Opinion I’ve Never Seen Washingtonians So Scared - The rise of political violence has reshaped life in the nation’s capital.

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
I’ve Never Seen Washingtonians So Scared
Politico (archive.ph)
By Michael Schaffer
2024-07-19 09:00:00GMT

wash01.jpg
Illustration by Brian Stauffer for POLITICO

One day in early 1991, I went to watch a punk band play in front of the White House at a protest of the impending first Gulf War. I borrowed my parents’ Plymouth Voyager and drove down with friends, parking at a metered spot on Pennsylvania Avenue just outside the executive mansion. For 17-year-olds, it seemed kind of cool, like we were sticking it to the man. What it didn’t seem was dangerous — for us, or for the leader of the free world. In those days, you could rally against the president’s policies and still stow your minivan right in front of his house.

At that point, Washington was actually most of the way through a century defined by steadily rising security barriers. Before World War II, downtown office workers could stroll right onto the White House grounds and eat lunch on the lawn. After 9/11, the city was permanently full of jersey barriers and fortified exteriors and ID checks at even the dinkiest government buildings. And the 1600 block of Pennsylvania Avenue, closed to traffic since the Oklahoma City bombing, was most definitely not available for parking.

What’s amazing to think about today is that all of this armoring actually predates our current age of bad feelings. In 2024, Washington’s sense of unease doesn’t come from foreign terrorists or obscure ideologies or monomaniacal presidential stalkers. It comes from particularly unhinged participants in the otherwise mainstream acrimony between America’s left and right. For all the headlines, though, the physical layout of the place hasn’t especially changed since our politics went sideways: There isn’t all that much physical infrastructure left to harden.

Instead, the story of the capital in the last decade is more like a tale of steadily disintegrating mental security barriers.

I’ve covered my hometown for most of my professional career, and what’s been striking to me is the steadily increasing number of conversations where folks tell me they’ve been worried for their safety because of politics.

That’s a remarkable change. The old knock on the capital was that it was boring. Washington may have enacted policies that affected life and death, but the workaday participants in its major industry felt largely insulated from the impact. You might worry that a career here would make you a dullard, but you knew it wouldn’t make you a target.

The path from the placid old political world to the fretful new one is dotted with horrific milestones, culminating in last Saturday’s near-miss assassination attempt against Donald Trump. The shootings of U.S. Reps. Gabby Giffords and Steve Scalise in 2011 and 2017. The mail bombs sent to media outlets and top Democrats in 2018. The 2020 kidnapping plot targeting Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. The 2022 arrest of a gunman outside the home of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. That same year’s hammer attack against the husband of then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

But in wondering where we go from here after the shock shooting at Trump’s Pennsylvania rally, I’ve found myself thinking about less spectacular stair-steps on the path into fear. Much more than the actual crimes, they explain the current mood.

As a string of historians have reminded us, political violence is not exactly new to the country that martyred Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley and Kennedy. Yet those crimes came and went without the rest of the permanent federal city feeling a perpetual sense of fear. What’s different right now, I think, is that the headline-grabbing assaults coexist with more mundane erosions of norms around the same theme.

Take language. For ages, politicians have perhaps unwittingly used martial analogies, right down to Joe Biden’s suggestion that Democrats quit fighting over his nomination and instead put a “bullseye” on Trump. But in the 45th and possibly 47th president, America has a leading political figure of unprecedented rhetorical violence. He talked about a “blood bath” if he doesn’t win. He suggested retired Gen. Mark Milley deserves execution. He amplified a social media post accusing Republican critic Liz Cheney of “treason” and calling for her to face a military tribunal. He’s made reference to enemies as “vermin” and said immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country.”

