Month: June 2025

The Third Rail > 2025 > June
America’s Right Wing Is in Denial About Its Violence

America’s Right Wing Is in Denial About Its Violence

For years I tolerated the right-wing narrative that political violence in America is some sort of “both sides” issue. That Antifa is just as bad as white supremacists. That January 6th was a false flag. That Islamic terrorism is the only real kind. I’m done tolerating the lies.

Here’s the truth — backed by data from across multiple newsrooms, the FBI, and terrorism trackers like CSIS and the ADL: right-wing political violence absolutely dominates the ideological homicide landscape in the United States.

Let’s look at the actual killings — not rhetoric, not protests, not property damage, but cold-blooded murder for political or religious ideology.


Recent Ideological Murders in the U.S. (2019–2025)

MotivationIncidentFatalitiesNotes
Right-wingBuffalo, NY – May 202210White supremacist targeted Black shoppers; “Great Replacement” ideology.
Allen, TX – May 20238Neo-Nazi shooter wore “RWDS” patch, posted racist manifestos.
Jacksonville, FL – Aug 20233Racially motivated hate crime at Dollar General.
Left-wingPortland, OR – Aug 20201Antifa supporter killed Patriot Prayer member.
Islamic extremistNew Orleans, LA – Jan 202514Pledged loyalty to ISIS, carried out mass killing on Bourbon Street.
OtherJersey City, NJ – Dec 20194Black Hebrew Israelite antisemitic attack on kosher market.

Pattern: Right-Wing Terror Is the Bulk of It

Let me be blunt: if you still think left-wing violence is the main threat, you’re either in a cult or unwilling to face facts. Right-wing terrorism in the U.S. is the most consistent and deadly category of ideologically-motivated murder. The data’s not close. The Buffalo massacre, the Allen mall shooting, and the Jacksonville hate crime all came from right-wing ideologies that are cultivated in online echo chambers and defended by bad-faith media.

But what about Antifa? Well, there’s exactly one confirmed Antifa murder in recent history — the 2020 Portland shooting of a Patriot Prayer member. That’s it. One. Is that okay? No. But it’s not comparable. If you think it is, you’re not analyzing — you’re rationalizing.


January 6th Was Not a False Flag. Stop Being an Idiot.

The number of people I’ve heard claim January 6th was “staged by the left” is staggering. If it were staged… why did Trump literally pardon them? Why are dozens of these goons proudly posting selfies and livestreaming their sedition? Why did so many Republicans suddenly backtrack after it happened?

It wasn’t staged. It was a failed insurrection, fueled by lies, egged on by the President, and supported by a militant undercurrent in the American right wing that wants authoritarianism when it suits them.


Yes, Islamic Terror Still Exists. And Moderate Muslims Need to Reckon With That.

I’m not giving Islamism a pass. The 2025 Bourbon Street mass murder was straight-up ISIS-inspired terror. And the U.S. Muslim population — around 1% — has produced a disproportionate share of lethal ideological violence over the past two decades. That’s real. That’s a problem.

But it doesn’t let right-wing Christians off the hook. Moderate Muslims and moderate Christians need to stop acting like they can passively disown the radicals while still defending the culture that nurtures them.

Religion gives people meaning — and, when left unchecked, it gives radicals moral license to murder. That goes for jihadists, incel shooters citing Bible verses, and Black Hebrew Israelites gunning down Jews.


Final Word: Enough With the Bothsidesism

I’m tired of polite conversations that pretend left-wing and right-wing extremism are equally dangerous in America. They are not. We’ve got dead bodies piling up from one side far more than the other. This isn’t about winning a debate — it’s about stopping a national delusion.

If you’re still pretending otherwise in 2025, you’re not conservative. You’re complicit.

Will ICE Turn Into the Kempeitai?

Will ICE Turn Into the Kempeitai?

✨ The Paradox of Politeness and Brutality

Japan is a society often admired for its intense social order, humility, and almost pathological politeness. People bow instead of argue. Conflicts are defused through silence, not aggression. And yet, this same culture birthed one of the most feared and sadistic military police forces in 20th century history: the Kempeitai.

For American readers unfamiliar with the term, the Kempeitai were Japan’s military police from the late 19th century through World War II. Nominally tasked with enforcing discipline and protecting national security, they became infamous for arbitrary arrests, torture, forced confessions, and ideological cleansing. In occupied territories—especially Korea, China, and Southeast Asia—they operated as a kind of unregulated secret police. Their mission wasn’t law enforcement. It was control through fear.

🕵️ ICE and the Specter of Historical Repetition

What does this have to do with the United States and ICE?

Everything.

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) was created in the wake of 9/11, as part of a national security reorganization. But its operational focus has increasingly drifted from security toward the use of psychological fear as a compliance tool—targeting undocumented workers, not employers, and using militarized raids that disproportionately affect the poor, the brown, and the voiceless.

Despite this, ICE does not conduct high-profile raids at elite institutions. You won’t see agents in tactical gear storming a country club kitchen in a wealthy neighborhood or seizing workers from a Fortune 500 retailer. Instead, they hit mom-and-pop restaurants, construction crews, and trailer parks. Not because those are the biggest offenders—but because they can.

Why? Because status insulates. Because real enforcement would trigger political backlash. Because it’s easier to terrify the vulnerable than to confront power.

⚠️ How Institutions Turn Cruel

This is where the real danger lies. Institutions like ICE don’t fall into cruelty—they recruit into it. The more visible the tactics of domination become, the more they attract a specific kind of personality: men drawn to power displays, unbothered by moral ambiguity, and thrilled by the optics of control. The empathetic quietly walk away. What remains is a culture increasingly shaped by those who enjoy the work—not in spite of the fear it causes, but because of it. Over time, enforcement morphs into ideology, and cruelty into identity.

And once that loop takes hold, cruelty stops being a mistake. It becomes policy.

The parallels to the Kempeitai are not exact. But they are real. The Kempeitai started as law enforcers and became instruments of state terror, powered not just by command, but by culture. ICE is still in its early stages—but the signs are flashing red:

  • Tactical raids meant to intimidate rather than apprehend.
  • Public confusion between legality and performative enforcement.
  • A labor market that depends on undocumented workers while criminalizing their existence.
  • A recruiting pattern that favors domination over empathy.

ICE is not yet the Kempeitai. But the vector is visible. And it won’t correct itself.

❗ A Warning, Not a Prediction

The question isn’t “Can ICE turn into the Kempeitai?” They can.

The question is: What will stop them?

Something had better.

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