• Shooting Violent Right Wing Extremists Is Justifiable Homicide

    From All Nines@jimin999999@nine.net to alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.atheism,alt.politics.immigration,alt.politics.trump,alt.home.repair on Sun Sep 28 15:15:35 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.home.repair

    September 14, 2025
    Right-Wing Extremists Drive Majority of U.S. Political Violence

    Both federal assessments and independent research reveal that the majority
    of political violence in the United States is attributed to right-wing individuals and groups. The Center for Strategic and International Studies found that right-wing extremists were responsible for approximately 67
    percent of extremist-related terrorist plots and attacks between 2015 and
    2020. It is important to note that this is not the sole source of data
    about U.S. political violence. Measuring Political Violence in the United States by Ideological Alignment: Right-Wing Actors Dominate Incidents of Politically Motivated Violence The Landscape of Domestic Political
    Violence

    Political violence in the U.S. refers to violent acts motivated by
    political beliefs, ideologies, or partisan affiliations. These range from
    hate crimes and extremist attacks to targeted assassinations and
    large-scale terrorism. Data compiled by government agencies and research institutions show that domestic extremism constitutes an enduring national security concern.

    Note that these acts have historically emerged from multiple ideological traditions. Left-wing movements produced incidents in the 1960s and 1970s involving radical groups like the Weather Underground. Right-wing violence
    has shown greater persistence. This has been driven by white supremacists, antigovernment militias, and other extremist factions.

    Threat assessments from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department
    of Homeland Security highlight that racially-motivated extremists, often associated with far-right ideologies, remain the most lethal domestic
    threat. These agencies also warn that antigovernment extremists continue
    to represent a significant and growing source of violence nationwide.

    The ideological divide in the U.S. is deeply connected to political polarization. Research from the Pew Research Center shows that partisan animosity has reached record levels. Both Republican and Democratic camps
    hold unfavorable views of the other. This reinforces ideological identity
    and hardens societal divisions across political, cultural, and religious
    lines.

    Polarization also amplifies the appeal of extremist rhetoric and fosters settings where individuals are more likely to support or commit violence against political opponents. Studies note that widespread disinformation, incendiary political discourse, and the growth of online echo chambers
    have further intensified the willingness of individuals to resort to
    violence. Statistical Weight of Right-Wing Violence

    While left-wing political violence has appeared sporadically in modern
    decades, data consistently indicate that right-wing actors are responsible
    for the majority of extremist violence. Reports by organizations such as
    the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center show that right-wing extremists dominate organized networks and lethal incidents.

    Remember that both the FBI and DHS have identified racially-motivated and anti-government violent extremism, often rooted in far-right or alt-right
    and ultra-conservative ideologies, as the most persistent and lethal
    domestic threat. Their joint assessments consistently describe right-wing extremist activity as posing greater risks compared to left-wing or other categories.

    Moreover, a 2020 congressional report based on filings and testimonies highlighted that in a dataset of 29 extremist murders in U.S. committed in
    2018 and 2019, 26 were attributed to right-wing extremists. This report, presented during oversight hearings, emphasized the dominance of
    right-wing actors and their ideologies in recent years of lethal political violence.

    The Anti-Defamation League reported right-wing extremists, particularly
    white supremacists, accounted for 85 percent of extremist-related murders
    in the U.S. in 2021. No left-wing extremists were linked to any of the
    murders that year. ADL has also reported that 75 percent of political
    violence from 2013 to 2020 was committed by right-wing extremists.

    Civil society tracking also shows the imbalance. The Southern Poverty Law Center recorded 1225 hate and antigovernment extremist factions active in
    2021. Most of these were classified as part of the radical right movement.
    This figure included militias, white nationalist groups, religious
    radicals, and sovereign citizen organizations that proliferated
    nationwide.

    Event-level datasets produced by the Armed Conflict Location and Event
    Data Project further confirmed that right-wing groups were responsible for
    the largest share of organized violent incidents from 2020 to 2023. ACLED
    also explained that many violent events in the United States remain unattributed or are classified as involving unidentified actors.
    Complicating Factors and Other Nuances

    However, although right-wing actors dominate the data, analysts note that incidents of violence associated with left-wing or anarchist groups are
    not absent. ACLED and congressional testimonies mention limited events involving anarchist or radical environmentalist networks, but the totals
    remain significantly smaller compared to right-wing extremist activity.

