Since a gunman murdered right-wing activist Charlie Kirk at an outdoor event at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, both social media circles and the political sphere have been alighted with accusations that “the Left” was responsible for the shooting.
Prominent right-wing social media
accounts called the Democratic Party “a domestic terror organization” and
declared “WAR.” Billionaire Elon Musk posted: “The Left is the party of murder.”
From the Oval Office, President Donald J. Trump blamed
the shooting on “the radical left” and vowed to “find each and every one of
those who contributed to this atrocity, and to other political violence,
including the organizations that fund it and support it, as well as those who
go after our judges, law enforcement officials, and everyone else who brings
order to our country.”
Without any information about the shooter, the media got
in on the game, with the Wall Street Journal reporting yesterday that
“[a]mmunition engraved with transgender and antifascist ideology was found
inside the rifle authorities believe was used in Kirk’s shooting.” Bomb threats
targeted Democratic politicians—primarily Black politicians—and historically
Black colleges and universities (HBCUs).
Condemnation of the shooting was widespread. Perhaps eager to distance themselves from accusations that anyone who does not support MAGA endorses political violence, commenters portrayed Kirk as someone embracing the reasoned debate central to democracy, although he became famous by establishing a database designed to dox professors who expressed opinions he disliked so they would be silenced (I am included on this list).
Meanwhile, it was not clear the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) was up to the task of finding the killer. FBI director Kash
Patel and deputy director Dan Bongino were both MAGA influencers without law
enforcement experience when Trump put them in charge of the agency. Once there,
they focused on purging the agency of those they considered insufficiently
loyal to Trump or “DEI hires.” In early August, they forced out the leader of
the Salt Lake City, Utah, field office, Mehtab Syed, a decorated female Pakistani
American counterterrorism agent.
Meanwhile, David J. Bier of the Cato Institute reported
that one in five FBI agents have been diverted from their jobs to conduct
immigration raids with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and just hours
before the shooting, three former top officials at the FBI filed a lawsuit
against Patel, the FBI, Attorney General Pam Bondi, the Department of Justice,
and the president accusing them of unlawfully politicizing the FBI, purging it
of anyone who had ever worked on a criminal investigation of Trump. The lawsuit
suggests Bongino had an “intense focus on [using] his social media profiles to
change his followers’ perceptions of the FBI.”
As Quinta Jurecic reported today in The
Atlantic, hours after the shooting, Patel’s personal social media account
posted a picture of himself and Kirk; minutes later, Patel’s official FBI
account posted that the shooter was already in custody and then, an hour and a
half later, said the suspect had been released. Both Patel and Bongino appeared
to be focused more on posting than on doing the work to find the shooter.
This morning, Trump announced on the Fox News Channel’s Fox & Friends that he had just heard “they have the person that they wanted.” That person turned out to be 22-year-old Utah native Tyler Robinson, who turned himself in to authorities after his father urged him to.
Robinson’s parents are registered Republicans; he was not
affiliated with a political party and was an inactive voter. Over the past
years, Robinson’s mother posted a number of pictures of him and his brothers
posing with guns.
Robinson had recently had a conversation with a family
member about why they didn’t like Kirk’s viewpoints. Robinson appears to have
admired the “Groypers,” led by Nick Fuentes, who complain that more mainstream
organizations like Kirk’s Turning Point USA are not “pro-white” enough and have
publicly harassed Kirk in the past.
Allison Gill of The Breakdown explained
that the rumors the shooter had engraved anti-fascist rhetoric on some of the
bullet casings found at the scene turned out to be a misunderstanding of terms
from the video game Helldivers2. The claim that he had used “transgender
ideology” was apparently a misreading of the headstamp “TRN” that marks
ammunition as the product of Turkish manufacturer Turan.
Almost as soon as Robinson was identified, the tone of
MAGA leader’s conversation about the shooting changed. Representative Nancy
Mace (R-SC), who had used a slur to refer to the shooter as pro-transgender,
posted on social media: “We know Charlie Kirk would want us to pray for such an
evil, and lost individual like Tyler Robinson to find Jesus Christ. We will try
to do the same.”
