Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
What Trump always knew and what so many in his party did not was
crystallized in fire and blood on a July evening forty miles outside
Pittsburgh.
After the shooting, FBI agents, reporters, and a
million social media voices descended physically and virtually on the
Butler Farm Show Grounds in search of answers. The shooter’s pictures
and phone have been pored over, CNN talking heads have analyzed the
impact on the election and scrutinized the performance of the former and
likely future president’s security detail. And while these things
matter, they are not the thing that truly matters.
When Trump
rode down the escalator on another summer day nine years ago, he was
riding into history and into danger. He did not see the bullet coming,
but he did see the crisis. The journey that took him from Trump Tower on
Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue to a Pennsylvania field where livestock
usually march around in pens was aimed at confronting the threat to the
country.
What Trump understood, and so many did not, was that the crisis is the way forward.
Some
are stricken by a crisis while others are energized by it, and that has
been true of the initial reaction among many Republicans and
conservatives to the Trump assassination attempt, but what everyone is
coming to understand is that no problem can be solved without
confronting the crisis. The GOP has far too long evaded the crises,
seeking compromises and easy answers, and the Trump decade during which
it began confronting them has often been messy and ugly.
Some may
think that the messiness and ugliness came to a head near Butler, PA,
but it did not. If history tells us anything, it’s that we have not seen
the worst of what human nature offers. But, even in the face of a
former fire chief giving his life for his family and Trump’s raised
fist, we have also not seen the best. If there may be worse times ahead,
there are better ones too.
And we cannot arrive at the reaches of that ‘promised land’ without dealing with the worse ones.
That
is the difficult lesson Trump has been teaching Republicans by example.
Sometimes the example has been bloody. And at the Butler grounds, there
was actual blood. But while it may have been the first time there was
presidential blood on the floor, it’s not the first time there was
peril. When the BLM race riots came to D.C.,Trump and his family had to
be taken to a bunker underneath the White House because there were fears
the mob would invade the grounds.
And Corey Comperatore was far from the first to die in the radical rage over Trump. It would be nice if he were to be the last.
9
years ago, a Manhattan real estate tycoon poked a bear which was unused
to being poked. The bear, tending to furious rages over not only
pointed criticism, but the simple existence of things that offended it,
like the middle class, the nuclear family and organized religion, went
mad. And despite the efforts by the Democrat political establishment and
the media which pretend to control the bear (when it’s actually the
bear that controls them), it is madder than ever. That is why everyone,
Republicans and Democrats, used to refrain from annoying it.
Trump
did the opposite. From the beginning of his political life to his
raised fist, he took the fight to the radicals. He didn’t worry about
offending them or enraging them, and he did it not only because it was
fun, but because he knew that solutions only come through
confrontations.
His response to the crisis is also a lesson for everyone in every walk of life.
A
crisis is not a sign that something is going wrong, but that it’s going
right. It’s only human to get caught up in the moment of the crisis, to
linger in the bloody aftermath or to wonder what might have happened if
the target hadn’t moved at just the right time, but Trump has always
understood what the Left has, that a crisis is really an opportunity to
go to the next level.
Rather than slowing down, Trump sped up,
revising his speech, picking a VP and kicking his campaign into gear.
The raised fist after the shooting was more than a symbol of defiance,
but the act of a man who reacts best and lives the most in the ultimate
moment of crisis.
And that is as it should be.
American
history has been shaped by our reactions to crises. Despite our best
efforts, we were not able to avoid the American Revolution or the Civil
War, but we came to see them as crises that were for the best and that
made us who we are. The Trump years are doing the same thing.
The problems are too big and the challenges too grave for us to do anything else.
There
are rifles aimed and bullets flying at our country every single day.
Governments and politicians have failed to deal with these threats
because they have worked to evade them. In a historic moment on a field
where cows once traipsed, Trump showed us and all of history how not
only to fearlessly meet a crisis, but how to rise from it and be
strengthened by it.
Trump’s raised fist symbolizes that what you
do when the bullets are flying is crucial, but what you do afterward
changes it all. The crisis is not the thing to be afraid of, it’s the
way forward.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. > Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.
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