Thoughtforfood said:
I do not disagree with that in the slightest. My only point is that discussion, and the discussion of this particular incident are two distinct conversations. I am glad that there is conversation regarding the political rhetoric in the US that stems from this incident, because it is a conversation that needs to be made. I hope it can be made without resorting to denouncing caustic rhetoric with caustic rhetoric because that will not solve the problem. I see people from the right and left searching for the moral high ground in this, when what I am doing is looking at my discourse. If I am caustic and hateful (which I certainly have been) regarding the caustic and hateful rhetoric of those whom I oppose, how will that ever solve anything? I guess, being spiritually minded, I always come back to Gandhi on such things. I actually believe that confrontational pacifism is the only sane option in existence. I cannot therefore throw the anger and hatred I feel at my opposition and expect anything will change.
I understand now more of the point you are trying to make. I posted two posts that I would not have had I read this first. Maybe I need to not jump so quickly in the future.
Shameful though it is, in cases like these, both sides of the political spectrum try to make as much, or as little, of the situation as circumstances and popular opinion permits.
One side attempts to discredit the other, while the other tries to refute the accusations with often straw-man arguments and distracting neither here nor their points purly on the basis of perceived future electoral gains. To a great extent it is in the nature of opposition politics to do so, for which one side must seek to exploit any opportunity to gain ground on the rival party or faction by whatever means (where exaggeration is usually resorted to), while the other enters per force into a defiant defensive mode, even at the expense of what would otherwise seems obvious due to the drama of the moment.
While both share in the manipulation game, the critical heads are, however, called upon to get beyond this political posturing, puerile and based entiely on selfish interests as it is, to arrive at something more objective in terms of the facts and what has actually taken place.
Critical heads, if they are intellectually sincere, from the left and the right, will see in this Arizona case a politcal figure that was targeted because she came from the left and probably because Jewish, which was perpetrated by a right-wing fascist extremist. Because his motives were certainly not coming form the left, the right, at least in part, will be thus be held responsible. Also because, consciously or not, from the moment any assassin points his weapon at a politician, a political motive becomes inescapable.
In this case people from the left have a right (and perhaps a duty) to denounce those elements of the right who behave most irresponsibly, given the media power they assume, in enhancing a social and political environment that in today's America hasn't exactly be qualified by equilibrium, restraint and measured responses. To the contrary, it is more reactionary and livid than ever. At the same time those among the right need to make it clear, in no uncertain terms, that they disassociate themselves from such fascist tendencies within their movement.
The problem, as I see it, is that neither has happened. It seems, as usual, that the left looks pitifully for more reasoned interpretations so as not to seem overly prejudiced, while the right has been ever more vociferous in their denouncements of even the slightest culpabilty on its part in what is an arrogance that usually befits them. In the latter case the right knows it can rely on enough popular support (and ignorance) to get away with such obstinancy, while the left is forced to take up the usual prudent stance, thereby enfeebling itself, so as not to seem too extreme! How grotesque!
I'd be all for toning down the voices, as you say, if the ones that were doing the most shouting would shut-up. And for once I'd like to see the right denounced and be held accountable for its ways, to the same degree that the right gets away with (as if it were in the natural order of things for them to do) and with the same firm tones, everytime it finds reason to take up odds with something coming from the left it finds so "dangerous" to America.
Perhaps shouting is not the answer, though certainly those whose voices are most raised in this instance have the least right to do so IMO.