's tragic shootings in Arizona, many on the left (and in the press) agree, and for a while hoped that Jared Lee Loughner's killing spree might fill the bill.

With only the barest outline of events available, pundits and reporters seemed to agree that the massacre had to be the fault of the tea party movement in general, and of Sarah Palin in particular. Why? Because they had created, in New York Times columnist Paul Krugman's words, a "climate of hate."

Jared Lee Loughner, the man suspected of a shooting spree that killed a Federal Judge and critically wounded Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, had left a trail of online videos in which he railed against the government. WSJ's Neil Hickey reports.

American journalists know how to be exquisitely sensitive when they want to be. As the Washington Examiner's Byron York pointed out on Sunday, after Major Nidal Hasan shot up Fort Hood while shouting "Allahu Akhbar!" the press was full of cautions about not drawing premature conclusions about a connection to Islamist terrorism. "Where," asked Mr. York, "was that caution after the shootings in Arizona?"

Set aside as inconvenient, apparently. There was no waiting for the facts on Saturday. Likewise, last May New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and CBS anchor Katie Couric speculated, without any evidence, that the Times Square bomber might be a tea partier upset with the ObamaCare bill.

Associated Press

Rep. Gabrielle Giffords

So as the usual talking heads begin their "have you no decency?" routine aimed at talk radio and Republican politicians, perhaps we should turn the question around. Where is the decency in blood libel?

To paraphrase Justice Cardozo ("proof of negligence in the air, so to speak, will not do"), there is no such thing as responsibility in the air. Those who try to connect Sarah Palin and other political figures with whom they disagree to the shootings in Arizona use attacks on "rhetoric" and a "climate of hate" to obscure their own dishonesty in trying to imply responsibility where none exists. But the dishonesty remains.

To be clear, if you're using this event to criticize the "rhetoric" of Mrs. Palin or others with whom you disagree, then you're either: (a) asserting a connection between the "rhetoric" and the shooting, which based on evidence to date would be what we call a vicious lie; or (b) you're not, in which case you're just seizing on a tragedy to try to score unrelated political points, which is contemptible. Which is it?

I understand the desperation that Democrats must feel after taking a historic beating in the midterm elections and seeing the popularity of ObamaCare plummet while voters flee the party in droves. But those who purport to care about the health of our political community demonstrate precious little actual concern for America's political well-being when they seize on any pretext, however flimsy, to call their political opponents accomplices to murder.

Where is the decency in that?

Mr. Reynolds is a professor of law at the University of Tennessee. He hosts "InstaVision" on PJTV.

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