Deprogram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: Guess Who’s Scouring the Dark Web?

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On Friday’s episode of DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou, where political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou discuss MI6’s launch of a dark-web portal to recruit spies, Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) massive expansion plans, Trump’s polls showing disapproval of his crime and immigration policies, Israeli airstrikes on a media complex that killed 31 journalists, and a judge dismisses Trump’s $15 billion defamation lawsuit against The New York Times.

  • MI6: MI6 launches a dedicated dark web portal today to recruit spies globally, targeting Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea, as announced by outgoing chief Sir Richard Moore in Istanbul. The secure messaging platform Silent Courier aims to bolster security by facilitating anonymous contact, with instructions available on MI6’s YouTube channel. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper emphasizes the portal’s role in keeping the UK ahead of adversaries.
  • ICE Expansion: ICE is seeking 300 new office spaces nationwide to support hiring over 10,000 immigration officers and lawyers, with the General Services Administration forming special teams to expedite the “ICE Surge.” The expansion targets red states and cities, though no leases are signed yet.
  • Trump’s Not-Good Polls: A Washington Post-Ipsos poll today reveals public disapproval of Trump’s plans to deploy the National Guard to cities beyond Washington, with a 10-point margin opposing his crime policies. Americans disapprove of his handling of immigration, economy, and foreign wars by double-digit margins. Despite this, Republicans hold a 2-to-1 edge on crime trust over Democrats.  What’s going on?
  • Israel Kills Dozens of Journalists: Israeli airstrikes on a Yemeni media complex on September 10 killed 31 journalists, the deadliest attack on media since 2009, per a Committee to Protect Journalists report. The strikes targeted Houthi-connected outlets in Sanaa, also killing a child. The IDF claims the site was a Houthi propaganda hub.
  • Trump’s Lawsuit Tossed: A federal judge in Tampa today dismisses President Trump’s $15 billion defamation lawsuit against The New York Times, calling the 85-page complaint “impermissible.” Judge Steven Merryday criticizes the filing’s structure and intent.
  • Russia Violates Estonia’s Airspace: Three Russian military jets breached Estonia’s airspace for 12 minutes today in a “brazen” act, per Estonian officials. This follows Russian drones entering Polish airspace last week, heightening NATO tensions.

Jimmy Kimmel Enabled Censorship

First they came for Jimmy Kimmel, but I didn’t say anything because I wasn’t…a lameass?

No. In this Niemöller scenario, the deplatforming of the host of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” comes at the end of the slippery slope, not the beginning. ABC canned Bill Maher 23 years ago for mocking Bush-era propaganda about our sainted Middle East occupation troops. Also at the request of right-wing Bushies after 9/11, MSNBC fired Phil Donahue—despite having the network’s highest ratings—for being too liberal and not pro-war. CBS News fired Dan Rather on a trumped-up ethical breach, and CBS radio fired Don Imus.

Lenny Bruce died in 1966 while appealing a prison sentence for obscenity. The Smothers Brothers, a top-rated comedy show, was canceled by CBS at the request of LBJ in 1969.

As broadcast television matured and corporatized over the better part of a century, it sanitized itself of content whose politics unabashedly leaned left, replacing Norman Lear’s 1970s progressive social-commentary programs like “All in the Family” and “Good Times” with 1980s and 1990s shows like “Family Ties” and “Home Improvement,” that had a pronounced sociopolitical subtext.

Nobody said much. They didn’t notice, because the median line of mainstream politics in both parties was sliding right. There was also a pressure-release valve. Viewers who preferred edgier content migrated to non-major network broadcast channels like Fox (“The Simpsons,” “The X-Files”) and cable (“The Sopranos,” “Weeds,” “Breaking Bad,” “Shameless”), where an FCC in thrall to an out-of-control president couldn’t brandish license-revocation over broadcasters’ bank accounts.

By the time Trump’s censors came for the safe, milquetoast humor and celebrity fluff that has long defined late-night talk shows on broadcast TV, anything smart, edgy and left had long been purged from the legacy broadcast channels. CBS’ decision to axe Stephen Colbert whose not-entirely-lame “Colbert Report” contrasts with his current uninspired dreck, was less of a harbinger of doom than a formal acknowledgement of long-accepted reality.

Media observers shocked by the demise of late-night titans Colbert and Kimmel at the hands of corporations sucking up to Trump to get their multi-billon-dollar mergers approved—with more on the chopping block, if Trump gets his way—should have seen this coming years ago.

