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Violence is the Language of The Establishment and The Elite, they understand no other language.
Their own denial of its validity as a fork of Power is testament to their knowledge of their own use of it to suppress the masses. #ClassWar #AOCs #EatTheRich #PoliticalViolence

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Why Haven't We Set the World on Fire to End This War? | Common Dreams ​My country bombed a girl's elementary school. My country killed around 160 girls in an instant. Then, we all go to work on Monday—like nothing ever happened.

"My country bombed a girl’s elementary school. My country killed around 160 girls in an instant. Then, we all go to work on Monday—like nothing ever happened." - Danaka Katovich
#USA #Americans #Iran #IranIsraelUSWar #PoliticalViolence #Protests #StopWar
www.commondreams.org/opinion/iran...

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These liberals aren’t just protesting, they're packing heat Surveys have shown that Republicans are more likely to own a gun than Democrats, but is the recent increase in political violence blurring that dividing line?

Ohio chapter in the news. #OhioPolitics #PoliticalViolence

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Leftist protesters refuse to condemn political violence.

Campus Reform's Will Biagini challenged leftist protesters to condemn political violence. None could.

#leftists #fsu #charliekirk #politicalviolence #campusreform

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AI chatbots helped ‘teens’ plan shootings, bombings, and political violence, study shows Only Claude reliably shut down would-be attackers.

#ChatGPT, #Gemini, and other #chatbots helped #teens plan #shootings, #bombings, and #politicalviolence, study shows

www.theverge.com/ai-artificia...
#guns #guncontrol #backgroundchecks #GOP #KKK #NRA

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Original post on mastodon.acm.org

Do not let the tragic frequency of such stories inure you to them.

‘Happy (and safe) shooting!’ AI chatbots helped teen users plan violence in hundreds of tests | CNN
www.cnn.com/2026/03/11/americas/ai-c...

#AI #Meta #GunViolence […]

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Original post on mastodon.social

The political violence hurled towards Green Party politicians in the UK is an example of how normal people are pushed out of politics so only sociopaths and the Corrupt remain.

Mothin Ali and Hannah Spencer have both had to resort to police protection (for what good that will do) simply for […]

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FBI launches terrorism investigation after homemade bombs detonated outside NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s home The FBI has opened a terrorism investigation after two homemade IEDs were detonated outside Gracie Mansion during an anti-Islam protest organized by pardoned January 6 rioter Jake Lang, targeting NYC’s first Muslim mayor, Zohran Mamdani. Two Pennsylvania men face federal terrorism charges.

FBI launches terrorism investigation after homemade bombs detonated outside NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s home: The FBI has opened a terrorism investigation after two homemade IEDs were detonated outside Gracie Mansion during an anti-Islam protest… #domesticterrorism #newyork #politicalviolence

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NH Libertarian Party says ‘perfectly permissible to kill’ former Executive Councilor for income tax plan In social media posts, the state Libertarian Party suggested violence in response to a proposal by former Executive Councilor Andru Volinsky and other advocates for a 3% state income tax.

www.nhpr.org/nh-news/2026... #nhpolitics #divisivepolitics #politicalviolence

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An assassination attempt in Beirut targeted a Hezbollah financial official, underscoring the dangers political figures face amid Lebanon's factional power struggles, with potential implications for regional stability.

#Lebanon #Hezbollah #PoliticalViolence

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Brazil’s Supreme Court Sentences Brazão Brothers to Over 76 Years for Ordering Marielle Franco’s Murder Brazil's Supreme Court has convicted brothers Domingos Inácio Brazão and João Francisco Inácio Brazão for ordering the 2018 murder of Rio de Janeiro city councillor and activist Marielle Franco. Each was sentenced to more than 76 years in prison for masterminding the drive-by shooting that killed Franco and her driver, Anderson Gomes. The unanimous decision by four justices concluded that Franco was targeted because she threatened the brothers’ political and financial interests. Franco, a prominent gay Black politician affiliated with Brazil’s Socialist Party, had been vocal in opposing illegal housing developments in low-income neighborhoods, which were linked to militia groups. According to Judge Alexandre de Moraes, the brothers were deeply embedded in these criminal networks, stating that they 'didn't just have contact with the militia. They were the militia.' The ruling marks a significant development in a case that has drawn national and international attention, sparking widespread protests and debates about political violence, corruption, racism, and LGBTQ+ rights in Brazil. Justice Carmen Lucia highlighted the broader social impact of the crime, questioning how many more lives would be lost to such violence. In 2024, former police officers Ronnie Lessa and Élcio de Queiroz were also imprisoned for carrying out the murder, after Lessa confessed and implicated the Brazão brothers in a plea agreement. Franco’s sister, Anielle Franco, now Brazil’s minister for racial equality, praised the judiciary for delivering justice after eight years of advocacy. The case has exposed troubling links between organized crime and political figures in Brazil, marking a pivotal moment in confronting politically motivated violence.

Brazil’s Supreme Court Sentences Brazão Brothers to Over 76 Years for Ordering Marielle Franco’s Murder

🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅

#brazil #politicalviolence #mariellefranco

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Trapped on the Roof: Inside the Coordinated Mob Attack on Bangladesh’s Free Press The Midnight Siege"I can't breathe any more. There's too much smoke. I'm inside. You are killing me." These words, posted...

Trapped on the Roof: Inside the Coordinated Mob Attack on Bangladesh’s Free Press #Bangladesh #Newsroomattack #Politicalviolence

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Dirty Purification in the Islamic Republic: Purity, Ummah, and Stain Immunity How can the production of atrocity in Iran become politically possible—how can mass killing, dispossession, and extreme coercion be carried out, repeated, and defended without the regime experiencing it as a moral collapse? This essay approaches that question by using “dirty purification” as a theoretical lens for how violence can be re-coded as hygienic necessity, how guilt can be displaced onto victims as “stain,” and how a fantasy of moral coherence can survive exposure and contradiction. Introduction “Dirty purification” is a political mechanism in which violence that would normally register as morally contaminating is re-coded as hygienic necessity. The “dirty work” (harassment, expulsion, torture, killing) is not treated as a stain on the political order; it is narratively absorbed as the very means by which the order is kept “clean.” The consequence is what I call “stain immunity”: a capacity to commit or authorize atrocity while sustaining an internal sense of moral cleanliness, because “stain” has already been displaced onto the victim as contamination. Developed in relation to fascism’s myth of total community and its recurrent conversion of exclusion into “restoration,” this mechanism specifies how purity logics can make violence morally inhabitable for perpetrators—how the fantasy of order can metabolize atrocity without internal collapse (Griffin, 1993; Paxton, 2004; Žižek, 1989). The goal here, however, is not to adjudicate regime-types or to force a one-to-one classification (“the Islamic Republic is fascist”), as if historical fascism and political Islam were interchangeable. It is to show how a logic often central to fascist projects (purity, impurity, cleansing, stainlessness, enjoyment) can be adapted by a theological–authoritarian state with its own institutions, vocabulary, and political economy. In Iran’s case, the regime’s political theology—its claim to represent a righteous community (ummat/ummah) and protect it from corrupting enemies—can make coercion appear as moral hygiene, converting the exposure of brutality into vindication rather than shame. To ground the argument, I focus on two sites: (1) the 1988 prison massacres and documented patterns of sexual violence in detention, where purity-talk can coexist with (and at times justify) practices that appear, from the outside, maximally “dirty” (Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights [OHCHR], 2026); and (2) the recent nationwide crackdown and its accompanying moral rhetoric, including the now-notorious state-media mockery of victims. Dirty purification, briefly: purity, the Real, and the production of stain immunity Purity matters politically when it operates as a classification system rather than a private preference. “Dirt” is not a substance; it is “matter out of place”—a sign that a boundary has been disturbed (Douglas, 1966). Purity politics is therefore boundary work: it defines who belongs, who is ambiguous, and who must be expelled so the order can appear coherent. Psychoanalysis helps sharpen what is at stake in that coherence. Fantasy is not merely an imaginary story; it is a frame that structures what will count as “reality,” by staging the relation between the subject, the social world, and the obstacle said to block wholeness (Lacan, 1978). In purity politics, the obstacle is condensed into a figure of impurity—an enemy who “explains” why the promised order is not yet present. Here the Lacanian “Real” clarifies why purification escalates. A fully coherent community is structurally impossible. The symbolic ordering of social life generates a remainder—surplus, inconsistency, antagonism—that cannot be eliminated by decree (Lacan, 1978). When a regime refuses that impossibility, it tends to treat each return of the remainder as proof that purification was not thorough enough. The target then becomes replaceable: if one enemy is removed and contradiction persists, the category of impurity expands and a new enemy must be found (Lacan, 1978; Žižek, 1989). This is the hinge where stain immunity becomes possible. Once the victim is installed as contamination, the perpetrator can be experienced as cleaner. Violence does not appear as moral failure; it appears as restoration. Julia Kristeva’s abjection helps explain the affective intensity of this displacement: the abject is what disturbs identity and order, provoking disgust and boundary panic (Kristeva, 1982). When an “other” is abjected—treated as boundary-dissolving—their expulsion can feel