For his part, Trump seemed to have lost interest in Kirk
even earlier. Yesterday evening, a reporter offered the president his
condolences on the loss of his friend Kirk and asked Trump how he was holding
up.
The president answered, in full: “I think very good. And
by the way, right there, you see all the trucks, they just started construction
of the new ballroom for the White House, which is something they've been trying
to get, as you know, for about 150 years, and it's going to be a beauty. It’ll
be an absolutely magnificent structure. And I just see all the trucks. We just
started so it'll get done very nicely and it'll be one of the best anywhere in
the world, actually. Thank you very much.”
The day of Kirk’s murder, Russia sent 19 drones into
Poland—some armed and some unarmed—testing the strength of the neighboring
country. With the help of allies, Poland shot down four of them. Poland belongs
to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), with whom the U.S. shares a
mutual defense agreement meaning that if it is attacked, we will come to its
aid. After the attack, Poland called an emergency meeting of the North Atlantic
Council, the primary political decision-making body within NATO. U.S.
Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker apparently did not attend.
Although Kaja Kallas, the European Union’s high
representative for foreign affairs and security policy, called the violation
“intentional, not accidental,” Trump told reporters that Russia’s sending of
drones into Poland “could’ve been a mistake.” Josh Kovensky of Talking
Points Memo reported on Tuesday that on August 27, the Trump
administration returned a plane full of Russian dissidents seeking asylum in
the U.S. to Moscow, where at least some of them went directly from the plane
into custody.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and Supreme Allied Commander Europe General Alexus G. Grynkewich announced that NATO is launching “Eastern Sentry,” an operation to bolster NATO’s defense against Russian incursions along NATO’s eastern flank.
In what appeared to be an
attempt to calm NATO allies’ concerns about Trump’s "mistake"
comment, acting U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Dorothy Shea told the United
Nations Security Council today the U.S. will “defend every inch of
NATO territory.” “The United States stands by our NATO allies in the face of
these alarming airspace violations,” she said.
If the U.S. is weakening ties to traditional defensive
alliances, it is attempting to flex its muscles by going after alleged drug
dealers with a newly dubbed “Department of War.” On September 2, Trump
announced the U.S. had struck a boat he claimed was carrying drugs to the U.S.,
killing 11 civilians he claimed were “Tren de Aragua Narco terrorists.” The
administration posted a video of the operation online.
Legal specialists noted that the U.S.
made the strike without legal authority. Trump simply claimed the power to kill
men he claimed were a danger to the U.S., advancing the argument that drug
smuggling is the same thing as an imminent military attack on the U.S. and thus
the laws of war are in force.
That argument got even weaker when Charlie
Savage and Helene Cooper of the New York Times reported that
the men on the boat appeared to have been spooked by the military hardware over
them and turned back to shore. “If someone is retreating, where’s the ‘imminent
threat’ then?” Rear Admiral Donald J. Guter, a retired top judge advocate general
for the Navy from 2000 to 2002, said to the reporters.
Yesterday, Trump announced he was sending the National Guard
not into Chicago, Illinois, where Mayor Brandon Johnson and Governor J.B.
Pritzker have mounted strong opposition, but to Memphis, Tennessee. The Memphis
Police Department noted: “Overall crime is at a 25-year low, with robbery,
burglary, and larceny also reaching 25-year lows. Murder is at a six-year low,
aggravated assault at a five-year low, and sexual assault at a twenty-year
low" in the city.
Although Trump said he had the support of the mayor and
the governor, Shelby County mayor Lee Harris asked Republican governor Bill Lee
to “please reconsider, if this is on the table.” He said local government would
welcome more state troopers to help fight crime, but “to have individuals with
military fatigues, semi-automatic weapons and armored vehicles patrolling our
streets is way too far, anti-democratic and anti-American.”
Lee released a statement saying he was set to speak with
Trump about a “strategic mission” to use state law enforcement more effectively
with an already established FBI mission in Memphis.
Meanwhile, yesterday four out of five justices
on a panel of the Brazilian Supreme Court found former president Jair
Bolsonaro, a close ally of Donald Trump, guilty of plotting a coup, attempting
to overturn the country’s 2022 election, and committing violent acts against state
institutions. They sentenced him to 27 years and three months in prison.
—Heather Cox Richardson
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