So should Mssrs. Colbert and Kimmel themselves.

As with Niemöller, censorship and suppression of American political humorists has been a lengthy, ongoing process in which Kimmel’s ouster is the culmination. This includes both economic censorship—private employers firing popular purveyors of satire because they annoy the wealthy and powerful elites, and refusing to hire them in the first place—as well as the medieval-style government suppression currently in the news, supposedly prohibited by the First Amendment, in which a president and his pet regulator order the elites to get rid of comedic wimps like Colbert and Kimmel over the most banal of utterances.

Politics-infused satire has long been systemically eradicated from our media and institutions of mass culture. As I’ve noted before, at their 20th century height America’s newspapers employed scores of satirical political writers on their opinion pages. A current-day update of H.L. Mencken, Art Buchwald, Mike Royko, Jimmy Breslin, Molly Ivins or Dave Barry would never be interviewed today, much less be allowed to launch a career. Assuming you can get one to call you back, they’ll tell you why: jokes, especially political jokes, especially smart political jokes, especially smart jokes that target rich and powerful individuals, institutions and their adherents, cause trouble. They generate letters to the editor, phone calls to the publisher, even the occasional cancellation of ads and subscriptions. It’s easier and safer to do without—while hypocritically bemoaning the death of the genre.

My profession, political cartooning, has been obliterated by the same censorious forces that decimated political humor columnists. As print media migrated to the Internet, we weren’t invited along with our hard-news colleagues. When you post them, cartoons generate clicks. Like the print forebears, online editors prefer to play it safe.

Also like the Niemöller trope, resistance to earlier instances of high-profile censorship both public and private might have prevented America from descending to its present bleak state, in which Trump’s random masked goons kidnap random Americans off the street and raising the possibility that a douchebag may still have been a douchebag even if gets assassinated can get the safest of watered-down stand-up comics terminated. As one outrage after another hit the news, we said “huh” and did nothing. We shook our heads over Donahue and Ed Schultz (fired by MSNBC for reporting about Bernie Sanders’ campaign). If we were editors and producers, we opined over the murder of my Charlie Hebdo colleagues at their drawing tables, bloviating from the offices of media organizations that themselves refuse to hire any cartoonists.

In cases like Kimmel and Colbert, victim-blaming is as appropriate as it is churlish. Both men presided over giant megaphones and enjoyed massive budgets. Night after night, they doled out drivel, never thinking for a moment that they might have used their platforms to defend those who were being deprived of theirs—and whose canceling were paving the way for their own doom.

In 2019, for example, the international edition of The New York Times published a cartoon by António Moreira Antunes, a Portuguese cartoonist, depicting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a guide dog, wearing a Star of David collar, leading a blindfolded President Donald Trump, who held a yarmulke inscribed with the Twitter logo. (The cartoon would still work today!) After the usual gang of Zionists complained it was “anti-Semitic”, the Times removed the cartoon and apologized. Then the Times fired its two staff cartoonists, Patrick Chappatte and Heng Kim Song—neither of whom had anything to do with the cartoon—and permanently banned all cartoons.

As far as I know, neither Kimmel nor Colbert, nor other major late-night hosts (Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers, Trevor Noah, Conan O’Brien) had anything to say about this outrageous act of censorship by the Times.

During this time period, I was fighting The Los Angeles Times in court. They had fired me as their cartoonist under orders by the LAPD, whose pension fund owned controlling interest in the Times’ parent company. Again, the late-night comics had nothing to say. Silence was death when it came to AIDS in the 1980s; it’s also death when censorship is running rampant, as it has throughout the post-9/11 era. If they had used their power to stand up for humorists like Chappatte, Heng and me, they might be in a better position to save themselves now.

By the time Hitler came to power, parliamentary democracy had become so weak and ineffectual that Germans didn’t mourn its passing. As I watch Colbert and Kimmel and their ilk fade away (or migrate to cable), I can’t help but see the parallel.

(Ted Rall, the political cartoonist, columnist and graphic novelist, is the author of “Never Mind the Democrats. Here’s What’s Left.” Subscribe: tedrall.Substack.com. He is co-host of the podcast “DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou.”)

Deprogram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: Trump Talking to the Taliban

Live 5 pm Eastern and Streaming 24-7:

On Thursday’s episode of DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou, where political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou dissect the news, the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the No Political Enemies Act, U.S. efforts to reclaim Bagram Air Base from the Taliban, hundreds of thousands strike in France.

