Political Violence in America: Turning Point or Flashpoint?

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Abstract

The murder of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk reignited an old debate in the United States: Are we approaching a turning point in political violence, or is this simply another flashpoint in a long, uneven history of partisan conflict?

Political scientists and commentators appear divided. Some warn of a spiraling wave of tit-for-tat violence, fueled by incendiary rhetoric and amplified by online echo chambers. Others emphasize that such acts are rare, often the work of lone actors rather than coordinated movements, and that the broader public overwhelmingly rejects violence as a political tool.

For security professionals, the challenge is not to get swept away in media-driven panic but to cut through the rhetoric and focus on the facts. Political violence like workplace violence follows patterns we have studied, trained for, and know how to interrupt. The actors may gain national headlines, but their behaviors, motives, and pathways to violence remain familiar.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalSecurity Magazine
StatePublished - Sep 18 2025

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