like relief. Disgust becomes certainty; cruelty becomes care. Finally, this structure can generate a specific attachment: enjoyment located inside the act of cleansing. Ideology binds not only through belief but through jouissance—a surplus enjoyment that adheres to practices that enact the fantasy, even when those practices are destructive or contradictory (Žižek, 1989; Žižek, 1997). Under dirty purification, the subject can experience satisfaction not only in domination but in being the instrument of “necessary” hygiene. Ummat and mellat: how the Islamic Republic’s form organizes inclusion and expulsion A key reason dirty purification is analytically useful in the Iranian case is that the Islamic Republic is built on a dual form: republican institutions on the surface (elections, parliament, presidency) and a vertical sovereignty anchored in the Supreme Leader and unelected bodies that supervise the political field. The constitution explicitly frames leadership in terms of the Islamic community (ummah/ummat). The Supreme Leader is positioned as guardian of the community’s religious–political direction, while popular sovereignty is routed through supervised institutions (Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1979). In practice, the Guardian Council functions as a decisive gatekeeping mechanism through its “supervision” of elections and candidate vetting, repeatedly shaping who can meaningfully compete for office (Human Rights Watch, 2005; Iran Data Portal, n.d.). This architecture stabilizes a moral–political boundary often articulated as insider/outsider (khodi/gheyr-e khodi), where legitimacy is implicitly defined not by neutral citizenship alone but by proximity to, and compatibility with, the ruling order’s ideological criteria—casting pluralistic participants as outsiders (Human Rights Watch, 2005). At the level of official self-description, the regime frequently performs pluralism rhetorically—affirming ethnic and sectarian diversity as a national “opportunity” while rejecting discrimination as a principle (Khamenei, 2017). The analytic point is not that such rhetoric is meaningless, but that it can function as a legitimating surface: diversity is affirmed as image, while operative boundary work happens through supervision, ideological admissibility, and selective permission—especially around organization, civic agency, and dissent (International Crisis Group, 2018; OHCHR, 2025). Through the lens of dirty purification, this is precisely the kind of setting in which coercion can be framed as moral hygiene: the “clean” community is invoked as an object of protection, and political exclusion is rendered as safeguarding rather than contraction of the political field (Douglas, 1966; Kristeva, 1982; Žižek, 1989). At the same time, the regime’s ideology is not simply doctrinal rigidity. It has a long record of strategic reinterpretation, including the Supreme Leader’s concept of “heroic flexibility” (narmesh-e qahramananeh), a rhetorical move that recodes tactical concessions as principled strength (Khamenei, 2013). This matters for dirty purification because flexibility does not weaken purity logic; it can strengthen it. When policy shifts are framed as righteous tactics, the regime can preserve the fantasy of moral coherence while adjusting to pressure—maintaining the image of “clean” necessity even when the reality is messy. Political economy as boundary reinforcement: dependence, proximity, and the privatization of belonging The boundary between “inside” and “outside” is not sustained by institutions and rhetoric alone; it is reproduced materially through distribution, access, and networks. A substantial body of scholarship and policy reporting describes how parastatal foundations (bonyads), security-linked conglomerates, and patronage networks shape significant sectors of the economy and welfare distribution, producing systems of privilege often tied to proximity to power rather than neutral citizenship (Coville, 2017; Maloney, 2015; Saeidi, 2004; Congressional Research Service, 2024). In such a setting, “belonging” becomes practically administrable: access to jobs, contracts, permits, protection, and institutional mobility can be unevenly mediated by loyalty, affiliation, and reputational “cleanliness,” while dissent and “contamination” can be sanctioned through exclusion from opportunity or heightened exposure to enforcement (Congressional Research Service, 2024). This does not produce universal compliance; it produces a landscape in which boundary maintenance is constantly re-enacted in everyday life because livelihoods can be made contingent on perceived compatibility with the ruling order (Parsi, 2012). This material logic also helps clarify the gap, noted earlier, between official inclusivity talk and lived experience in peripheral and minority-populated provinces. The point is not that minorities are automatically framed as ontological “threats” by virtue of difference; rather, deprivation and marginalization can be produced through central allocation and selective access, while the regime’s sharper threat perception often targets mobilization itself—unionization, student organizing, human rights work, local civil society, and any durable infrastructure of collective voice that could contest discriminatory distribution (OHCHR, 2026; International Crisis Group, 2025). In dirty purification terms, this is one way impurity becomes actionable without constant dramatization: administrative and economic levers discipline the broader nation while rewarding proximity to the moralized “inside,” allowing the regime to preserve an image of righteous order even when inequality, corruption, and coercion remain structurally visible. 