Political Violence Happens Because We Let It
What the ’60s and ’70s tell us about Luigi Mangione and the UHC shooting.
The murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson earlier this month appears to be what it looked like: a political attack. In this case, one motivated by hatred of the American insurance system. In a leaked manifesto, the alleged killer, Luigi Mangione, blames the insurer’s corruption and greed, and claims to be the first to face it with “brutal honesty.”
If true—and a grand jury in New York will soon decide—that makes the murder another in a string of ideologically motivated violent attacks over the past few years, including:
- Assassination attempts—two against Donald Trump as well as the shootings of Rep. Steve Scalise and (further back) Rep. Gabby Giffords;
- Political riots, from the BLM violence of summer 2020 to the riot in the Capitol on January 6, 2021, to the pro-Hamas riots of last fall;
- Intimidating protests against Supreme Court justices, or individual attacks like the assault on Paul Pelosi;
- A wave of bomb threats as well as the pipe bombs mailed to prominent Democrats in 2018, reflecting domestic terror hitting its highest level in decades.
None of this is new. The late 1960s and early 1970s were wracked by political violence.
Continue reading the entire piece here at The Free Press
______________________
Charles Fain Lehman is a fellow at the Manhattan Institute and a contributing editor of City Journal.
Photo by UPI/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images