Okay, so you acknowledge that there are anti-abortion extremists out there, and that such extremists may be capable of unlawful violent activity.
So is it such a leap to conclude that the DHS has a legitimate role to play in identifying such people, preferably before actually kill someone (again)?
Of course they should. I never said anything to the contrary. But that identification must be based on a
propensity for violence, not on their political beliefs. And since a propensity for violence can and does exist across the political spectrum, looking at someone's political beliefs on issues like abortion isn't even a useful correlator with propensity for violence.
I thought it was fairly obvious we were talking about anti-abortion and anti-immigration activists.
That's a very broad group of people. If that's the "they" you meant, then you made an incredibly sweeping statement, and one that's almost certainly not true of the entire group.
The more mainstream groups might not be inclined to committing unlawful violent activities themselves, but they do bear a certain responsibility by engaging in demagoguery
If they don't advocate violence, then no, they don't. The person responsible for violent acts is the person who commits violence. We should not be engaging in any shifting of responsibility of this sort, because to do so is to basically rule that some political speech is unacceptable. But it is not: political speech is speech, and should be free
and protected as long as it doesn't advocate violence. I am not suggesting that it be immune from criticism, but assigning blame for the actions of others goes beyond that: if we accept the premise that it shares culpability for crimes, then we must logically do more than just criticize it, and that's not acceptable.
and illegal immigrants as depriving Americans of income
Interesting example: you're basically saying that statements which may be true should not be said because some nutjob might do the wrong thing in response.
After all, isn't it plausible that there are some people out there who would feel morally justified killing people who supposedly commit or support "genocide," or foster a threat to the very fabric of American society?
Yes: and we blame the nutjobs themselves in such cases. There are an infinitude of ways in which nutjobs can respond violently to political differences, that's no reason to single out any particular political differences.
If they object to being suspected of collusion with such terrorist elements, then maybe they need to clean house by expressing in the strongest terms that they not only do not condone such violence, but actively condemn it, and stop making "root cause"-type excuses for the people who commit acts of terrorism.
Funny, but I don't recall any military veteran organizations, for example, making "root cause"-type excuses for Timothy McVeigh. Did the American Legion need to "clean house" before they sent Napolitano a
letter objecting to the report? And what anti-abortion groups excused attacks against doctors with "root cause"-type excuses? You may be able to find one, but this goes back to my objection to your "they": if you find one, you're basically going to use it to paint all anti-abortion groups with the same brush.
That's a dodge. Can you point to instances where you publicly (e.g. on this forum) criticized the activities of the DHS prior to Obama taking office as president?
Let me be more explicit then: I reject the entire premise of your question. The validity of what I'm saying now doesn't depend in any way on my previous statements, or lack thereof. Hell, I don't even remember what I might or might not have said about DHS on this board since it was formed, and I've got zero interest in searching the archives to find out. If you find some
inconsistency between what I've said in the past and what I've said before, that might be of some interest. But there's no reason to have a litmus test for who is qualified to criticize the government today based on whether or not they adequately criticized it in the past. That's bull****.