  • Jimmy Kimmel: FCC Chairman Brendan Carr states that Kimmel misled the public by linking Charlie Kirk’s killer to MAGA, prompting ABC—with a merger pending before the Administration—to suspend Jimmy Kimmel Live! indefinitely. Carr warns of ongoing shifts in the media ecosystem post-Trump’s election. House Democrats are accusing him of abusing power to coerce ABC and Disney, as Trump calls for more media cancellations.
  • Shield Act for Critics?: Democrats unveil their No Political Enemies Act, creating legal defenses for those targeted for political speech and allowing attorney fee recovery from government harassment. Sponsors like Senators Murphy and Schumer decry the Trump administration’s exploitation of Kirk’s assassination to silence critics, labeling it a path to autocracy and the worst free speech crisis since McCarthyism.
  • Bagram Air Base Back? Trump announces that the U.S. is working to regain Bagram Air Base from the Taliban, describing it as one of the world’s largest bases and strategically located an hour from China’s nuclear facilities. Trump pushes national security officials for months to negotiate its return, leveraging Taliban needs amid their push for sanctions relief and recognition. Will we normalize relations?
  • French Strikes and Protests: Hundreds of thousands join strikes against budget cuts, with unions estimating one million participants while officials report 500,000, deploying 80,000 police amid clashes in Paris, Lyon, and Nantes. Disruptions halt metro lines, block roads, and close 98% of pharmacies, as teachers and students protest reduced public services under new Prime Minister Lecornu. Over 140 arrests occur after protesters damage businesses.

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Fed Cut: A Warning Sign?”

LIVE 5:00 pm Eastern time, Streaming Anytime:

Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou read the tea leaves behind the Federal Reserve’s quarter-point rate cut, the FBI director’s testimony on the Epstein files, a new age-verification system for ChatGPT raises questions, men who spike drinks with abortion pills, and a widow’s claim that Alexei Navalny was poisoned.

  • Is the Rate Cut a Warning?: The Fed approves a quarter-point rate cut, setting the overnight funds rate at 4.00%-4.25%, with two more cuts signaled for 2025 amid labor market concerns. Governor Stephen Miran dissents, pushing for a half-point reduction, while Fed Chair Jerome Powell notes rising downside risks to employment. Is a midterm-election recession imminent?
  • FBI Director Denies on Epstein Files: Kash Patel testifies he never discussed the Jeffrey Epstein files with Trump. Is he credible?
  • OpenAI’s Age-Prediction System: A new AI-driven age-prediction system will restrict ChatGPT access for users under 18, prioritizing teen safety. The move follows a lawsuit tied to a teen’s suicide after harmful chatbot interactions. Will it work? Is it smart?
  • Abortion Pill Spiking: Men face charges for secretly slipping abortion pills to pregnant partners, exploiting relaxed FDA rules on mifepristone. Cases highlight coerced abortions, prompting states like Texas to tighten regulations. Advocates warn of rising risks to women and unborn children.
  • Navalny Poisoned?: Yulia Navalnaya claims Alexei Navalny was poisoned in an Arctic prison, based on smuggled samples analyzed by two labs. She is accusing Putin of murder.

TMI Show Ep 224: “Tyler Robinson Faces Death Penalty”

LIVE 10 AM Eastern time, Streaming Anytime:

“The TMI Show” hosts Ted Rall and Manila Chan are joined by guest Tyler Nixon. Utah County Attorney Jeff Gray announces seven charges against 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, including aggravated murder, a death-penalty charge, for allegedly targeting Kirk due to his political expression. Gray is citing Robinson’s act in the presence of children and attempts to obstruct justice by hiding evidence and tampering with witnesses.

Plus:

• Luigi Mangione Case: New York judge drops terrorism charges against Luigi Mangione for the December 2024 killing of United Healthcare executive Brian Thompson. Mangione still faces second-degree murder and weapons charges, with federal prosecutors pursuing the death penalty.

• Robert Redford’s Legacy: Hollywood icon Robert Redford, who died at 89, leaves a cinematic legacy with classics like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and the Sundance Film Festival. His work as an actor, director, and environmental advocate reshaped independent film.

• Trump’s Defamation Lawsuit: Trump sues The New York Times for $15 billion, alleging defamatory reporting aimed at damaging his reputation. The case, targeting investigative articles and a book, sparks debate over press freedom and legal accountability.

 

TMI Show Ep 223: “Are You On the Blacklist?”