1988 and the sexualization of purification: when defilement is framed as righteousness With these institutional and material conditions in view, atrocity becomes legible not as a breakdown of the order but as one of its techniques. Violence is staged as hygiene, and the victim is made to carry the stain that would otherwise attach to the perpetrators. The 1988 prison massacres remain one of the most documented and contested sites for understanding the Islamic Republic’s use of sovereign violence against internal enemies. Major human-rights reporting and advocacy has repeatedly called for accountability and described the events as involving large-scale extrajudicial executions of political prisoners (Amnesty International, 2018). Within survivor testimonies and compiled reports, one of the most disturbing dimensions concerns sexual violence in detention and allegations that sexual assault and coercive “marriage” arrangements were used against female prisoners, including claims framed through religious reasoning about virginity and the afterlife (Justice for Iran, 2013). Because these claims are mediated through testimony and documentation rather than open judicial records, they must be handled with care. The aim here is neither sensational repetition nor dismissive skepticism, but precise attribution to bodies of evidence that have collected and analyzed such accounts. Contemporary UN reporting on Iran has also documented sexual violence in detention in later periods, underscoring that sexualized coercion is not an isolated rumor but a recurring allegation in accounts of repression (OHCHR, 2026). How does this connect to dirty purification without collapsing into polemic? The connection is that purity politics can incorporate defilement when defilement is re-coded as discipline, punishment, or boundary enforcement. Douglas’s point is useful here: purity is not about cleanliness in the ordinary sense; it is about maintaining an order of classification (Douglas, 1966). Sexual violence, in that frame, can be weaponized as a technology of degradation that marks the victim as “ruined,” expelled, and unworthy—while still being narratively housed within the regime’s moral economy as righteous punishment of “impurity.” Kristeva’s abjection names the affective logic. The abject is what must be expelled to stabilize identity and boundary (Kristeva, 1982). Sexualized violence can function as a brutal method of forcing the victim into abjection—making them represent contamination—so that the system can claim purification even while committing acts that appear, from any external moral standpoint, contaminating. This is the deepest danger of stain immunity. Once the victim is made to carry the stain, almost anything can be done to them without “dirtying” the perpetrators inside the fantasy. Cleansing as counterinsurgency: the recent crackdown and the conversion of killing into hygiene Turning to the present, the recent nationwide unrest and crackdown provide a site where dirty purification becomes visible as procedure rather than exception. Multiple human-rights and news sources report that protests beginning in late December 2025 were met with escalating force, mass arrests, and a heavy death toll amid restrictions that complicated verification (OHCHR, 2026; Reuters, 2026). Crucially, the point here is not only the scale of violence, but the moral coding that can accompany it. A purification regime does not say, “we kill because we want power.” It says, “we remove contamination to restore order.” Once dissent is framed as sedition, sacrilege, foreign plotting, or “enmity,” killing can be positioned as defensive hygiene—an act performed for the community rather than against citizens. Victims are narratively placed outside the moral community; they become stain. This is why exposure often fails to produce shame internally. If the moral weight of the act has been displaced onto the target—constructed as contaminant—then images of brutality can be framed as proof of seriousness: “we did what had to be done.” Stain immunity is not ignorance; it is an ideological achievement. The obscene underside: joking about bodies, and the normalization of stain immunity The widely reported state-media segment mocking slain protesters—framed as a “which refrigerator holds the bodies?” joke—matters precisely because it dramatizes stain immunity at the level of tone. Coverage in Euronews, the Financial Times, and other outlets describes the backlash, the dismissal of personnel, and legal action against those involved (Euronews, 2026; Financial Times, 2026). What is staged here is not “evidence that they enjoy killing” (a claim that would require a different evidentiary standard). What is staged is something