Summary
Experts warn that online extremism and US political polarization are fueling radicalization, creating a “perfect storm” for attacks like the ISIS-inspired New Orleans incident.
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a veteran who killed 14 people, followed a pattern of lone-actor radicalization linked to personal grievances.
While the majority of radicalized individuals will not commit acts of terror, the rise in Islamist extremism and the increasing diversity of ideologies pose significant challenges.
The FBI has ramped up efforts to combat domestic terrorism, but the threat remains, with concerns about potential attacks from both the far-right and anti-Trump ideologies.
Because:
And now we can add this to that list:
Heck, “Both sides” ing the issue is probably the best we’re gonig to get now. We’ve already seen coverage at mainstream sites like CNN and MSNBC shift much more favorably towards Trump. Look at what Trump forced ABC to do. I would not be surprised to see a shift in tone where “both sides” isn’t enough any more, and open praise of Trump and criticism of his critics becomes the only way to avoid Trump’s wrath, a-la North Korea state media.
I don’t really disagree except that I think it’s a mix of not wanting to appear biased and actually being biased. The mainstream media establishment actually views left wing “extremists” as more threatening than right wing extremists. The right doesn’t challenge power, and the left does.
Last decade we would say facts have a liberal bias. Now I would say context has that bias as well.