LIVE 10 AM Eastern time, Streaming Anytime:

Welcome to the new McCarthyism. Are you on the blacklist?

Trump and his far-right allies cynically exploit the assassination of Charlie Kirk to unleash an opportunistic barrage of assaults on liberal institutions, donors, and foundations. Portraying liberals as traitors, this offensive unfolds amid vows to dismantle fictional “networks” fueling violence against poor, innocent conservatives. Stephen Miller, appearing on Kirk’s podcast, condemns organized doxxing, riots, and dehumanization campaigns as a “vast domestic terror movement”—ignoring that his allies are doing the same thing to critics of Israel. He is deploying Justice Department and Homeland Security to identify, disrupt, and destroy liberals in Kirk’s name.

Trump blames some “radical left” for demonizing conservatives, vowing to pursue contributors, funders, and attackers of officials. MAGA forces amplify Trump by outing and pressuring firings of Kirk’s social media critics—teachers, workers, pundits—leading to mass firings. Officials like Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy demand terminations, while War Secretary Pete Hegseth monitors military personnel and Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau pushes visa revocations. Representative Clay Higgins threatens lifetime social media bans, business blacklisting, school expulsions, and license revocations for detractors. Trump and Miller target the Ford Foundation and George Soros’s Open Society Foundations, alleging RICO-level financing of riots. Laura Loomer urges Trump to act as a “dictator.”

Plus:

  • Trump Bombs Ships for Fun: Monday morning’s attack murdered three men, whom Trump labeled “narcoterrorists” in a post featuring blurry strike video, asserting the vessel’s location in international waters with no threat to Americans or evidence of wrongdoing. Venezuela’s foreign minister reported U.S. Navy boarding of a tuna boat in their waters, detaining fishermen for hours, while Maduro accused the U.S. of fabricating drug claims to provoke regime change and a military incident.
  • Robert Redford Dies at 89: The big-screen charmer turned Oscar-winning director whose hit movies often helped America make sense of itself and who, off screen, evangelized for environmental causes and fostered the Sundance-centered independent film movement, died early Tuesday morning at his home in Utah. He was 89. As an actor, he starred in iconic films like “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” and “All the President’s Men,” often opposite powerhouses such as Jane Fonda and Meryl Streep, blending romance, drama, and thrillers.
  • Trump Sues the Old Gray Lady: The President announced he will file a $15 billion lawsuit for defamation and libel against the New York Times days after the newspaper released articles on his ties to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. The announcement followed threats over reporting on a sexually suggestive note and drawing linked to Epstein. Trump accused the Times of falsehoods about him, his family, businesses, and ideologies like America First and MAGA, planning to file in Florida.

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Trump Lied to Qatar”

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Start your week with DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou, where political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou, where we catch you up on the news of the weekend and prepare you for the week ahead and what it all means.

Bullet Points for Each Topic

  • Israel Lied to Qatar: Israel’s strike on Hamas leaders in Qatar, approved by Netanyahu, kills five Hamas members and one Qatari officer. New reports claim Trump was in fact informed beforehand—exposing his statements that he learned after the bomb blasts in Doha began and immediately notified his ally, as lies. Israel is covering up for The Donald. But who will ever believe him again?
  • If a Tree Burns in the Woods, Will the EPA Report It?: Trump already gutted the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Now he seems to be trying to stop everyone from getting access to reliable information about the environment. His EPA will stop thousands of coal plants, oil refineries, and steel mills from reporting greenhouse gas emissions, a practice in place since 2010. This undermines climate policy by hiding emission sources, while the EPA claims it saves $2.4 billion in compliance costs. The move follows Trump’s efforts to erase climate change references and cut related funding.
  • If a Company’s Q3 Blows, Will Stock Analysts Ever Know?: Trump suggests public companies reduce financial reports from four to two annually, aiming to save costs and shift focus to business operations. Critics warn this reduces transparency for investors and regulators, potentially hiding financial crimes. The SEC must approve the change.
  • Right-Wing Cancel Culture: The assassination of Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University leads to firings of employees, including a sports reporter and a Secret Service agent, for public comments. Private employers cite reputational harm, with legal experts noting limited First Amendment protections. Should your boss be allowed to can you for what you say away from work?
  • Poland Want Ukraine No-Fly Zone: Poland’s foreign minister, after Russian drones entered Polish airspace last week, proposes a NATO no-fly zone over Ukraine to protect against debris and drones. The idea, floated to German media, would need NATO approval and revisits no-fly zones of the past. Will it escalate tensions with Russia.