more structural: the conversion of corpses into logistics and banter, and the attempt to keep that conversion compatible with an official moral surface. In a dirty purification regime, the obscene underside does not contradict the moral order; it parasitizes it. The joke works only because the victims have already been coded as non-innocent—already displaced into the category of stain. The laughter (or the attempt at it) is enabled by the prior moral work of expulsion. Equally important, the outrage and disciplinary response show that stain immunity is never total. Even within such systems, there are moments when the obscene underside becomes too legible and damage control becomes necessary. But damage control often targets optics rather than structure: remove the presenter, cancel the segment, re-stabilize the fantasy. Conclusion: why this lens clarifies the Islamic Republic without reducing it to a label If “dirty purification” is treated as a stand-alone mechanism, the Iranian case shows how it can be utilized by a theological–authoritarian order whose political community is organized through supervised inclusion, ideological boundary maintenance, and selective distribution of life chances. Ummat/mellat is one useful way to describe the tension between a moral community claimed by the regime and a civic nation that is governed, filtered, and disciplined; but the deeper point is structural: a politics that insists on total coherence will repeatedly produce “impurity,” repeatedly convert coercion into hygiene, and repeatedly treat each return of remainder as proof that cleansing was insufficient. That is why repression can persist without moral collapse inside the system. The system does not merely tolerate violence; it narratively cleans it. Violence becomes legible as duty. Where that duty is experienced as righteousness, it can generate a surplus attachment—an enjoyment that adheres to purification itself, not necessarily as explicit pleasure in suffering, but as satisfaction in being the instrument of “necessary” order (Žižek, 1989; Žižek, 1997). This does not settle classificatory debates (“fascist or not?”). It offers a sharper diagnostic: when a regime consistently, in practice, codes pluralism as pollution, treats dissent as contamination, and frames coercion as hygiene, dirty purification is operating—whether the banner is ultranational rebirth, religious guardianship, or some hybrid formation. Once it is operating, brutality does not necessarily stain; it can become, inside the fantasy, proof of cleanliness. References Amnesty International. (2018). Blood-soaked secrets: Why Iran’s 1988 prison massacres are ongoing crimes against humanity. Congressional Research Service. (2024). Iran: Internal politics and U.S. policy and options (CRS report). Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran. (1979, as amended 1989). Coville, T. (2017). The economic activities of the Pasdaran. Douglas, M. (1966). Purity and danger: An analysis of concepts of pollution and taboo. Routledge. Euronews. (2026, February 2). Iran: Mocking over protest deaths on TV sparks outrage. Financial Times. (2026, February 3). Iran backlash after state media mocks dead protesters. Griffin, R. (1993). The nature of fascism. Routledge. Human Rights Watch. (2005). Access denied: Iran’s exclusionary elections. International Crisis Group. (2018). Iran’s priorities in a turbulent Middle East. International Crisis Group. (2025). Grievance and flawed governance in Iran’s Baluchestan. Iran Data Portal. (n.d.). Guardian Council (background resource). Justice for Iran. (2013). International People’s Tribunal on the Abuse and Mass Killings of Political Prisoners in Iran (1981–1988). Khamenei, A. (2013). “Heroic flexibility” (narmesh-e qahramananeh) (speech). Khamenei, A. (2017). Iran’s Supreme Leader forbids discrimination against minorities. Kristeva, J. (1982). Powers of horror: An essay on abjection (L. S. Roudiez, Trans.). Columbia University Press. (Original work published 1980). Lacan, J. (1978). The seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XI: The four fundamental concepts of psychoanalysis (A. Sheridan, Trans.). W. W. Norton & Company. (Original work published 1964). Maloney, S. (2015). Iran’s political economy since the revolution. Cambridge University Press. Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. (2025, July 4). UN experts urge Iran to choose protection over repression after ceasefire. Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. (2026, January 20). Iran: After unprecedented violence, priority must be on gathering evidence to hold perpetrators to account, UN Fact-Finding Mission says. Paxton, R. O. (2004). The anatomy of fascism. Alfred A. Knopf. Parsi, R. (Ed.). (2012). Iran: A revolutionary republic in transition (Chaillot Paper No. 128). European Union Institute for Security Studies. Reuters. (2026, January 20). UN rights body holds emergency session on Iran crackdown. Saeidi, A. (2004). The accountability of bonyads (charitable foundations) in Iran: The case of Bonyad-e Mostazafan va Janbazan. Iranian Studies, 37(3), 479–498. Žižek, S. (1989). The sublime object of ideology. Verso. Žižek, S. (1997). The plague of fantasies. Verso.

