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OPINION

Kathleen Parker: Will another Timothy McVeigh emerge?

Saturday, April 17, 2010
(Updated 3:01 am)

WASHINGTON -- The upcoming 15th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing, which killed 168 people in the nation's worst act of terrorism before 9/11, has prompted renewed concerns about growing anti-government sentiment.

Is the political environment becoming so toxic that we could see another Timothy McVeigh emerge?

No one knows the answer, but fears that anger could escalate into action beyond the ballot box are not misplaced. Ninety-nine percent of angry Americans might be perfectly satisfied to rail at their television sets -- or to show up at a tea party rally -- but it takes only one.

The biggest concern for security folks in Washington is the lone operator, the John Hinckley who tries to take out a president for his fantasy girlfriend. Or some variation thereof.

This is why "Don't retreat, reload," Sarah Palin's recent imperative to her tea party audience, felt so off. Obviously, she wasn't suggesting that people arm themselves, as she has explained several times since. Hunting and military vocabulary is hardly new to politics. We "target" audiences or "set our sights" on policies and politicians all the time. In the world of healthy competition, trophies are victories, not dead people.

But words matter, as we never tire of saying. And these are especially sensitive times, given our first African American president and unavoidable fears about the worst-case scenario. If Jodie Foster could bestir the imagination of Hinckley, a Sarah Palin in the Internet age could move regiments.

Such fears are not unfounded. I hear daily from dissatisfied Americans who feel their duty isn't only to protest, but to fight if necessary. Here is just one recent example, in response to a column I had written about America's true centrist nature:

"Sorry, honey, but we don't need the squishy middle right now. We need the hyper patriots, the combat vets ready to defend the constitution with arms if necessary."

The distance between such thinking and recent examples of overt hostility seems too little. In this space, the unthinkable becomes plausible.

After the health care bill's passage, Democratic congressmen were threatened. The brother of one had his home's gas line cut. At a tea party rally in Washington, some claim there were racial slurs aimed at, of all people, Georgia Rep. John Lewis, a civil rights hero.

All of the above have put the nation ill at ease. Add to the mixture of organic anger and grass-roots momentum the heckling language of Beck, Limbaugh and Co., and one fears that volatility could become explosive. What's next, militias?

Well, yes, now that you mention it. In Oklahoma, un-ironic legislators are sympathetic to a proposal to form local voluntary militias to thwart unwanted federal initiatives and to preserve state sovereignty.

"Is it scary? It sure is," tea party leader Al Gerhart told The Associated Press. "But when do the states stop rolling over for the federal government?"

Note to Mr. Gerhart: When their citizens go to the polls.

In more tempered remarks, another Oklahoma tea party leader, J.W.Berry -- whose newsletter boasts the motto "Buy more guns, more bullets" -- explained that the militia idea isn't "a far-right crazy plan or anything like that. This would be done with the full cooperation of the state legislature."

Reassured?

Whether we can now boast more wing nuts than in other times is debatable, though hate and vigilante groups, now numbering about 1,000, increased by 54 percent between 2000 and 2008, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Anti-immigrant organizations increased last year by almost 80 percent.

What is clear is that technology and social media have empowered the least sane among us and amplified their voices. Thus, a random racist at a tea party rally suddenly becomes the face of a group of people who are, on the whole, decent, law-abiding citizens with legitimate concerns about government expansion and the inherent erosion of individual freedom.

The challenge for all, but especially the media, is to find a balance between vigilance and restraint. How do we expose the unhinged without emboldening them with attention? Inevitably, the lone operator hears his own name summoned from the crowd.

The only palatable answer is what conservatives say they love best -- self-control and personal responsibility. When someone spews obscenities, shout them down. When politicians and pundits use inflammatory language, condemn them.

When you choose to remain silent, consider yourself complicit in whatever transpires.

 

E-mail: kathleenparker @washpost.com

Comments

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michael1218

April 17, 2010 - 9:04 am EDT

We should all abhor violence. A couple of points about this article are in order. Regarding racial epithets on March 20 at the rally in DC.; Heath Shuler, Democratic Congressman from the 11th District in NC was with Rep. Lewis and other members of the black caucus as they walked to and fro among the protesters and said last week that he heard no racial slurs at all. Jesse Jackson Jr. scoured the crowd during the walk with his video cam, as did other caucus members and scores of others yet there is no evidence that this happened. False accusations contribute to the problem, especially when made by a Pulitzer winner.
When rattling off incidents, why not include the 65 year old tea partier who recently had his finger bitten off at a rally by an Obama supporter, or the black man at another rally that was beaten to the ground on film by an SEIU thug. Or most recently, Governor Jindall's fund raising manager who just last week had her leg broken in 4 places
and her date's nose and jaw broken by leftist thugs in New Orleans.
Oklahoma City was a tragedy, McVeigh was an animal. But remember, we are also approaching the 16th anniversary of the Waco Texas affair, when President Clinton, AG Janet Reno, and the FBI, instead of arresting David Koresh at the community grocery store that he frequented on weekends, burned 100 men, women and children to death in their home. This horror in Waco was McVeighs stated motivation for his despicable action.

dcolin

April 17, 2010 - 4:33 pm EDT

I bet you are a militia guy.

sandsham

April 17, 2010 - 9:39 am EDT

"They bring a knife, we bring a gun". That's a direct quote, not from us hateful, racist tea partiers but from Obama himself....no mention of that....very interesting.