TMI Show Ep 222: “Hochul Finally Endorses Mamdani”

LIVE 10 AM Eastern time, Streaming Anytime:

So late that it no longer matters or helps, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul tries to heel the rift between progressives and corporate Democrats by finally endorsing Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani for New York City mayor—who continues to surge in the polls as the billionaire class desperately flails to stop him by supporting Andrew Cuomo—positioning them as united front against Trump. Hochul urges leaders to transcend differences, rallying to combat Trump’s tariffs, attacks on welfare programs, and attempts to seize military control of NYC. Endorsements still elude him from key Democrats like Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, underscoring internal party tensions—but does it matter now?

Plus:

• TikTok Ban—It Lives!: Trump is still threatening a TikTok ban in the U.S. unless China relaxes tariff and technology demands tied to ByteDance’s forced sale, with a September 17 deadline looming. Madrid talks, involving Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, are flailing. Experts foresee no breakthrough without Trump-Xi dialogue.

• Russia’s Barter Revival: Russia revives barter in foreign trade, swapping grain for Chinese cars or flax for materials to evade Western sanctions, echoing 1990s practices amid Ukraine war disruptions. Over 25,000 sanctions since 2014 cut Russia from SWIFT; barter, hard to trace, fills gaps in deals like yuan-ruble exchanges, with a government guide promoting it as de-dollarisation advances.

• Emmy Awards: The 77th Emmy Awards crown “The Studio” as the top winner, securing 13 Emmys including best comedy series, with Seth Rogen tying records for individual wins—Hollywood loves to talk about itself. “Adolescence” claims eight limited series awards, “The Penguin” adds to Cristin Milioti’s lead actress victory, and “The Pitt” takes best drama; Stephen Colbert’s “The Late Show” gets its first and last talk series win as a pity vote.

DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Charlie Kirk Suspect Arrested”

LIVE 5:00 pm Eastern time, Streaming Anytime:

On the “DeProgram” show with political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou, we dissect the news with unflinching insight and a unique pair of journalistic backgrounds. Today we confront escalating tensions between ICE and city residents, the capture of a suspect and calls for retribution in the Charlie Kirk killing, and California’s defiant stand against the federal government.

  • ICE Kills Immigrant in Chicago: Federal ICE agents encounter Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez during a routine stop near Grand Avenue and Elder Lane in suburban Chicago, part of ICE’s Operation Midway Blitz targeting undocumented individuals with criminal histories like reckless driving. Villegas-Gonzalez refuses commands, accelerates his vehicle, striking an officer and dragging him, prompting the agent to fire in self-defense, killing the driver while sustaining injuries himself. Community leaders decry the incident as a stark example of militarized enforcement endangering neighborhoods.
  • Capture of Charlie Kirk’s Alleged Shooter: Authorities apprehend 22-year-old Tyler Robinson from Washington City, Utah, accusing him of fatally shooting conservative influencer Charlie Kirk. Robinson, a high-achieving former student at Utah State University with no prior criminal record, emerges from a tight-knit Mormon family, his capture facilitated by relatives and a friend after he confesses or implies involvement. Discord messages, surveillance video, and family interviews reveal his recent anti-Kirk sentiments expressed at dinner. Investigators recover a Mauser 98 bolt-action rifle in .30-06 caliber from a wooded area, along with casings inscribed with taunting memes, antifascist references like “Bella Ciao,” and gaming allusions such as Helldivers 2 airstrike codes, underscoring a politically motivated act prepared with practice.
  • Trump Invades Memphis: The President plans to deploy federal law enforcement and the National Guard to Memphis, Tennessee, inspired by concerns raised by a FedEx board member about the city’s crime rates. Despite Memphis Police reporting overall crime at a 25-year low, with murders and assaults declining, Trump extends similar rhetoric to New Orleans, vowing military involvement if needed, while the city’s sanctuary status limits ICE cooperation. Tennessee Governor Bill Lee welcomes the support.
  • California’s Mask Ban for ICE Agents: Lawmakers advance legislation banning federal immigration agents from wearing masks like balaclavas during raids across California, alongside requirements for visible badges or name tags to safeguard public trust and democratic norms. Assemblymember Juan Carrillo frames the bill as essential to prevent “secret police” tactics in an authoritarian vein.

Why Americans Love Political Violence

“I disagree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it,” Voltaire said. But not really. Stephen G. Tallentyre wrote it in his 1906 book about Voltaire, as a paraphrase of his attitude toward free speech. Actually, that’s not true either: “Tallentyre” was a pseudonym. “He” was really a she: Evelyn Beatrice Hall.