Does Trump mean it more than any of the others? His defenders say no, it’s just the rhetorical style of someone trained outside professional politics. But people know it only takes one person to interpret things literally. And the past few years have offered a lot more than one example.

wash02.jpg
Former President Donald Trump, with blood on his ear, is surrounded by Secret Service agents after shots were fired at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13, 2024. | Scott Goldsmith for POLITICO

Some Trump critics have blasted through norms of their own, less noxious but still telling. The last decade has seen a frenzy of political protests at the personal homes of public officials, shattering the old convention where Washington allowed even partisan big shots to be civilians when they were home with their families. The highest-profile examples of this trend have involved protesters from the left showing up at the homes of conservative figures like Josh Hawley, Lindsey Graham or Tucker Carlson — and, after the October 7 attacks, the homes of perceived Biden administration Israel allies like Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
To the protesters, the old kid-glove rules of engagement seemed like entitlement. Their protests were peaceful, they said. It’s a free country. According to this logic, who cares if a bunch of well-protected insiders wrongly felt intimidated?

But when it comes to intimidation, two can play at that game. During the pandemic, the mostly conservative protesters against lockdown began showing up at the homes of minor public officials across the country, people like the state epidemiologist of Utah, the president of the Fresno City Council or the Ohio government’s health director. This being a free country, sometimes the marchers had guns.

Especially in a city like Washington, where so many people work on public policy, the net effect when you combine these minor spectacles with the major acts of violence is a sense that we are all combatants now, whether we’re at home or at work, whether we’re big shots or nobodies.

That was true even on the day when the chaos came closest to actual power. Though the import of Jan. 6 is as an attempt to violently disrupt the constitutional functioning of government, a lot of the most jaw-dropping later revelations involved the insurrectionists’ treatment of the Washington working stiffs who were on the job that day: The police who were beaten and called the n-word, the staffers who huddled for their lives.

Yes, staff have always risked being collateral damage of political violence. A Washington cop, a Secret Service officer and the presidential spokesman were shot alongside Ronald Reagan in 1981. But they weren’t targets. Looking at video of the fury with which the rioters confronted the anonymous workforce of the Hill, you get the sense of why a lot of Washington types on all political sides might worry that they’re potential prey and not just potential bystanders.

That’s true even if we’re just out leading nerdy Washington lives. In 2019, white nationalists marched on a Connecticut Avenue bookstore hosting a reading of a book about racial resentment. A few years earlier, a pizza and pingpong place on the same block was assaulted by a gunman who subscribed to a bizarre conspiracy theory saying the restaurant was an epicenter of child trafficking by Democratic political elites. Maybe it was just internet-era craziness, but in a culture accustomed to being safe from politics, it was disturbing all the same.

In the nature of our politics, the tendency when faced with this ignoble history is to try to adjudicate responsibility. Is it MAGA’s fault? Antifa’s? It’s a thankless exercise, even if you’re acting in good faith. Calling out a faction manifestly doesn’t change its behavior.

Instead, as the FBI and Homeland Security warn of possible retaliatory attacks following the Trump shooting, I think the better question is: What does this mood do to the functioning of a society?

So far, the specific security-focused new policy ideas are more likely to upset civil libertarians than traffic engineers. There have been calls for prosecuting people who protest at the homes of federal judges, successful local efforts (including in liberal municipalities like Los Angeles) to criminalize home protests, and legislation requiring members of Congress to get special security that whisks them through airports out of public view.

Other than that, as the aftermath of the shooting showed, the mood has mainly just amped up Washington’s already ravenous appetite for finger-pointing.

Ultimately, the graybeards of American politics may have less wisdom to offer than folks who’ve focused their work on more distant places. John Paul Lederach, a Notre Dame professor whose work draws on his experience in conflict zones like Northern Ireland, Somalia and Colombia, likened ambient fear to a system that produces specific outcomes.

“The most significant outcome that it produces is paralysis,” Lederach told me. “People aren’t sure what steps to take, so they pull back. And that paralysis then translates into very slow responses to things that are fairly urgent — and then that diminishes the trust in those institutions.”