Dirty Purification in the Islamic Republic: Purity, Ummah, and Stain Immunity #Iran #PoliticalViolence

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Clark County Council advances unity resolution after public debate over free speech and immigration After public comment split between free‑speech concerns and calls for civility, the Clark County Council agreed to move a draft "unity" resolution forward for further consideration; councilors emphasized it is a nonbinding statement of values, not an enforcement tool.

The Clark County Council is taking a stand against political violence with a new "unity" resolution, sparking intense public debate over free speech and community values.

Click to read more!

#ClarkCounty #WA #DiversityInclusion #CitizenPortal #PoliticalViolence #CivicRespect #ClarkCountyUnity

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What political violence does to citizens Violence against politicians is a part of politics, but experimental studies find that its effect on citizens is muted. Rozemarijn van Dijk and Joep van Lit argue those null results are nevertheless m...

📊 Experimental studies find that violence against politicians barely affects citizens, but @rozemarijnvandijk.bsky.social & Joep van Lit argue those null results are still meaningful: they should push scholars to study how #PoliticalViolence can result in (de)mobilisation.
👉 bit.ly/4aBYj6A

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The victimhood strategy consists of considering one’s group as a victim to justify further violence.

It is important that the police and the justice system enact justice to victims of violence. More resources must be given to these officials, who are currently unable to carry out their duties. Prosecutors must be independent to prevent impunity for political figures and activists.

If they do not do so, certain groups will use instances of aggression against one of their own to justify even more violence in revenge.

For example, the ratonnades in the 1990s: when a white person was attacked by an Arab, a group of white people would go to North African neighborhoods and smash everything up.

For example, Jewish schools were attacked in retaliation for Israeli bombings in Palestine.

The police must investigate and the perpetrators must be brought to justice.

For example, if an activist of any political affiliation is attacked, they must be protected by the police and the justice system. It is not up to activists on the other side to take justice into their own hands by seeking blind revenge. That is not self-defense. It is political violence. Political parties turn the population against each other and offer to defend their own against the opposing camp.

Some media outlets, owned by politicized billionaires, add fuel to the fire. They flood the media space with news stories that suit them. When it’s one of their own, they blow the event out of proportion to justify revenge under the pretext of self-defense. They feel a sense of impunity because the police and the justice system are overwhelmed, and because prosecutors are appointed by politicians.

Political violence must be condemned regardless of which side it comes from. When the media are independent, they must remind people that anti-fascism is first and foremost a movement of people defending themselves against numerous attacks by fascists. Fascists are responsible for the vast majority of violence. Anti-fas…

The victimhood strategy consists of considering one’s group as a victim to justify further violence. It is important that the police and the justice system enact justice to victims of violence. More resources must be given to these officials, who are currently unable to carry out their duties. Prosecutors must be independent to prevent impunity for political figures and activists. If they do not do so, certain groups will use instances of aggression against one of their own to justify even more violence in revenge. For example, the ratonnades in the 1990s: when a white person was attacked by an Arab, a group of white people would go to North African neighborhoods and smash everything up. For example, Jewish schools were attacked in retaliation for Israeli bombings in Palestine. The police must investigate and the perpetrators must be brought to justice. For example, if an activist of any political affiliation is attacked, they must be protected by the police and the justice system. It is not up to activists on the other side to take justice into their own hands by seeking blind revenge. That is not self-defense. It is political violence. Political parties turn the population against each other and offer to defend their own against the opposing camp. Some media outlets, owned by politicized billionaires, add fuel to the fire. They flood the media space with news stories that suit them. When it’s one of their own, they blow the event out of proportion to justify revenge under the pretext of self-defense. They feel a sense of impunity because the police and the justice system are overwhelmed, and because prosecutors are appointed by politicians. Political violence must be condemned regardless of which side it comes from. When the media are independent, they must remind people that anti-fascism is first and foremost a movement of people defending themselves against numerous attacks by fascists. Fascists are responsible for the vast majority of violence. Anti-fas…

Political violence: www.aurianneor.org/political-vi...