That this most famous quotation about standing up for free expression with integrity turns out to be fake is perfect. As we grapple with the gruesome public assassination of 31-year-old right-wing ranter Charlie Kirk, Americans say they support free speech. Some of them even believe it. The truth is, the only freedom of speech most Americans support is the speech they agree with.

Shortly after Kirk was gunned down, the President of the United States appeared on Fox News. Ainsley Earhardt asked him: “Because we have radicals on the right as well. We have radicals on the left. People have gotten are watching all of these videos and cheering. Some people are cheering that Charlie was, was killed. How do we fix this country? How do we come back together?”

Earhardt was right. Political violence in the U.S. is a bipartisan sport. Democratic Minnesota State Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark Hortman were murdered by a right-wing pro-lifer on June 14th.   Two Israeli embassy staffers were shot to death in D.C. on May 29th by a liberal who supports Palestine. A right-wing conspiracy nut broke into Nancy Pelosi’s house and assaulted her husband in 2022. The 2018 Pittsburgh synagogue shooting was carried out by a right-wing anti-Semite.

Overall, though, rightists are a lot more murdery than leftists. From 1994 to 2020, the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) tracked domestic terrorist attacks and plots. Right-wingers accounted for the vast majority (57%). Left-wingers were a much smaller share (25%).

Why don’t those numbers add up to 100%? Many attacks against political figures, like last year’s assassination attempt against Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, are not acts of political violence. They are carried out by people motivated by a desire for notoriety or mental illness, or whose politics are impossible to define.

Trump, of course, lies about this.

“I’ll tell you something that’s going to get me in trouble, but I couldn’t care less,” he told Earhardt. “The radicals on the right oftentimes are radical because they don’t want to see crime…Worried about the border. They’re saying, We don’t want these people coming in. We don’t want you burning our shopping centers. We don’t want you shooting our people in the middle of the street,” Trump said. (In other words, they’re reasonable.)

“The radicals on the left are the problem,” Trump continued, “and they’re vicious and they’re horrible and they’re politically savvy, although they want men and women sports, they want transgender for everyone, they want open borders.”

In the same way that the Israeli government and supporters of its genocide against the Gazans pretend that the conflict began on October 7th when, out of the blue, the Palestinians broke the peace by attacking Israel, the permanently aggrieved American Right is acting like the Kirk killing was a novel, unexpected atrocity initiated not by a lone gunman, but by tens of millions of liberals, progressives and Democrats who comprise a dastardly unified Left. (As if!) “We have to have steely resolve,” said Steve Bannon. “Charlie Kirk is a casualty of war. We are at war in this country. We are.”

“They are at war with us, whether we want to accept it or not. What are we gonna do about it?” Fox News host Jesse Watters railed.

If it’s a war, the Right is winning. According to the Anti-Defamation League, all 25 extremist-related killings in 2022 were by right-wing murderers. In 2023, all 20 were right-wing. In 2024, all 13 were right-wing (8 by white supremacists, 5 by anti-government extremists). Left-wing violence (e.g., during protests) occurs sporadically and is rarely lethal.

“If they won’t leave us in peace, then our choice is to fight or die,” wrote Elon Musk.

Who is this “they”? The suspect, a 22-year-old from Utah, is one dude.

I’m not a perfect adherent to “Voltaire”/Hall’s standard of supporting free speech that I disagree with. But I have often come to the defense of right-wing cartoonist colleagues when they came under fire. I opposed the doxxing, canceling and firing of right-wing douchebags who attended the Charlottesville and January 6th demonstrations. It’s self-serving: I prefer not to get shot or censored. When you call to shut up your political opponents, you validate those who do the same to you.

People are asking, how can we put the idea that it’s OK to shoot someone because we hate their political opinions behind us?

Honestly, we never will. Violence is baked into American culture and politics going back to the genocide of Native Americans, the importation of slaves and Aaron Burr offing Alexander Hamilton. If we were to make progress, however, we would need to start with better leaders than we have now. We would need calls for understanding rather than retribution. And we would need something we violent, censorious, hypocritical Americans are singularly unwilling to entertain: self-awareness.

(Ted Rall, the political cartoonist, columnist and graphic novelist, is the author of “Never Mind the Democrats. Here’s What’s Left.” Subscribe: tedrall.Substack.com. He is co-host of the podcast “DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou.”)

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