Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
The
attempted assassination of President Trump was on the right side of
history. The inch that spared his life was on the wrong side of history.
Leftists
see history as a series of confrontations between progressive and
reactionary forces. The escalation of those confrontations from
political protests “dissent is patriotic” to violent riots “the language
of the unheard” to terrorism “the last desperate struggle of outraged
and exasperated human nature” is blamed on the failure of society to
become sufficiently socialist.
The right side of history arrives
when society, and all conservative and reactionary forces, is
overthrown. Assassinating a president, especially a reactionary one, is a
means to that end.
Over the last 9 years, liberals had pursued
every possible legal and illegal means from secret investigations to
lawfare to street violence to prosecution on invented grounds to stop
Trump.
Are we supposed to believe that the same political
interests that defended the violent BLM riots as “mostly peaceful” were
willing to shrink away from a targeted assassination of Trump?
Just call it a mostly peaceful assassination.
Nearly
every Democrat politician, media outlet and cultural force has
consistently made the case for the last 9 years that Trump is a unique
threat that must be stopped by any means.
If there is anything
that they have demonstrated over the years, it’s that they don’t believe
any value, principle or safeguard matters more than getting him. Or
getting to the right side of history. A movement vandalizing art
treasures, killing babies and destroying black neighborhoods for the
greater good could hardly quibble with one man’s death.
Every
legal and moral code has been made subservient to the right side of
history. The ends of saving the planet and transforming society always
justify the means. Violence is a means. Like racism or breaking into the
Capitol, it’s not inherently wrong, its morality rests on whether it
falls on the right and progressive side or the wrong and reactionary
side of history.
To regret the violence is to also to regret the
movement. Those liberals who came to regret the violence eventually
became conservatives because they came to question the ends.
Liberals
ask us to accept two incompatible notions, that Trump is Hitler and
they regret his attempted assassination. But if Trump indeed is Hitler,
then wouldn’t shooting him be justified? Either they don’t believe their
own analogy or they don’t regret the assassination attempt.
There’s
no doubt that the obsessive hatred for Trump is real, but the need is
as real as the hate. Every Republican presidential candidate, even the
most milquetoast of them like Mitt Romney, have been compared to Hitler
because the right side of history needs someone to hate.
Trump,
unlike Romney or George W. Bush, understood that and embraced the
persona. In contrast to many other Republicans, he didn’t expect to be
liked by those who wanted to hate him. And the right side of history is
all about finding someone to hate to justify the violence.
The
greatest lie that leftists tell themselves is that they are violent only
as a reaction. Someone, society, an economic system, human nature,
always started it and they’re the ones fighting back. The reality is
that the real purpose of every radical movement is violence. The promise
of utopia is unachievable, but the impossible dream and its
accompanying impossible standards justify the destruction of every
flawed institution and the flawed people who live by it.
In
France, leftists rioted before and after they won the election. Why riot
after you’ve won? Because violence is both the means to victory and the
ultimate purpose of victory. Out of power, leftists riot, in power they
kill. The right side of history is the power to kill absolutely
everyone.
Killing Trump was not an aberration, a turn away from
the right side of history, but the thing itself. In the aftermath of the
assassination attempt, the machinery of denial and projection hums
along, spinning off conspiracy theories, projections and
rationalizations. Ear truthers claim that Trump wasn’t really hit.
Prominent intellectuals and academics speculate that it was a set up.
Democrats and the media explain that it’s conservatives who are the
violent dangerous ones.
An act of violence is an opportunity for
self-examination. Mass murder, as Stalin was said to have pointed out,
operates on the scale of statistics which is impossible for people to
take in. Anne Frank is comprehensible where the Holocaust is not. A
single story or moment can crystalize violence while a systematic
campaign of destruction is too big to take in.
The Trump
assassination attempt did what previous larger scale outbursts of
leftist violence, like the congressional baseball game shooting, the
campaign against the justices and BLM race riots could not because the
man at the center of it had become the symbol of the unwoke. The seconds
of the assassination showed what the right side of history really looks
like up close.
The Left fears that moment because it understands
the power of symbolism. It cannot bend economies to its will, command
the ocean tide or change the human heart, but it understands how to tell
a story because telling stories is what it does. The right side of
history is a story that killed millions. The Trump assassination is the
story of the right side of history. And its ugliness.
The Trump
assassination, like the terrors of the French and Russian revolution,
and Mao and Pol Pot in China and Cambodia, show what happens when the
Left actually gets what it wants.
In Butler, PA, liberals briefly
tasted what they had wanted all along. Some were shocked while others
gloried in it. And that is not only the story of the Trump
assassination, but of the Left. It’s the story of two centuries of mass
murder, torture, fear, terror and the destruction of everything.
The right side of history doesn’t unite us, it doesn’t offer hope and its only outcome is death.
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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