Justice Alito is afraid.
The author of last summer’s holding in Dobbs said this week that the leaking of the decision draft in May exposed his fellow justices (the right-wing ones, anyway) to risk of assassination.
One can partly attribute this rhetorical drama to conservatives’ self-importance. Conservatism is rooted in the belief one is intrinsically better than other people. Putting oneself above others leads to self-aggrandizing ideation. Having said that, we have to look at who is victimizing whom in the long-Trump pandemic. Aside from the incident of an antifa protestor killing a Patriot Prayer militant in Portland in 2020, there are few credible examples of lethal left-on-right violence in recent years.
Before Dobbs I saw Samuel Alito as I regarded other run of the mill conservatives in high places, something resembling a pebble in my shoe. His low public profile in the past led me into a grudging acceptance of his presence. Since the May leak, Alito’s outspoken assholery has become nearly intolerable. We have learned much of his character in past months. Alito strikes me as an angry, embittered man with antediluvian views who poses a threat to the personal liberties of tens of millions of Americans.
But
it isn’t Alito’s hyperbole that prompted me to write this. The attempted murder of Paul Pelosi in his
San Francisco home yesterday is the worst example of right-wing violence since
the January 6th insurrection.
The accused is, unsurprisingly, a Trump-troll whose activism was
previously limited to shitposting on social media. News reports indicate the assailant planned
to hold Pelosi hostage until his wife returned from Washington. Pelosi was able to dial 911 during the home
invasion and the police promptly responded, but not until after the attacker
fractured his skull with a hammer.
The attack on Speaker Pelosi’s spouse is the latest incident in the trend of escalating far-right aggression since 2016. As I write, a group of self-proclaimed militiamen (i.e., armed cosplayers in camouflage) are on trial in Michigan for plotting to kidnap and murder governor Gretchen Whitmer. The ambiguity of Donald Trump’s statements on such incidents from the “good people on both sides” assertion after Charlottesville to his instruction to the Proud Boys to “stand back and stand by” before the 2020 election constitute a tacit endorsement of illicit force directed at other Americans. Statements by other Republican leaders, such as Lindsey Graham’s prediction of “riots in the streets” if Georgia prosecutors dared to indict Trump for his attempted election fraud simply add fuel to the fire. Last summer’s YouGov / Economist poll reporting more than 40% of those polled believe a civil war is likely in the next decade is probably a reflection of the ratcheting bombast emanating from Republican politicians.
And yet, to hear them tell it, these same pols are the victims. Alito’s drama queen fears of assassination have manifested in little more than Brett Kavanaugh being forced to cut short a night out when a few protestors showed up outside the restaurant. To the last individual, Republicans at all levels whine about imaginary stolen elections while shamelessly advocating and instituting policies designed to exclude minority voters in future contests. Delusional imaginings of violence meted by antifa and other lefties ignore the very real threat from the right.
There’s a word for this: Projection. Push your faults and your misdeeds on your opponents. That’s what is happening here. Call it for what it is. Call out the offenders. May the truth win the day.
©
2022 The Unassuming Scholar
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