Best Not Miss
Trump Assassination Tango
Jim Kavanagh
The first and
worst thing to say about the attempted assassination of Trump is that it is
going to divert attention from the much more important and horrific mass
slaughter of Palestinians that is taking place daily in Gaza and the West Bank,
as well as the constant Israeli attacks on Lebanon and Syria. Nothing that did
happen, or could have happened, to Donald Trump or any American politician supporting
that atrocity is worth an ounce of concern that should be going to the killed
and amputated children of Gaza. In that context, it’s particularly sickening to
witness the spectacle of politicians across the US political spectrum proclaiming
the unacceptability of “political violence”—meaning violence against
establishment politicians—while they vie to manage the country MLK correctly
called “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world.”
N. Pelosi: political violence is unacceptable
— Zachary Foster (@_ZachFoster) July 14, 2024
J. Fetterman: political violence is unacceptable
L. Austin: political violence is unacceptable
A. Blinken: political violence is unacceptable
J. Biden: political violence is unacceptable
Gaza’s 2M people: u bigoted hypocrites
Sat morning: Israeli massacre, Western politicians in full support
— Tiberius (@ecomarxi) July 14, 2024
Sat afternoon: Israeli massacre, Western politicians in full support
Sat night: Trump’s ear shot, Western politicians denounce all violence
Sun morning: Israeli massacre, Western politicians in full support
Nonetheless,
I’ll succumb to discussing what is, however ultimately diversionary, an unavoidable
event that’s symptomatic of the present, tense, American political paradigm and
of the peculiar, fascinating history of such events in American history. It’s impossible
to ignore, and kind of fun
to discuss, presidential-level political assassination.
So what are we dealing with here? What we seem to know now is that shots were fired at Donald Trump—a volley of three evenly spaced shots followed by another volley of five more quickly spaced shots; Trump was injured, either directly by a bullet or indirectly by the glass of a shattered teleprompter that was hit by a bullet; a spectator was killed and two others critically wounded; a man, identified as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks, was seen climbing onto a roof with a rifle by witnesses who pointed him out to police and Secret Service personnel, and was shot and killed by a Secret Service sniper after shots were fired at Trump.
We know, from Butler County Sheriff Michael Slupe, as interviewed by Pittsburgh CBS affiliate KDKA-TV, that an armed police officer “had both hands up on the roof to get up on the roof, never made it because the shooter had turned toward the officer, and—rightfully and smartfully—the officer let go.”
From another
KDKA interview,
we know that local witness Ben Maser “saw the person move from roof to
roof…going from one building to another”—consistent with this picture of the
two roofs connected by a small structure, conveniently laddered and ensconced
behind a large tree:
We do not know how Thomas Crooks knew of this inviting lair 400 feet from Trump’s podium. Had he driven the 52 miles from Bethel Park before the rally to case it out? Had he been told about it? Or had he just wandered around the area with a long gun for some time before luckily stumbling on it?
We do not
know whether anyone else was shooting or otherwise involved in the
assassination attempt. We do not know whether and for how long a Secret Service
sniper had Crooks in his sight before firing on him. And we do not know why
Thomas Matthew Crooks wanted to shoot Donald Trump.
These are
just the known unknowns. To say “a lot of questions remain unanswered” is the
understatement of the year.
It's impossible in the American context not to consider the following possibilities:
- This was an isolated, personal attack by Crooks—perhaps with accomplices, but independent of any larger organization—who wanted to kill Trump for some reason we either will or will not be able to determine, based on documents that either will or will not be found and released to the public. At any rate, an event of no great political significance in itself.
- This was an assassination attempt by Crooks (with or without accomplices) acting on behalf of an organization independent of Trump or the USG/Deep State with a larger political agenda. If this is the case, that organization should be expected to make itself and its agenda known. There would be no point to such an action otherwise.
- This was a false-flag attempt action by the Trump campaign to gin up enormous political support and to put to shame and to an end the Democratic party’s and its media allies’ incessant, extreme vilification of him. The cui bono principle certainly raises this possibility, since this event has achieved those objectives for Trump in a way that nothing else could have.
- This was an assassination attempt by some deep state, intelligence agency faction that was able to manipulate Crooks and the Secret Service protection protocols to make the shooting possible. This would be consistent with what has undeniably been a constant campaign on the part of powerful elements of the political and national security elite to portray Donald Trump as an existential threat to democracy and the American polity, and to, at all costs, prevent him from becoming president again. Many people, myself included, have remarked that, if all other gambits to stop Trump fail—as the lawfare seems to be failing—assassination is in the logic of that position, and in the historical repertoire of such factions. As American as apple pie. Predictable and predicted. Per Republican Lincoln Project founder, Rick Wilson: “The donor class can’t just sit back on the sidelines and say, ‘Oh, well, don’t worry, this will all work itself out.’ They’re still going to have to go out and put a bullet in Donald Trump. And that’s a fact.”
As far as I'm
concerned, all of those scenarios are possible in principle and in practice. I
don't know now, and I don't know that we will ever know, which is true.
I would say
that option 1 is an event of no great political significance, other than
to encourage toning down the aggressive intensity of political discourse—which,
in the U.S., is WWE-level trash-talking that ensures nothing will fundamentally
change.
