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Noah Rothman on "How the Left Has Come to Excuse Away and Embrace Political Violence"
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Noah Rothman on "How the Left Has Come to Excuse Away and Embrace Political Violence"

The Commentary writer and author on the sharpening taste for vigilante justice and the abomination of making heroes of killers. "People just don't know what forces they're inviting."

Reading Noah Rothman’s new piece in Commentary, “A Clockwork Blue: How the Left Has Come to Excuse Away and Embrace Political Violence,” I felt as though he had written it just for me; this, because he called to account institutions and individuals who proclaim violence from the left justified, a trend I found maddening when I covered 150+ nights of violent street protests in Portland in 2020.

And about that: How long did Rothman think that violence would have been explained away had it been committed by the right?

"Hours," he said.

In a discussion that calls out violence on all sides, Rothman addresses the roots of political barbarism, how the power of crowds can lead well-adjusted people to commit orgies of violence, the juvenile cop-out of making avatars of people in order to justify brutality against them, and some especial opprobrium for the intellectual and spiritual poverty that makes a hero of Luigi Mangione, who, weeks after murdering UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson, was given a round of applause by an SNL audience.

“The point of this piece is a call for political consistency,” said Rothman. “Only when we have consistency will we see a decline in political violence.”

Noah Rothman is a senior writer for National Review. He is the author of Unjust: Social Justice and the Unmaking of America (Regnery, 2019) and The Rise of the New Puritans: Fighting Back Against Progressives’ War on Fun (HarperCollins, 2022). His work has been published in USA Today, the Washington Examiner, the New York Post, the New York Times, the Atlantic, the Washington Post, and elsewhere. Follow on Twitter/X at NoahCRothman

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