That listlessness is not a response most Beltway lifers would cop to. Bureaucrats still go to work; reporters still report; politicos still do political battle. But there was an echo of it in a couple of blind quotes from Democratic members of Congress that appeared in Axios this week. Asked about the faltering efforts to push Biden off the ticket, a member said that, after the shooting, “We’re all just focused on expressing condolences ... and keeping our teams safe.” Another called the moment too “chaotic” for leadership battles.

Could this be true? Or is it just a convenient rationale from someone who wants to avoid a difficult issue, the way bad weather or the flu might be for occupants of a less fraught capital?

Maybe it doesn’t matter. Anxiety about political violence and its aftermath is a plausible excuse in today’s Washington. Which represents a much bigger change than the closing of a city street.
 
Like two blocks away from the Capitol in the wrong direction and you're in the depths of a nigger ghetto of the worst kind. The Smithsonian sites make it worth a visit though.
Don’t forget the homeless encampments. I’d just avoid those altogether. Also, don’t go out at night if you can avoid it and never go alone.
 
I was about to repost this one.

As a string of historians have reminded us, political violence is not exactly new to the country that martyred Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley and Kennedy.
My favorite political martyr:

Wiki-05-Berlin-Garfield-DSC05956.jpg

The police who were beaten and called the n-word, the staffers who huddled for their lives.
Bbbaaseeed

A few years earlier, a pizza and pingpong place on the same block was assaulted by a gunman who subscribed to a bizarre conspiracy theory saying the restaurant was an epicenter of child trafficking by Democratic political elites.
What was up with those tweets and paintings though?
 
Note the framing here. Normal people outside the Beltway trying to live their lives, pay their taxes, and not have their livelihoods destroyed are the bad guys.

The petty tyrant bureaucrats, DC journos and politicians who demanded martial law, enabled consequence-free race riots, and crushed everyone not feeding from the government trough are just "working stiffs" and the Real Victims in all this.

Thanks, Michael Schaffer.
View attachment 6212447
I can just SMELL the douche.
 
The bit that stuck to me was how weirdly segregated it actually was. Every service position is staffed by a black person. Every one. Even baristas. Once you get a few blocks away from the main roads the brownstones get ghetto fast.
Haven't been there post-pandemic but I have to imagine the criminal element has been allowed to run wild over the last few years.

This is a secret of a lot of liberal areas. The people who live there are pretty much entirely white or "good Asians" (rich East Asians or pajeets with tech jobs), but the people who actually work there are all black and Latino. It's totally possible to live in "Chocolate City" and only interact with black people when they're serving you.
 
This is a secret of a lot of liberal areas. The people who live there are pretty much entirely white or "good Asians" (rich East Asians or pajeets with tech jobs), but the people who actually work there are all black and Latino. It's totally possible to live in "Chocolate City" and only interact with black people when they're serving you.
My particular corner of the country has largely avoided this, probably because a lot of our initial settlement was by whites fleeing the Rust Belt and because even after 1995 we were mostly a resettlement target for other suburban white kids mad at their dad when it wasn't Californians looking for the same experience, but without an income tax.
 
My particular corner of the country has largely avoided this, probably because a lot of our initial settlement was by whites fleeing the Rust Belt and because even after 1995 we were mostly a resettlement target for other suburban white kids mad at their dad when it wasn't Californians looking for the same experience, but without an income tax.
Pacific NW? Do you think that's part of the reason why people got so unhinged with the BLM protests and a lot of the related incoherent lefty protests around the same time (i.e. I know indigenous Land Back stuff is really vocal and incoherent up there)?
 
John Paul Lederach, a Notre Dame professor whose work draws on his experience in conflict zones like Northern Ireland, Somalia and Colombia, likened ambient fear to a system that produces specific outcomes.