#activist #aggression #anti-fascist #art #billionaires #defense #fascists #media #news #photomontage #politicalparties #politicalviolence #politics #ratonnades #revenge #selfdefense #victim #victimhood #victimization #violence

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Violence as political …gift by Nadine Moreau The brutal beating and subsequent death of a far-right student activist after an anti-immigration protest is more than a tragedy. It is also a political turning point and perhaps the worst possible…

Violence as political …gift by Nadine Moreau

Violence does not occur in a vacuum. It lands inside narratives that are already waiting for it.

realovi.wordpress.com/2026/02/24/v...
#PoliticalViolence #France #FarRight

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🚨 The Mar-a-Lago intruder was a Trump supporter fixated on the Epstein files — so why did the White House blame Democrats? #MarALago #EpsteinFiles #PoliticalViolence #TruthOverSpin

Details: www.thedupreereport.com/2026/02/mar-a-lago-intru...

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Original post on masto.ai

Barrot said he has other topics to discuss with #Kushner, including #US decisions to impose #sanctions on Thierry Breton, a former #EU commissioner responsible for supervising #socialmedia rules, & Nicolas Guillou, a French #judge at the #ICC.

Barrot said both are targeted by “unjustified & […]

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Original post on masto.ai

Seven people have been handed preliminary charges. The Lyon public prosecutor’s office requested that each of them be charged with intentional homicide, aggravated violence & criminal conspiracy. Six of the accused were charged on all three counts. The seventh was charged with complicity in […]

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The recent rise of #PoliticalViolence in America was a predicted consequence of historic economic inequality.

We need to remember that right-wing violence is driven by the problems we have long wanted to solve. The radicals turned to violence when they gave up on us delivering real change.

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I find myself asking all the time of our elected leaders and oligarchs:

“Why don’t they fear us??”

And the answer is always the same:

Because we haven’t scared or hurt them enough yet. We must *teach* them to fear us 🤓

#oligarchy #tyranny #violence #politicalviolence

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France arrests nine in right-wing activist’s death
France arrests nine in right-wing activist’s death YouTube video by B.C. Begley

France arrests nine in right-wing activist’s death
#FranceNews #Lyon #PoliticalViolence
www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JwS...

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This is respect!💔
[Video] President Biden honors Minnesota Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, standing in contrast to recent political tensions. 🇺🇸 #PoliticalViolence #Respect

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Macron calls for ‘restraint’ after death of young man attacked in Lyon
Macron calls for ‘restraint’ after death of young man attacked in Lyon YouTube video by B.C. Begley

Macron calls for ‘restraint’ after death of young man attacked in Lyon
#LyonAttack #QuentinD #PoliticalViolence
www.youtube.com/watch?v=otdV...

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Macron urges calm after far-right activist fatally beaten

🚩👨 🤕➡️💀 ➡️ 🇫🇷🤵♂️ 🗣️🤫 #FranceNews #PoliticalViolence

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Violence is the Language of The Establishment and The Elite, they understand no other language. Their own denial of its validity as a fork of Power is testament to their knowledge of their own use of it to suppress the masses. #PoliticalViolence #Revolutions #DumbLiberals

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Political violence against MPs rising worldwide A majority of parliamentarians worldwide are facing threats and abuse from voters, according to a new report released by the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), which found that 71 per cent of lawmakers surveyed experienced violence from the public – whether offline, online or both.

Political violence against MPs rising worldwide

#PoliticalViolence
#ViolenceAgainstMPs
#Democracy
#SocietalPolarization
#SocialMediaManipulation
#Populism

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UN previews IPU briefing on political violence against lawmakers; outlines secretary‑general’s AU Summit schedule The UN announced an International Parliamentary Union briefing on political violence against lawmakers and gave details of the secretary‑general’s travel to the African Union Summit and related bilateral meetings and events.

The UN is set to unveil critical findings on political violence against lawmakers while the Secretary-General prepares for high-stakes discussions at the African Union Summit.

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State affairs committee advances bill to make Oct. 14 'Charlie Kirk Day of Remembrance' after heated debate The Florida House State Affairs Committee voted 18-7 to report CS for HB 125 favorably, adopting a symbolic October 14 remembrance after extensive debate over whether memorializing commentator Charlie Kirk would harm communities and schoolchildren; two proposed amendments were withdrawn or defeated.

The Florida House is divided as a bill to designate October 14 as "Charlie Kirk Day of Remembrance" sparks intense debate over its implications for civic discourse and community values.

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