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A****a assault on Andy Ngo was inevitable and will be repeated.
Jul 5, 2019 23:13:49   #
dtucker300 Loc: Vista, CA
 
“Once you buy into the idea that speech can be violent, the logic defending violence as a means of suppressing speech is almost unassailable.”

https://thefederalist.com/2019/07/02/a****a-assault-andy-ngo-inevitable-will-repeated/

Why The A****a Assault On Andy Ngo Was Inevitable And Will Be Repeated
Once the A****a activists determined that Andy Ngo’s speech is violent, it is both logical and consistent that they would use violence to thwart him.
By Daniella Greenbaum Davis
JULY 2, 2019
Over the weekend, A****a activists in Portland brutally assaulted Andy Ngo, a gay Vietnamese-American editor and photojournalist. Ngo was admitted to the hospital and, as a result of his assault, suffers from a brain bleed, among other things. The attack on Ngo, in an American city, in broad daylight, from a group purporting to care about justice and e******y, should have been inconceivable. Instead, it was inevitable.

My first instinct upon opening Twitter in the wake of his attack was to be outraged at the dearth of journalists and pundits defending Ngo or arguing that violence is never acceptable. But then I thought about it for more than a moment.


Violence is often acceptable. Sometimes it is even admirable. It is entirely ethical to conclude that if someone attacks you, you can use violence to repel his assault. Likewise, if someone or a group of someones were violently assaulting a third party, it would be not only unobjectionable, but heroic, to step in and stop the assault, even if the only way to do so was through the use violence.

This is precisely why the attack on Ngo was inevitable and why, in all likelihood, further attacks, from A****a activists and others, will follow.

Pundits on the right have long rallied against the left’s misuse of words like “unsafe” or “violent.” We have long cautioned that, beyond doing a gross injustice to the English language, these misuses would ultimately beget something worse than an abuse of syntax.

Ngo’s assault — and the reaction to it — is that something worse. Once you buy into the idea that speech can be violent, the logic defending violence as a means of suppressing speech is almost unassailable.


If we agree that, as a general rule, violence is a tool like any other that can, and sometimes should, be wielded in an attempt to quell further violence, then once the A****a activists determined that Ngo’s speech is violent, it is both logical and consistent that they would use violence to thwart him. This is bad news for just about everyone.

Larger and larger segments of society are buying into the notion that speech can be violent. As more people reorient their worldview through this lens, the problem is compounded by a second factor: the kind of speech that counts as violent seems to be perennially expanding. As a result, any group, at any time, can conclude that someone — this time a gay, Asian-American journalist — is violent and must be stopped with violence.

This time it was Ngo. It will almost certainly happen again, to someone else, very soon.

The aftermath of Ngo’s assault has been disturbing, for several reasons. The first and most obvious is the lack of mainstream media coverage this has received. A couple of notable journalists have reported on this, including CNN’s Brian Stelter and Jake Tapper, but overall, this incident is going heavily underreported. If Ngo had been beaten up in the Palestinian Territories instead of in Portland, his assault would be front-page news. It’s not.


The coverage that Ngo is actually getting isn’t all that great, either. A brief perusal of the commentary demonstrates an ironic and profoundly hypocritical reality. It’s common knowledge that blaming victims is the quickest way to make enemies on the left. Ngo seems to have been excluded from this consideration.

The Twitterati have several questions: Why was Ngo there? Didn’t he know A****a could be violent? Doesn’t he bear some responsibility because he’s written so many “violent” things? Had he been a she, had she been wearing a short skirt, had she been raped instead of beaten up, these questions would be not only verboten, but considered violent themselves.

In the meantime, the real violence has gone under-reported and under-criticized. This weekend, A****a did nothing more radical than carry an idea that the left has long been advocating to its logical conclusion. It is unquestionably sensible: the logical end point of calling speech violence is using actual violence to suppress speech. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the end of peaceful society as we have known it.

Daniella Greenbaum Davis, a Spectator columnist, is a writer living in New York. Follow her on Twitter.
Photo Michelle Malkin / YouTube
Andy Ngo a****a assault Crime First Amendment free speech Portland speech violence
Copyright © 2019 The Federalist, a wholly independent division of FDRLST Media, All Rights Reserved.

