Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The Left’s History of Violence

The American Republican Party, and others on the political Right, have been claiming that the Democratic Party, and others on the Left, is the party of violence. I disagree and will explain why, but first thought I should look at what they have to say.

My wife found this short video on YouTube by Brian Holdsworth titled “The Left’s History of Violence”.  Let’s see what Brian has to say.

He starts by complaining that Right-wing figures like Ben Shapiro and Jordan Peterson are labeled “controversial” while Left-wing figures like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) are “daring” and “uncompromising.” First, who is calling them that – Left-leaning people I presume? So how do Right-leaning people describe them? They probably think that Ben and Jordan are honest, smart, good debaters, and stand up for what they believe, while AOC is a radical left lunatic. I’d say both sides are good at dissing the other side and venerating their own.

Next Holdsworth argues that the Right has the more traditional and common views of most people in the community. I agree that the fringe ideas that the Right keeps harping on to heat up the culture wars are not as universally supported, such as transgender people using washrooms and playing competitive sports in their chosen gender group. But the basic platform of the Left is widely supported by the majority of Americans. Things like: free speech; free and fair elections; no hungry children; the right to a fair trial if charged with a crime; the rule of law applying to everyone, rich and poor alike; freedom of religion; fair wages; affordable housing and food; free good quality public education and affordable college; clean air, water and uncontaminated food; etc. Historically, views of the Left once considered radical are now supported by the majority – abolishment of slavery; women voting and owning property; Blacks and other visible minorities free from discrimination in college and the workplace; unions to support workplace safety and fair pay; regulation of manufactured items, including automobiles, for safety and efficacy; regulation of banks and other businesses to prevent them ripping off customers; and more. Republicans have been opposed to all of these, and in many cases, still are. To me that makes them the radical out-of-touch party.

Holdsworth then argues that if the positions of right-wing speakers like Charlie Kirk are wrong, why does he win most of his debates? On a podcast of The Left Hook Katie Phang and Waj Ali covered that very question. Katie pointed out that Kirk mostly debates unprepared college kids with his highly polished arguments. To her knowledge Charlie Kirk never once went away from a debate admitting he was wrong.

Holdsworth said the defining feature of the Left is that it seeks change; the defining feature of the Right is it seeks stability. Progressives want to make the world a better place. Conservatives want peace and stability. That’s accurate as far as it goes but doesn’t explain why people choose one or the other. Those with wealth and power want to keep it so they are on the side of stability; those without either want change so they can share in the good life (or just be able to feed their children).

Next Holdsworth states that the Left is too impatient in wanting improvements. Changes to society takes time and diligence, he argues, like exercising to get fit, it can’t happen overnight. Historically social improvement requires patience and intermediate steps, and also can’t be achieved by force.  The Left wants immediate reform, and if that doesn’t work, uses protests and resistance, and if that doesn’t work, resorts to violence.

Holdsworth also stated that the common people are always conservative, preferring peace and stability to progress. Really? I’m not so sure.

As examples of this impatience and use of violence, Holdsworth goes back in history to the French Revolution and the Russian Revolution. Both were admittedly led by what would be considered the Left and both were violent. They fit his narrative of the impatient Left resorting to violence to achieve their goals. Perhaps in these examples most of the common people did not support the radical leaders, I don’t know.

I thought it odd though, that as an American, he didn’t mention the American Revolution or the American Civil War. In the first example the Right would be represented by the British who wanted to maintain their power over the American continent, and the rebellious Americans (the “Continental Army” in their history books) represented the Left. I wonder if Holdsworth prefers Canada’s long slow road to independence to the violent bloody road the Americans took. Perhaps he does, but it would be considered treasonous for him to say so. And does he believe that the common people opposed the Revolutionary War? Many did, and fled to Canada – their loss, our gain.

The Civil War is another example. The Right would be represented by the wealthy southern plantation owners who started the war to preserve their privileged way of life which depended on slavery. Judging by the display of confederate flags at Trump rallies, many on the Right regret the outcome of that war. The Progressives who wanted to preserve the Union and abolish slavery across the land tried political means first. And when that didn’t work they were forced to respond with violence when the South declared war.

This brings up my next point, that it usually is the Right who initiate violence to preserve their power, even when the Left does not use violence. During the 1960s’ civil rights battles those advocating voting and other rights for Blacks for the most part used non-violent means like peaceful protest marches. They were met by violence from the Right who had the marchers beaten and sometimes killed. Holdsworth argues that when the Left resort to violence, the Right is forced to respond, but in many, if not most, cases it is the Right that resort to violence first.

Change that benefits an oppressed group need not require violence to achieve but it does require pressure. Martin Luther King Jr. put it this way:

We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.

Finally I want to deal with Holdsworth’s call for patience in making societal improvements. It depends entirely on who has the power and wealth. The Right who has the power and wealth doesn’t want change and tries to persuade the Left to wait. The Left with hungry children can’t afford to wait. How many more generations of slavery would there have been if the South had been allowed to secede? Martin Luther King Jr. was frustrated with people who kept telling him to just be patient and wait for change. In response he wrote a book, published in 1964, that says it all: When Patience Becomes Complacency: Why We Can’t Wait.

I will finish with a quote from MLK's Letter From A Birmingham Jail, 1963.

First, I must confess that over the last few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in the stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Council-er or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate who is more devoted to “order” than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice...


Thursday, September 18, 2025

Jimmy Kimmel

I had started to write about free speech and hate speech in America when this story broke last night.

Just like Stephen Colbert before him, Jimmy was fired for poking fun at President Trump and the “Maga gang” for their reaction to the Charlie Kirk killing. This is what he said (you can watch it here) on his show Monday night:

“We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them, and doing everything they can to score political points from it. In between the finger-pointing, there was grieving. On Friday, the White House flew the flags at half-staff which got some criticism but on a human level you can see how hard the president is taking this.”