    The Government Accountability Office has stressed that methodological challenges complicate comparisons across datasets. Definitions of
    extremism differ. Some incidents are counted as political violence by one source but excluded by another, and many events remain unattributed during investigations. Consistent long-term assessments are a continuing
    challenge.

    Note that the American political spectrum is generally described as a
    continuum ranging from left to right. The left is associated with
    progressive policies, social justice, and labor activism. The right
    emphasizes conservatism, nationalism, and limited government. Radical extensions of both ends sometimes transform ideological beliefs into
    violent extremist action.

    It is also worth mentioning that the political center, or the
    center-aligned, is typically characterized by moderate stances that blend policy preferences from both sides. It emphasized pragmatism and
    compromises. However, centrists are rarely associated with extremism, as
    most cases of politically motivated attacks originate from actors
    positioned on ideological extremes.

    Political violence in the United States is both a symptom and a further
    driver of polarization. It reflects deepening ideological entrenchment, mistrust across partisan lines, and the influence of extremist
    subcultures. This heated, polarized environment muddies national unity and challenges institutions tasked with protecting democracy and ensuring
    public security.

    FURTHER READINGS AND REFERENCES

    Anti-Defamation League Center on Extremism. 2021. Murder & Extremism
    in the United States 2021. Anti-Defamation League. Available via PDF
    Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department of Homeland Security.
    2023. Strategic Intelligence Assessment and Data on Domestic
    Terrorism. Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department of Homeland
    Security. Available via PDF Jones, S. G. and Doxsee, C. 2020. oThe
    Escalating Terrorism Problem in the United States.o CSIS Briefs.
    Center for Strategic & International Studies. Available via PDF Sacco,
    L. N. 2023. Understanding and Conceptualizing Domestic Terrorism:
    Issues for Congress. United States Library of Congress. Available via
    PDF Southern Poverty Law Center. 2023. The Year in Hate and Extremism.
    Southern Poverty Law Center. Available via PDF
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  • From Jamaal Bowman@jamaal.bowman@fire-science.edu to alt.home.repair on Sun Sep 28 16:55:02 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.home.repair

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    On 9/28/2025 11:15 AM, All Nines wrote:
    September 14, 2025
    Right-Wing Extremists Drive Majority of U.S. Political Violence


    Do you get your "news" from leftist Jimmy Kimmel?

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    <div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 9/28/2025 11:15 AM, All Nines wrote:<br>
    </div>
    <blockquote type="cite"
    cite="mid:10bbjem$2c53q$1@paganini.bofh.team">
    <pre wrap="" class="moz-quote-pre">September 14, 2025
    Right-Wing Extremists Drive Majority of U.S. Political Violence

    </pre>
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    <p><br>
    </p>
    <p>Do you get your "news" from leftist Jimmy Kimmel?</p>
    </body>
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  • From Snag@snag_one@msn.com to alt.home.repair on Sun Sep 28 20:02:39 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.home.repair

    On 9/28/2025 3:55 PM, Jamaal Bowman wrote:
    On 9/28/2025 11:15 AM, All Nines wrote:
    September 14, 2025
    Right-Wing Extremists Drive Majority of U.S. Political Violence


    Do you get your "news" from leftist Jimmy Kimmel?


    More likely CNN and MSDNC .
    --
    Snag
    We live in a time where intelligent people
    are being silenced so that
    stupid people won't be offended.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From T@T@invalid.invalid to alt.home.repair on Sun Sep 28 22:27:38 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.home.repair

    On 9/28/25 6:02 PM, Snag wrote:
    On 9/28/2025 3:55 PM, Jamaal Bowman wrote:
    On 9/28/2025 11:15 AM, All Nines wrote:
    September 14, 2025
    Right-Wing Extremists Drive Majority of U.S. Political Violence


    Do you get your "news" from leftist Jimmy Kimmel?


    -a More likely CNN and MSDNC .


    They blame us for what they do.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2