By Catholic League president Bill Donohue
In the wake of the storming of the Capitol, many are blaming President Trump for the violence. Of course, he never instructed anyone to engage in violence. Nevertheless, his critics argue that he stoked people's passions, which he did, and can therefore be held accountable.
If this is the standard—inflammatory rhetoric—then Trump's critics are at best ethically compromised. Consider the following remarks, made by the kind of people who are now hammering the president.
- "I need you to get
out and talk to your friends and talk to your neighbors. I want you to
talk to them whether they are independent or whether they are Republican.
I want you to argue with them and get in their face." Presidential
candidate Barack Obama, 2008
- "When they go low,
we kick 'em. That's what this new Democratic Party is about." Former
Attorney General Eric Holder, 2018
- "Let's make sure we
show up wherever we have to show up. And if you see anybody from that
[Trump] Cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline
station, you get out and create a crowd. And you push back on them. And
you tell them they're not welcome anymore, anywhere." Rep.
Maxine Waters, 2018
- "Please, get up in
the face of some congresspeople." Sen. Cory Booker, 2020
- "People will do what
they do." House Speaker Nancy Pelosi commenting on violent
protesters, 2020
- "You know, there
needs to be unrest in the streets for as long as there is unrest in our
lives, and unfortunately there is plenty to go around." Rep.
Ayanna Pressley, 2020
- "They're [left-wing
protesters] not gonna stop before Election Day in November and they're not
gonna stop after Election Day. And that should be—everyone should take
note of that on both levels, that this isn't, they're not gonna let up and
they should not. And we should not." Sen. Kamala Harris, 2020
- "And please, show me
where it says protesters are supposed to be polite and
peaceful." CNN host Chris Cuomo, 2020
- "When you see a
nation, an entire nation, simultaneously grappling with an extraordinary
crisis seeded in 400 years of American racism, I'm sorry, that is not the
same question as the understandably aggrieved store owner or the devout
religious person who wants to go back to services." New York
City Mayor Bill de Blasio justifying illegal street protests that violated
social distancing norms while he restricted church services, 2020
- "I can't imagine
what it would look like if we said to people, 'Actually, you have to stay
in. You have to ignore systemic racism—I'm sorry, just ignore it. Stay
in.'" New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy justifying illegal street
protests that violated social distancing norms while restricting church
services, 2020
- "As public health
advocates, we do not condemn these gatherings as risky for COVID-19
transmission. We support them as vital to the national public health and
to the threatened health specifically of Black people in the United
States." 1200 health and medical colleagues justifying
illegal street protests that violated social distancing norms, 2020
- "Destroying
property, which can be replaced, is not violence." Nikole
Hannah-Jones, New York Times journalist, 2020
- "We don't have to
finger-wag at protesters about property. That can be rebuilt." David
Remnick, New Yorker journalist
- "The notion that
nonviolence is tactically more effective...has not only been proven wrong
over the past week by sheer numbers; it cannot be historically
supported." R.H. Lossin, Ph.D., The Nation magazine, 2020
- "A siege [of the
White House] only works if it is sustained. We witnessed this—the
multiplying power of a strategic occupation—nine years ago. You dig in,
hold your ground, and the tension accumulates, amplifies, goes
global." Adbusters, the group that started Occupy Wall
Street, 2020
Many more examples could be given. In fairness, these comments, while incendiary, are not direct calls for violence. But it is also true that nothing Trump said was a direct call for violence either.
Left-wing commentators and activists (pretty much the same these days) have no moral authority to lecture the rest of us about violence committed by right-wing protesters. They nurtured a climate of violence over the past year by giving Antifa and Black Lives Matter their blessings.
If they were principled, they would do as the Catholic League does and condemn violent protesters regardless of their cause. But they are not.
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