
A 21-year-old gunman identified as Nasire Best opened fire near a White House security checkpoint Saturday evening while President Donald Trump was inside the White House, according to the Secret Service and multiple reports. Officers returned fire, Best was killed, and a bystander was wounded.
Authorities say Best was already known to law enforcement. He had reportedly attempted to enter the White House complex in 2025, claimed to be Jesus Christ or God, had been sent for psychiatric evaluation, and was under a court order to stay away from the area.
That background matters. This appears, first and foremost, to involve a deeply disturbed man, subject to the incessant violent rhetoric of Democrat leaders.
But Americans are entitled to ask a broader question: What happens when unstable people spend years hearing the president described not merely as wrong, but as Hitler, a dictator, a fascist, a tyrant, and an existential threat to democracy?
CNN reported that social-media accounts linked to Best included a post that threatened violence against Trump, along with another in which he allegedly wrote, “I’m actually the son of God.”
That combination — delusion, obsession, and political targeting — should alarm every serious person in America.
For years, leading Democrats, progressive commentators, celebrities, and corporate media personalities have escalated their language about Trump and his supporters. They have not merely argued that he is a bad president or wrong on policy. They have described him as a unique evil, a monster, an authoritarian menace, and a threat so grave that ordinary politics is insufficient.
Then, when unstable men act on fantasies of violence and saving democracy from the threat, the same voices express shock.

No one should accuse ordinary Democrats of wanting violence. Most Americans across the political spectrum reject assassination attempts and political terror. But elite rhetoric has consequences, especially when repeated relentlessly by people with large platforms.
If public figures tell the country every day that one man is destroying democracy, that he is a fascist, that his supporters are dangerous, and that the nation itself may not survive him, some broken mind may eventually decide that murder is patriotism.
That is not normal politics. It is moral arson.
The Secret Service did its job. The president was unharmed. But America should not treat this as merely another security incident. It is part of a growing pattern of political violence and attempted violence in an atmosphere of national hysteria, whipped up by the lying Left.
The Left cannot spend years portraying Trump as an existential threat and then pretend those words evaporate harmlessly into the air. Not at all. They know what they are doing.
A recent Axios article expressed how Democrats and progressive strategists have openly debated whether the party’s “resistance” to Trump has been too restrained. It reports that internal frustration on the Left has fueled calls for more aggressive confrontation, sharper rhetoric, and a broader willingness to escalate political pressure through violence. No serious democracy can ignore how years of portraying opponents as existential threats, while constantly framing politics as emergency warfare, may help create an atmosphere where unstable minds begin viewing conflict not as debate, but as moral combat.
The investigation will determine exactly what Nasire Best believed and what drove him to fire near the White House. But the country does not need to wait for a final report to say something obvious: A civilization cannot survive if politics becomes a permission structure for violence.

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