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Jul 6, 2019 00:30:28   #
EconomistDon
 
dtucker300 wrote:
“Once you buy into the idea that speech can be violent, the logic defending violence as a means of suppressing speech is almost unassailable.”

https://thefederalist.com/2019/07/02/a****a-assault-andy-ngo-inevitable-will-repeated/

Why The A****a Assault On Andy Ngo Was Inevitable And Will Be Repeated
Once the A****a activists determined that Andy Ngo’s speech is violent, it is both logical and consistent that they would use violence to thwart him.
By Daniella Greenbaum Davis
JULY 2, 2019
Over the weekend, A****a activists in Portland brutally assaulted Andy Ngo, a gay Vietnamese-American editor and photojournalist. Ngo was admitted to the hospital and, as a result of his assault, suffers from a brain bleed, among other things. The attack on Ngo, in an American city, in broad daylight, from a group purporting to care about justice and e******y, should have been inconceivable. Instead, it was inevitable.

My first instinct upon opening Twitter in the wake of his attack was to be outraged at the dearth of journalists and pundits defending Ngo or arguing that violence is never acceptable. But then I thought about it for more than a moment.


Violence is often acceptable. Sometimes it is even admirable. It is entirely ethical to conclude that if someone attacks you, you can use violence to repel his assault. Likewise, if someone or a group of someones were violently assaulting a third party, it would be not only unobjectionable, but heroic, to step in and stop the assault, even if the only way to do so was through the use violence.

This is precisely why the attack on Ngo was inevitable and why, in all likelihood, further attacks, from A****a activists and others, will follow.

Pundits on the right have long rallied against the left’s misuse of words like “unsafe” or “violent.” We have long cautioned that, beyond doing a gross injustice to the English language, these misuses would ultimately beget something worse than an abuse of syntax.

Ngo’s assault — and the reaction to it — is that something worse. Once you buy into the idea that speech can be violent, the logic defending violence as a means of suppressing speech is almost unassailable.


If we agree that, as a general rule, violence is a tool like any other that can, and sometimes should, be wielded in an attempt to quell further violence, then once the A****a activists determined that Ngo’s speech is violent, it is both logical and consistent that they would use violence to thwart him. This is bad news for just about everyone.

Larger and larger segments of society are buying into the notion that speech can be violent. As more people reorient their worldview through this lens, the problem is compounded by a second factor: the kind of speech that counts as violent seems to be perennially expanding. As a result, any group, at any time, can conclude that someone — this time a gay, Asian-American journalist — is violent and must be stopped with violence.

This time it was Ngo. It will almost certainly happen again, to someone else, very soon.

The aftermath of Ngo’s assault has been disturbing, for several reasons. The first and most obvious is the lack of mainstream media coverage this has received. A couple of notable journalists have reported on this, including CNN’s Brian Stelter and Jake Tapper, but overall, this incident is going heavily underreported. If Ngo had been beaten up in the Palestinian Territories instead of in Portland, his assault would be front-page news. It’s not.


The coverage that Ngo is actually getting isn’t all that great, either. A brief perusal of the commentary demonstrates an ironic and profoundly hypocritical reality. It’s common knowledge that blaming victims is the quickest way to make enemies on the left. Ngo seems to have been excluded from this consideration.

The Twitterati have several questions: Why was Ngo there? Didn’t he know A****a could be violent? Doesn’t he bear some responsibility because he’s written so many “violent” things? Had he been a she, had she been wearing a short skirt, had she been raped instead of beaten up, these questions would be not only verboten, but considered violent themselves.

In the meantime, the real violence has gone under-reported and under-criticized. This weekend, A****a did nothing more radical than carry an idea that the left has long been advocating to its logical conclusion. It is unquestionably sensible: the logical end point of calling speech violence is using actual violence to suppress speech. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the end of peaceful society as we have known it.

Daniella Greenbaum Davis, a Spectator columnist, is a writer living in New York. Follow her on Twitter.
Photo Michelle Malkin / YouTube
Andy Ngo a****a assault Crime First Amendment free speech Portland speech violence
Copyright © 2019 The Federalist, a wholly independent division of FDRLST Media, All Rights Reserved.
“Once you buy into the idea that speech can be vio... (show quote)


OK, how do you rationalize the A****a attack on the older fellow who just happened to be there when they attacked Ngo? How do you rationalize A****a attacks on the police? How do you rationalize A****a destruction of property when they don't know who's property they are vandalizing? The older fellow, the police, and the property cannot be accused of violent speech. A****a loves to hurt people and destroy things --- period.

I was amused to hear earlier this year when A****a nearly k**led one of their own. They clobbered him with a baseball bat embedded with blades. The cuts went deep into his skull. I guess he should have been wearing his mask so his pals wouldn't mistake him.

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