For The Nation‘s Katrina vanden Heuvel, Loughner’s act was "an assassination of democracy, an armed assault on citizens gathered to exercise the most precious of American rights—the right to free speech and assembly." After Loughner made his first appearance before a federal court in Phoenix Monday, vanden Heuvel argues that, "Nothing is more corrosive to democracy than the use of violence to terrorize the public square, to shut down speech, to slay those seeking its exercise."
But in a culture awash in violence, in which poverty is spreading and mental illness gets too little treatment, the underlying causes of violent acts threatening to poison our democracy demand closer examination: "the violent imagery at Palin’s Web site should be of less concern than the real cross hairs of guns readily available across the land," vanden Heuvel argues; "the vitriol of politics of less concern than the shrinking opportunities in our economy; the passions of partisans less dangerous than the absence of help for the mentally unstable among us."
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