“The most significant outcome that it produces is paralysis,” Lederach told me. “People aren’t sure what steps to take, so they pull back. And that paralysis then translates into very slow responses to things that are fairly urgent — and then that diminishes the trust in those institutions.”
this is the most astute observation in this whole damned article.
it's telling that the author chose to conclude with it ... and that it isn't his.
 
There's lore going back to 1997 that the Washington NBA team changed their logo and name because it was already a violent shithole

OIP (5).jpeg
v9oECy.jpg
In November 1995, owner Abe Pollin announced he was changing the team's nickname, because Bullets had acquired violent overtones that had made him increasingly uncomfortable over the years, particularly given the high homicide and crime rate in the early 1990s in Washington, D.C. The name change was widely and incorrectly believed to be related to the assassination of Pollin's longtime friend, Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin.

A contest was held to choose a new name and the choices were narrowed to the Dragons, Express, Stallions, Sea Dogs, and the Wizards. On May 15, 1997, the Bullets officially became the Wizards. - Wikipedia

Hey here's an idea.

When protesters show up outside somewhere, maybe someone should ask them for a list of demands and then sit and talk to a couple of specifically chosen leaders of the protest in exchange for the protesters getting off your lawn.

A sitdown with Trudeau officials was exactly what the truckers were asking for during the 2022 Ottawa protest.

But like Biden, Trudeau faked the coof and hid at his cottage across the river while hurling epithets through the media for 3 weeks instead.

Even the opposition was too scared to sit down with the blue collar protesters, instead only taking the odd frigid selfie.

The city’s response after the protest was cleared by beatings and martial law was to permanently restrict access to Wellington St in front of Parliament by closing it forever to vehicular traffic with concrete barriers so the plebs could never try it again. Just like the article & Pennsylvania Ave.

I have no idea what the hell the point of this article is supposed to be. It goes on and on, using a great many words to say literally nothing.

This was my take as well, though I started skimming after all the TDS "violent rhetoric" and "bloodbath" tropes.

The meandering piece seemed like a vehicle just to reminisce about parking in front of the White House to protest Bush Sr.
 
Pacific NW? Do you think that's part of the reason why people got so unhinged with the BLM protests and a lot of the related incoherent lefty protests around the same time (i.e. I know indigenous Land Back stuff is really vocal and incoherent up there)?
We got unhinged over Saint Floyd for the same reason a lot of areas did - uppity teenagers swarming in from the suburbs knowing that nobody in the government was going to punish them for misbehaving. Hell, our mayor and governor both pretended they had no idea CHAZ/CHOP was happening until Trump commented on it, at which point they became ardent defenders of people lighting shit on fire.
We got lucky that they were retarded enough to hand "security" duties to some random rapper and his posse immediately shot up a SUV for looking at them weird, at which point the kids mad at their dad ran back home with their tail between their legs and any longevity to their movement was shortly sapped.
 
The bit in the middle about the low-level bureaucrats, deep state functionaries and other bottom-of-the-totem-pole Beltway pansies was my favorite. They're just as responsible for how the bloated leviathan functions (or doesn't) as the people at the top. I actually think "just following orders" is a worse excuse when it's about a pension 30 years from now. At least when the Nazis were pulling that one out of the deck, the "if I didn't..." was a military tribunal followed by a public execution by hanging or guillotine.

Anyway, to quote one of the MPs up in Canada after it came out that dozens of MPs are implicated in a treason scandal, "boo hoo! Get over it." If working in the cathedral makes you feel uncomfortable, McDonald's is always hiring; your average burger-flipper contributes more to society in a single shift than anyone working in any federal department does in a year, so it might even be fulfilling.
 
Last edited:
We got lucky that they were retarded enough to hand "security" duties to some random rapper and his posse immediately shot up a SUV for looking at them weird, at which point the kids mad at their dad ran back home with their tail between their legs and any longevity to their movement was shortly sapped.
wait are you telling me that white people are the secret sauce? That black people need white protestors or else things fall apart? Noooo stallker child just look at south africa
 
Back
Top Bottom