When Words Become Weapons: The Climate That Precedes Actual Violence
The attempted attack on President Trump and members of his administration at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner should be a national wake-up call.

Cole Tomas Allen, a 31-year-old man and teacher from Torrance, California, armed himself, positioned himself near one of the most heavily protected events in America, and moved rapidly within range of the President of the United States with deadly intent. Why did he do it? It is becoming rather clear.
Cole Allen’s Manifesto in part:
“And I am no longer willing to permit a pedophile, rapist, and traitor to coat my hands with his crimes.
“I would still go through most everyone here to get to the targets if it were absolutely necessary (on the basis that most people chose to attend a speech by a pedophile, rapist, and traitor, and are thus complicit) but I really hope it doesn’t come to that. . . .
“Turning the other cheek is for when you yourself are oppressed. I’m not the person raped in a detention camp. I’m not the fisherman executed without trial. I’m not a schoolkid blown up or a child starved or a teenage girl abused by the many criminals in this administration. . . .
“I need whoever thinks this way to take a couple minutes and realize that the world isn’t about them. Do you think that when I see someone raped or murdered or abused, I should walk on by because it would be “inconvenient” for people who aren’t the victim? . . .
“Oh and if anyone is curious is how doing something like feels: it’s awful. I want to throw up; I want to cry for all the things I wanted to do and never will, for all the people whose trust this betrays; I experience rage thinking about everything this administration has done. . . .”
This didn’t happen in a vacuum.
For years, the political temperature in this country has been turned up to a dangerous level by leaders on the Left. President Donald J. Trump and those associated with him have not simply been criticized—they have been described, repeatedly, as existential threats to the nation, to democracy, even to the future itself. They are daily called fascists, Nazis, racists, and a real threat to American democracy. The Left has recently begun to attack President Trump on charges of being a “pedophile, rapist, and traitor,” as reflected in the shooter’s manifesto.
That kind of language is not ordinary political disagreement. It is escalation. Violent escalation.
And escalation has consequences.
When public figures are portrayed as uniquely dangerous or contemptible, even inhuman, when the message—implicit or explicit—is that the stakes are so high that normal rules no longer apply, it creates a moral gray zone that unstable individuals can step into. In their minds, they are no longer acting recklessly. They are acting with purpose. Unfortunately, high percentages of those on the Left are becoming emotionally and mentally unstable, as a direct result of purposefully ginned-up rhetoric against those not of their party and Marxist ideals and goals.
This should alarm everyone. Because the pattern is becoming harder to ignore. It is in our face, daily.
What’s the problem? This is how civil wars start. Violence begets violence. Those who fail at the ballot box cannot seize power from the winners by arresting and imprisoning them. They cannot gin up their base to take extreme actions, even assassinations as in the case of Trump and Charlie Kirk, without invoking an ‘equal and opposite reaction’ from those are are being hunted like Soviet dissidents.
Trump and his supporters have exercised tremendous self-restraint over the past ten years, as the Left has vilified them, arrested them, imprisoned them, and killed them. The Left cannot expect such restraint to always win the day. Their violence will eventually produce the inevitable reaction, and that will be a very sad day in history.
In the days leading up to the attack, even the entertainment world dipped into rhetoric that, at best, trivializes the idea of violence. Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel drew backlash after referring to Melania Trump as an “expectant widow” in a monologue just two days before the attack.
This is what normalization looks like. This is how widespread violence is born, and transforms into a national crisis.
Kimmel’s violent rhetoric against the president and his supports is typical of the Left. Not a single statement. Not a single joke. But a steady drumbeat of vitriolic language that strips away restraint, that frames political opponents as something more than opponents—something to be feared, rejected, and, in the worst cases, confronted violently.
And when that drumbeat is constant, it only takes one person to hear it the wrong way.
A serious country should be willing to ask a serious question: What kind of climate makes that step easier to justify in someone’s mind?
This is not about silencing criticism. It is about recognizing that words carry weight—especially when repeated, amplified, and stripped of nuance and humanity.
A political culture that thrives on outrage and absolutism does not stay contained in television studios, social media feeds, or campaign speeches. It seeps outward, like a seething plague.
And sometimes, it shows up at the doors of a ballroom where the President of the United States is speaking, or at his golf course, or at a rally, or a college amphitheater.
If the investigation confirms that the suspect was motivated, even in part, by the belief that he was confronting something larger than himself, something described in the Left’s constant drumbeat of hyperbole, then we are not just dealing with an isolated act. We are dealing with a warning. We are dealing with a civil war that is percolating in the bowels of the American Left.
The question now is whether anyone is willing to hear it. Is there anything that we can do to put the brakes on this runaway train?

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