It is true
that “dehumanizing” your political opponent as an enemy, a traitorous “dictator”
from whom the country must be saved, will tend to encourage fanatical and
violent activity by those who are prone to it. Donald Trump is not Hitler and
Joe Biden is not Stalin, and those in the respective camps should cease
proclaiming such nonsense. It is also true that the Democratic camp and the
dominant media it controls have been unsurpassed on that score:
But pointed
political attacks, using nasty figures of speech, are not going away, and
neither Trump’s “bloodbath” nor Biden’s “put Trump in a bullseye”— anymore than
Malcolm’s “by any means necessary” or “No justice. No peace.”—makes an
individual pick up a gun and kill someone. You can’t control everyone you might
“inspire.” It would be a mistake, and it will be the impetus, to use
this situation to further suppress political speech on behalf of the status
quo. It is particularly galling that the Biden campaign and the Democratic
party are now going to blame pro-Palestinian protestors for the vitriol
and violence that they incited. Biden, it seems, is now going to
tone down attacks on Trump, and stress “unity,” by redirecting its unsurpassed
apparatus of vilification toward those protestors, “draw[ing] on the
president's history of condemning all sorts of political violence including his
sharp criticism of the ‘disorder’ created by campus protests over the
Israel-Gaza conflict.”
To be sure,
there are situations where political opponents are existential enemies
and polarized discourse and “disorder”—even to the point of “political
violence”—are appropriate. The difference in the American context between Joe
Biden and Donald Trump, Democrat and Republican—the two right-wing imperialist
and Zionist factions that will find unity in attacking Palestinians—is
not one of them, and all the Democrats who have been screaming about Trump’s
“fascism” know it. That’s why Maine Democrat, Rep. Jared Golden now denounces “hyperbolic threats about the stakes
of this election. It should not be misleadingly portrayed as a struggle between
democracy or authoritarianism, or a battle against fascists or socialists bent
on destroying America. These are dangerous lies,” and AOC wishes
Trump “a speedy recovery.” In fact, the
Democrats have “all resigned ourselves to a second Trump
presidency." They know very well that, as with Biden, “nothing will fundamentally change.”
In other
words, all of what you see in the videos above, all of what you saw for years
in Dem-aligned media, any part of which worked itself into the mind of Thomas Mattew
Crooks, is a crock of diversionary fear-mongering shit.
https://x.com/Glenn_Diesen/status/1812363857215488427
Option 2 would be politically significant if
it were publicly claimed. Since it hasn’t been by now, I doubt it will be, but
we shall see.
Options 3
and 4 are the ones
that, for good reason, engage the American imagination. Anyone who has lived
through, or has more than superficial knowledge of, the history of political
assassination in the U.S., would be foolishly naive not to suspect one of these
explanations.
My first instinct
was to consider that this was a Trump ploy, because it so obviously benefitted
him. These extraordinary photos, I think, rule that out:
Doug Mills/The New York Times
Sorry, Trump
haters, but If it really was a bullet that clipped Trump's ear1 and/or if that
really is a bullet (perhaps the same) whizzing by him, then Donald Trump is the
luckiest motherfucker in the universe. In the history of the universe. And whoever was shooting at him was trying to kill him.
We can talk
about how he was already winning and didn’t need to mount such a dramatic,
inevitably suspect false flag. We can talk about a thousand things. But ending
the discussion is the millimeter difference in the angle of his head that
separates an ear cut from brains being blown out. Yes, it couldn’t have
worked out better if he planned it, and no, he could not have planned
it. This is not William Tell or David Blaine. Nobody (and certainly not
Donald Trump) is going to risk his life with a gag like this.
Really, in
the history of the universe. Atheist that I am, we're talking divine, satanic,
or Doctor Who-type intervention here. If this event proves anything, it’s that
we are living in crazy.
Also, it’s worth
noting, an epic day for photography. That whizzing bullet photo is one of the most
amazing live-action pictures in the history of photography, because Mills just
happened to be shooting at 8,000
frames per second. And the bloody-face, fist-pumping under-the-flag
photo will take its place among the iconic images that instantly sealed political
fate, making Donald Trump the presumptive incoming president, in the eyes of
the country and the world.
Could not have
planned it better. Could not be more crazy.
That leaves
us with option 4, an American classic.
This event
has many of the hallmarks: A spate of protective-detail screw-ups, multiple
gunshots and witnesses. An unknown, disaffected loner who took shots or was
seen in a position near the shooting and was himself quickly gunned down or
taken out of the picture, and officially identified as the lone gunman. No one
can forget John Hinckley, Mark David Chapman, Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan.
No one should forget that Oswald didn’t shoot anybody, that Sirhan shot but did
not kill RFK, that Hinckley and Chapman were obsessed with Catcher in the Rye, and that the agencies who conducted
those official investigations and will conduct this one, lied and destroyed and
hid and continue to hide evidence about those assassinations. These are the
same agencies that brought us Russiagate and Iraqi WMDs, and have proven
themselves completely untrustworthy.
I have no
idea what’s the truth behind Thomas Matthew Crooks, but I’m betting it’s option
1 or 4, and I have no reason yet to exclude either. It’s possible that he’s
nothing more than a disaffected kid acting alone. It’s possible—one would be
foolish to exclude—that he’s a Manchurian candidate, a “manipulated subject of”
those forces that just “had to go out and put a bullet in Donald Trump.” If it
was the latter, this was a masterful misdirection of the Sirhan kind: Look.
You can see with your own eyes who shot him! (And if you don’t know that
was a misdirection, that’s how masterful it was.)
I know that
the rat’s nest of “known unknown” questions above, combined with the multitude
of other questions that will inevitably come up (or remain “unknown unknowns”) and
the justifiable suspicion of the investigative agencies, makes it very likely
that many people will not believe whatever version the FBI/SS/DHS/etc. come up
with.
If it was on
op, the big problem for the perpetrators is, per Ralph and Omar: “When you come at the king, you best
not miss.” Not least because the king now controls the investigation.
For now, I’ll
call it a toss-up between 1 and 4. Now if they find a dog-eared copy of Catcher
in the Rye in Thomas Crooks’s bedroom….
1There was a report that Trump’s ear was injured by glass from a shattered teleprompter. I don’t think that’s the case, but even that means the bullet was heading right toward him.
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