Kimmel called it murder and condemned the killing and all political violence, so he was in no way condoning the killing of Charlie Kirk. What he did do was to expose how the right was using the killing to score political points. He also showed, using a video clip of a Trump interview, how little grieving the President appeared to be experiencing, despite the lowering of the flags to half-staff. When asked how he was holding up personally on the loss of his good friend Charlie Kirk, Trump replied “I think very good,” and without taking a breath continued “and by the way right there you see all the trucks. They just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House…” Kimmel observed “This is not how an adult grieves the murder of someone he calls a friend. This is how a four-year old mourns a goldfish”.  

On Wednesday the Trump-appointed chair of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Brendan Carr, went on the podcast of right-wing influencer Benny Johnson and threatened to pull the broadcast license of stations that continued to air Kimmel’s show.

Nextar, which owns 200 stations across America, was the first to cave, quickly followed by ABC (which is owned by Disney). Nexstar has an important reason to get on Trump’s good side – they are in negotiations to buy rival Tegna for $6 billion, which would give them a near monopoly coverage of 80% of US households. The current FCC cap is 39% so the FCC will not only have to approve the deal but also lift the cap.

It was Kimmel’s phrase “one of them” that appeared to particularly bother Carr. He said that Kimmel was "playing into that narrative that this was somehow a Maga or Republican-motivated person...that is really sick". But this show aired Monday when all that we knew of Robinson was he was from a white, Mormon, gun-totin’, MAGA-supporting, Utah family. The information about a possible trans girlfriend hadn’t come out yet.

Keep in mind that immediately after the news broke of Kirk’s murder, when we knew nothing about the perpetrator, President Trump blamed “the radical left” and vowed to “find each and every one of those who contributed to this atrocity…” Trump’s definition of the “radical left”, by the way, is anyone who opposes his policies, which now includes the majority of the 340 million people who live in America.

Just a few months ago in June Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband were murdered by Vance Boelter, an evangelical Christian who also shot and injured two other Democratic politicians and had a hit list that included dozens of other Democratic targets. Donald Trump Jr. claimed the suspect was a "leftist" and "a Democrat". Elon Musk, referring to this shooting, said the Left was "murderously violent". Laura Loomer demanded that the FBI interrogate (Democratic Governor) Tim Walz. None later apologized. None lost their jobs.

Compare the reaction against Kimmel with that of Fox host Brian Kilmeade who, on the air, suggested a solution for homeless people would be “involuntary lethal injections”. There was no pushback from the cohosts of the show at the time. The next day Kilmeade offered an apology; he still has his job.

I suspect thought that it was Kimmel's line about the four year old mourning his goldfish that got under Trump's thin skin and led to the order to get rid of him. The line about Robinson being "one of them" was used as an excuse to take advantage of sympathy for the murder victim. You have to admit, though, that the goldfish line was funny and Trump in that unedited video did not act very bereaved.

It was also very true to say that Trump supporters were working hard to distance Tyler from his gun-loving, MAGA supporting, family and pin the shooting on leftist radicalization. There is no evicende, however, that the shooting was connected to any organization. A DOJ official working on the Kirk case told NBC News "Thus far, there is no evidence connecting the suspect with any left-wing groups. There is every indication that this was one guy who did one really bad thing because he found Kirk's ideology personally offensive."

We know that this was just an excuse to get rid of Kimmel. When Stephen Colbert Show was cancelled President Trump posted July 18: “I absolutely love that Colbert got fired. His talent was even less than his ratings. I hear Jimmy Kimmel is next”.

When Trump learned of Kimmel’s firing he tweeted from his visit in Britain his delight and shared the next two on his hit list:

Great News for America: The ratings challenged Jimmy Kimmel Show is CANCELLED. Congratulations to ABC for finally having the courage to do what needed to be done. ... That leaves Jimmy [Fallon] and Seth [Meyer], ... Do it NBC!!! President DJT

As Mechelangelo Signorile concluded in his September 18 post, the problem with Kimmel’s firing is not that a privately owned company fired him for saying something they didn’t like. The problem is that the FCC Chair

ordered it, doing the bidding of a president who is intent on silencing his critics, and letting big business know that they won’t get what they want—and will face retaliation—unless they follow his orders. That is the epitome of authoritarianism, and this is yet another bright line crossed.

Trump, in ordering the firing of Kimmel (and no one seriously doubts that he did just that) violated his own Executive Order. On his first day in office, January 20, 2025,  Trump issued an executive order titled "Restoring Freedom of Speech and Ending Federal Censorship":

"The First Amendment to the United States Constitution, an amendment essential to the success of our Republic, enshrines the right of the American people to speak freely in the public square without Government interference." He adds that his administration will "ensure that no Federal Government officer, employee, or agent engages in or facilitates any conduct that would unconstitutionally abridge the free speech of any American citizen..."

I’ll give Carr himself the last word. Illinois Governor Pritzker wrote “This is an attack on free speech and cannot be allowed to stand”. The Governor then quoted Brendan Carr who had posted in 2023:

Free speech is…the check on government control. That is why censorship is the authoritarian’s dream”.

 

Sources

https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/p/september-17-2025-wednesday

https://www.signorile.com/p/kimmels-suspension-is-another-red

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/15/business/media/fox-host-homeless-comment-brian-kilmeade-apology.html

https://hartmannreport.com/p/saturday-report-92025-the-nazis-famously


The Left’s History of Violence

The American Republican Party, and others on the political Right, have been claiming that the Democratic Party, and others on the Left, is t...