Yesterday’s News 2025 09 26

curated news excerpts & citations


the match and the flame

Adam Kinzinger: Trump’s Words Are Fueling Violence: Why Leaders Must Step Up

America needs calming leadership—not reckless blame and division.

Donald Trump’s words are not harmless bluster. They shape the national mood and, too often, the behavior of those listening. The danger of that rhetoric became starkly clear again with the last two politically charged shootings, including the attack on an ICE facility in Dallas yesterday. Instead of urging patience or unity, prominent voices on the right quickly blamed “the left,” painting millions of Americans as complicit. This is more than cynical politics—it is reckless and destructive.

A president’s job is not to pour gasoline on a fire. From Washington to Lincoln, from FDR to Reagan, presidents have generally recognized their unique power to calm the country when passions run hot. Even when they were deeply partisan, they understood the office carries an unwritten duty to keep violence from escalating. Trump is the first modern president who openly rejects that responsibility. He thrives on the spectacle of grievance, fueling division with each rally chant and social media post.

If Donald Trump will not meet this basic standard of leadership, others must.

(Adam Kinzinger more…)

Mary Geddry: From Stone Age Warnings to Jet Age Salesmanship

While the world tuned in to the United Nations General Assembly this week, the split-screen was almost too on the nose. On one side, Colombian President Gustavo Petro warned that “a kind of stone age has descended on all of humankind,” with missiles raining on unarmed youth in the Caribbean, Gaza in ruins, Ukraine locked in attrition, and humanity sliding backward under the weight of violence. …

And then there was Donald Trump, flexing for Erdoğan like a salesman on commission.

Thom Hartmann: Putin and Trump: When Cowards Play with Matches

Noah Berlatsky: What Counts as Political Violence?

State violence is political violence, too.


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *