Looking Beyond Today's Disgraceful Riot in DC
by
The scene at the Capitol is disgraceful.
The scene at the Capitol should not be a surprise to anyone.
This type of lawlessness has become distasteful, but
tolerated, behavior. Just yesterday some were saying that boarding up
ahead of the announcement on whether charges would be filed for the
officers involved with Jacob Blake is “hurtful” and “incitement.” They, a
vast majority the left, were building excuses to riot based on their
whims. Until it became a threat to the left it was going to continue to
be permitted. Today’s disgraceful rioting at the Capitol is the fruit
of the past tolerance of violence and rioting.
We need to unequivocally state the past tolerance of
rioting does not excuse today’s disgraceful actions. Those involved in
breaking the law need to be held accountable. However, what’s most
important is how does everyone, both left and right, respond to what
happened today.
We need to make certain two issues remain in the fore
when responding to the rioting today. First, nothing excuses this
behavior. Nothing. At. All. We are a democratic republic, and peaceful
transition of power is paramount. No matter the grievance today’s riots
are indefensible. Second, the anger and resentment that lead to today
are real, and didn’t build up starting in November 2020. Whatever the
societal and political response to the disgrace that is today needs to
be one of peace and reconciliation.
Ferguson (insert all the subsequent cities) didn’t burn
because of the flashpoint that initiated the riot. The Capitol wasn’t
stormed because Trump lost reelection or any other singular event. Just
as with Ferguson, the feelings that lead to today have been building,
and that needs to be understood when the immediate crisis settles and
response is formulated.
We need to hold the actors today responsible, but we also need to set about to understand why
today happened. Trite statements like we are the party of law and
order, or this is Trump’s fault, or any simplistic dismissal of the
underlying cause is not productive; and will not prevent a repeat of the
violence that has marked the past few years.
Today is a disgrace, but it is also an opportunity. As a
nation we cannot continue the path we are on. Whether it’s occupation
zones in Seattle or rioting at the Capitol violence has replaced
dialogue as the means to resolve dispute. We, everyone of good
sensibility, need to reject violence in lieu of political discourse, and
unite in the proposition that through dialogue, and only through
dialogue, can the stark divide in society begin to close. The danger in
today isn’t in the disgrace that occurred at the Capitol today. The
rioting will be quashed, and rightly so. The danger is in how we
respond. If we don’t take intentional steps to recognize that deep
grievances exist on both sides of the political spectrum more violence
will follow. It’s just a matter of when and what event causes the
violence to erupt again.
For everyone’s sake we need to seek first to understand;
and acknowledge the underlying concerns that lead to today – not just
today but all incidents of violence that have occurred the past few
years. Understanding and recognizing the grievances exist and have
become intolerable is the key to beginning the process of peace and
reconciliation.
2 comments:
Interesting to see pundits decry violent demonstrations when it's a conservative mob. Gotta wonder where they were six months ago.
My FB post today:
Officer Brian D. Sicknick who died from injuries protecting the capitol was a Trump Supporter. I guess I am saddened by the fact that many of our FB friends that are retired or current police officers are passing on conspiracy theories in the wake of the Capital Riot. Officer Sicknick was maced and bludgeoned to death. This happened to a brother officer and is not a conspiracy theory. What happened is murder. So I ask as an American and a retired Police Officer for my FB friends to stop sharing unsubstantiated rumors that can inflame people to act out. This isn't what people do that took an Oath to Protect and Serve. Trey
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