This week, a Wisconsin jury will be asked to decide the fate of 18-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse, who is charged with shooting three men, killing two of them and injuring one, in the midst of a protest against excessive use of force by police. (Rittenhouse claims he was acting in self-defense when he fired all of the shots.)
Wisconsin’s governor has already authorized deployment of 500 National Guard troops to Kenosha ahead of any verdict announcement.
But I’m not particularly focused on the jury’s verdict; instead, I’ll be watching our reaction to it. That’s because our response to a duly rendered jury decision while we’re already at a violent flashpoint in America will speak volumes about the future of our institutions and the rule of law. So far, the signs aren’t good.
Wisconsin’s governor has already authorized deployment of 500 National Guard troops to Kenosha ahead of any verdict announcement, and in Chicago — over 65 miles away — the police department has canceled leave for its officers. Those actions make sense because threat intelligence includes reporting that an alleged right-wing extremist group, Kenosha Strong Patriots, shared the home address of Rittenhouse prosecutor Thomas Binger, causing him to implement security measures. Police also spotted someone video-recording jurors in the trial as they stepped onto a bus, leading officers to take the person’s cellphone and delete the video. And on the social media platform Telegram, someone in the Kenosha Strong Patriots group room seemed to predict that the far left, not the right, would act out violently after the verdict:
“Praying for you all. And especially for Kyle. I hope you prepare for staying home for a couple weeks while the left wages war on your city. Just like how feds setup Jan 6, I don’t want them to use you to tarnish our movement. We can’t take the bait. Love you all.”
But these security concerns are merely a manifestation of the increasingly malevolent nature of many in our society. If your instincts are telling you we’re living in increasingly threatening times — the evidence supports what you’re sensing. Last week, the Department of Homeland Security issued a warning about increasing concerns over violence and threats by domestic extremists against Congress, schools and health officials. The Capitol Police Department reported that threats against members of Congress have more than doubled this year over last year.
A recent New York Times article spoke of the “mainstreaming of menace” across GOP leadership:








