I'm not sure if the people who bring attention to antifa or BLM and their hand in the violence are trying to make the point that we shouldn't pay attention to the guy who plowed his car into a crowd-- or, maybe not all the people.
I want to give more complete thought on this and I've been mulling it for a while, but I think there's a grand issue in orienting ourselves from tragedy to tragedy instead of looking at the greater timeline.
We already had two instances of political violence where parts of cities were trashed in the first quarter of the year alone. We've already had an instance of political violence where four politicians were shot at and wounded-- and given that people usually shoot to kill, as per the purpose of a gun, I can't imagine their still being alive as anything else than a fluke on the part of the shooter. And now we have this. To say nothing about antifa and militant BLM, in addition to the now openly militant portions of the alt-right, militant either in reaction to the militant antifa, or preemptively geared towards violence.
Our political violence is escalating all around, it seems-- and to be expected, honestly, given that from Richard Spencer being decked and the first chant of the mantra of "bash the fash", we've been normalizing political violence more and more. Heck, since the people cracking unsettlingly less joking jokes about assassinating Trump, we've been normalizing political violence.
That's… part of what's concerning.
What's also concerning is that this time, there are many who are wrapped up in exclusively condemning the neo-Nazis here just because someone died, as if the situation demands it, and as if political violence is just happening. Even mentioning that antifa and BLM got belligerent is enough to get accused of whataboutery. Heck, elsewhere, I've seen even mentioning this as a symptom of a bigger issue be called whataboutery.
That's not the point. At least, it's not my point. In pointing out that the militant left seemed to have escalated first, I'm not trying to divert attention from the fact that the militant right is now openly militarizing in similar fashion-- rather, I'm trying to point out that this is far from the first time something of this general nature has happened, and it's part of something more sinister. And I'll tell you what the issue probably is-- and you'll think I'm some sort of hippie for it, but I'll live with it:
A modicum of forbearance and empathy. Understanding that those who live by the sword, die by it as well. The maturity to not make effigies out of groups of people, to not try to cater to a feeling of self-righteousness to cloud yourself from realizing that you're actually a pretty terrible person in at least some regard-- as I'm sure many of these people do.
The white nationalists latch on to statistics they twist to make their point that they're superior to black people because they have a higher average IQ and talk about how a lower average IQ is the only thing that causes the poverty and struggle in Africa--as if Africa is a single country-- to mask their stunning averageness or below-averageness; the alt-left arbitrarily labels those who fall out of their social orthodoxy as racist, or sexist, or homophobic, or Islamophobic in order to fill the gaping void in their souls, obfuscate their lust for control probably motivated by a life wherein they feel they have none, and mask just how terrible they at least feel they are at being good people.
Of course, when people decide that the solution to the problem is gloating about how we should have punched the Nazis back into hiding-- as I've seen in the article's comment section for the rally, admittedly rarely so far--it tells me two things:
1. These people are beyond idiotic. People in persistent vegetative states would beat them in every single measure of intelligence that we have currently conceived. They're legitimately immature-- being slightly facetious, I doubt that they're old enough to go on the internet without their parents' permission. They care for nothing more than the "defeat" of the Voldemort that they've created out of a section of society that they have superficial fears of but not the deep fear that comes out of a anything resembling a deep understanding of said enemy, both of which would prevent them from eagerly treating them as a Saturday morning cartoon on steroids.
2. These people live from outrage to outrage. They don't care about the greater picture-- they might not even know that events like these are cumulative. They might not have even been mired in politics until that Saturday, and if they have, they'd be able to fool me. There's a chance some of these people don't even care about anybody that's involved in political violence, given how shortsighted they reveal themselves to be by advocating political violence all over again.
Unfortunately, I'm not quite optimistic that this will apply to less people as time goes on. In fact, I'm sure this is going to be used as a somewhat weighty "I told you so!" of the radical left to encourage more political violence going forward.