Sawdust

April 17, 2010 - 11:35 am EDT

The moonstream media is all aflutter over the possible violence that just might, someday, happen somewhere because of something a right-winger might say someday. They totally ignore remarks like that made by Obama, and I haven't seen any coverage of the incident in New Orleans by the moonstreamers. They beat the hell out of that couple, complete with compound fractures, just because they were wearing Palin buttons. But those of us on the right are the ones to be feared? I guess that makes sense, if you're stupid enough to vote for Obama.

dcolin

April 17, 2010 - 12:04 pm EDT

Go back to school.
It is never to late.

Stop embarrassing thre family.

Sawdust

April 17, 2010 - 2:16 pm EDT

I've heard enough of your crap, Rocket Man. Go pound sand. At least I can scrape up a thousand dollars. Apparently you can't, or else you are a liar. Either way, I don't need advice of any kind from you. I managed to make it this far without your counsel, I can probably drag across the finish line without it.

dcolin

April 17, 2010 - 4:18 pm EDT

"I've heard enough of your crap, Rocket Man. Go pound sand. At least I can scrape up a thousand dollars. "

I don't believe you have a $1000.00.
Prove it.
Net Worth?
Going to sell a Cadillac?

Rocket man?
Go pound sand?

You are losing it.

A thousand dollars.

The Capitalist brags.

Sawdust

April 17, 2010 - 5:22 pm EDT

(crickets chirping)

dcolin

April 17, 2010 - 5:50 pm EDT

Aren't you going to shoot them?

michael1218

April 17, 2010 - 9:44 am EDT

...Oh and Parker, lets not forget the arrest of the man that threatened Congressman Cantor's life. Jeez Parker, what is it with you? Do you get all of your news from the NYT and Couric. I remember during the campaign when Bob Sheiffer called Bill Ayers a ' Vietnam Protester.' What's the big deal?, he asked. Well for starters, the guy made bombs for Christ's sake. He was a terrorist. A good terrorist, I guess.

Sawdust

April 17, 2010 - 2:22 pm EDT

To the left, the only good terrorist is a live, lawyered-up terrorist. One of the basic differences between them and me. But when you look at the big picture, Ayers isn't that much worse than the rest of the people B-plus hung with his whole life. Communists, Marxists, terrorists, crooks, and America-haters, every last one of them. No wonder B-plus has such ambivalent feelings for this country. No wonder he wants to "totally transform" it.

dcolin

April 17, 2010 - 4:24 pm EDT

"Communists, Marxists, terrorists, crooks, and America-haters"

Well Sowell was one of those you cut him some slack.
You are hard to understand.

You're' a good America?
You question a duly elected presidents patriotism.
The Commander in Chief and we are at war.

Surely you see the shame.
Comfort to the enemy.

Are you joining the militia with your 44.

dcolin

April 17, 2010 - 5:53 pm EDT

To the left, the only good terrorist is a live, lawyered-up terrorist.

You are a very confused person.

You said in the army they let you practice law?

Lawyer up.

Really clever.

Lawyer up.

Aquaadverse

April 17, 2010 - 7:59 pm EDT

Tens of thousands of people in hundreds of diverse geographic and economic locations spanning months. Not a single report of any violence. None. Nada. Zip. If the tea party people were this seething mass of bitter angry racist people, how do you explain it? The looney left has spent so much time and effort convincing themselves that Health Care and Health Insurance are the same thing and interchangeable, that some universal and base law of existence has magically made it utterly impossible for Congress to pass legislation worsening the situation.

Quite ironic that no one seems to remember Obama was fine with calling the early protesters paid shills of special interests who were willing to have others suffer and die to keep their own pockets lined. How it was all about bringing him down. Obama's utter lack of experience at running anything but his mouth and never raising the game above a debaters "me good, you evil" campaign turned what should have been a little bump in the process into possibly derailing his entire agenda. How detached from reality do you need to be to cut a back room deal with Unions a few days before Teddy's seat was decided?

The fact is the Democrats decided to use the early tea parties, which were primarily some concerned citizens upset at huge bills being passed with the content unknown and no debate, for political gain.

Obama shows his face at a Party and agrees less speed and more transparency isn't unreasonable. Congress doesn't have August amnesia and immediately go back to where it left off in July.....

The utter ineptitude it took to ruin this all-the-planets-aligned-once-in-a-generation opportunity for real and fundamental reform is amazing. That we've turned into such a federal cheese swilling nation of citizens with a generation that has never seen inflation is costing us.

Pelosi and Reid jumped right in as well. Astroturf. The tears rolling down that tight as a drum face as she recalled the violent protests of the '60's.

yankeefan

April 17, 2010 - 11:08 pm EDT

I must say, the rabid conservative folks who typically post on the paper's site seem to have lost their expected and minutely small grasp of reality and lost any perspective of what is actually happening in this country and world. Kathleen Parker, this year' Pulitzer Prize recipient and self-identified "conservative" columnist seems to have touched a nerve.

Could it be that she, along with the majority (let me repeat this for those who were not paying attention on Election Day 2008 - the majority of American Citizen VOTERS) gets it?

To disagree with policy is acceptable.
To engage in informed debate of policy and/or philosophy is acceptable and desirable.
To criticize policy, philosophy, and/or decisions is acceptable.
To threaten (or worse, use) force as means of removing from power those with whom you disagree is the act of a cowardly terrorist, not an informed, mature citizen.
Timothy McVeigh was a terrorist.
Those who murder physicians who LEGALLY provide abortion services are terrorists/murderers.
Those who advocate taking up arms in response to the actions of our legitimately elected officials, at any level, are terrorists.

Facts are not negotiable. Opinions should be, if they are factually based. Clearly, those commenting here have little evidence of the facts and an overwhelming abundance of ill-informed opinion.

No wonder I fear for the future...

Get A Clue

April 18, 2010 - 12:36 pm EDT

Kathleen, if it truly bothers you, then simply stop carrying water for your right-wing masters.

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