The Data Shows Political Violence Is Actually Down
People gather before marching in memory of Charlie Kirk in Peoria, Ariz., on Sept. 13, 2025. Photo: Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images
It would be easy to believe America is tipping into an era of rampant political bloodshed.
In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, voices from across the spectrum sounded alarms that the shooting was just the latest flashpoint in a rising tide of violence.
Progressive commentator Hasan Piker, shaken after watching video of Kirk’s murder, warned his audience of “people looking for decentralized forms of violence.” A Reuters analysis was even more blunt, declaring Kirk’s killing “a watershed moment in a surge of U.S. political violence.” Even Utah’s Republican governor mused whether this marked “the beginning of a darker chapter in our history.”
These aren’t the first calls for open strife. When Donald Trump himself was shot last year, some right-wing figures rushed to declare it the opening salvo of a new civil war.
Are we on the brink of another 1960s-style season of political assassinations and unrest?
A funny thing is happening beneath the apocalyptic headlines: Rather than surging, key indicators of political violence and extremism in the U.S. have actually been trending downward in recent months. New findings from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, or ACLED, show that protest and extremist activity has dropped significantly nationwide.
In August, the number of public demonstrations in the U.S. plummeted by nearly 40 percent compared to the month before. A much-hyped progressive day of action called “Rage Against the Regime” fizzled with only modest turnouts, contributing to the sharp decline in protests.
And, perhaps most tellingly, organized extremist incidents — rallies, hate marches, militant group meet-ups — fell off a cliff. ACLED reports that extremist group activity dropped by over one-third in August, hitting its lowest level in more than five years. It’s part of a steady decline in far-right mobilization that dates back to 2023.
In other words, according to ACLED, by the time commentators were warning that Kirk’s murder heralded a new wave of violence, extremist activism on the ground was at a multiyear low.
Five-Year Low
The contrast between the panic-stricken narrative and ACLED’s hard numbers is striking. Yes, politically motivated attacks still occur and can be horrific. Yet the broader trend in extremist mobilization suggests less organized violence, not more.
ACLED’s data-driven analysis notes multiple factors behind the slump. There are possibly more clandestine tactics by groups. Leadership failures could account for a lack of organization. And a big one: There is a loss of “urgency” among extremist followers because they see their views reflected in mainstream politics.
It turns out that when your side is already winning, you don’t need to storm the barricades.
Even Princeton’s Bridging Divides Initiative, which closely monitors political violence across the country, acknowledges that incidents remained relatively low in 2024. Their analysis, grounded in real-time event tracking, confirms that, while we’ve seen marked upticks in threats recently, the overall trend in political violence has declined since the peak years around 2020.
The Southern Poverty Law Center, or SPLC, observed the same phenomenon in its latest Year in Hate and Extremism report. The SPLC counted 1,371 active hate and extremist groups in 2024, down from 1,430 in 2023. The group concluded the slight drop “does not signify declining influence” at all. Rather, it’s because many on the far right “feel their beliefs have become normalized in government and mainstream society,” according to the report.
In plain English: Why organize a fringe militia when your agenda is being adopted on Capitol Hill and made into policy by the White House?
This dynamic helps explain why the immediate wake of Kirk’s assassination hasn’t unleashed the spate of tit-for-tat violence some feared.
Why organize a fringe militia when your agenda is being adopted on Capitol Hill?
The far-right ecosystem, which in years past might have exploded with vengeful rallies or vigilante reprisals, has been relatively muted in terms of on-the-ground action. To be sure, there was plenty of online fury and calls for crackdowns. Offline, organized extremist events, though, remain in a lull.
The shock and outrage did not translate into a Proud Boys revival or a new wave of militias taking to the streets.
Energy on the left, meanwhile, is already flagging. Its protest movements have been quieter than expected during Trump’s second term.
Progressives pulled off several “days of action” earlier in the year, but by late summer the protests were losing steam. The energy that fueled huge anti-Trump demonstrations in 2024 ebbed, reflected in the 40 percent drop in protest activity.
At least for now, both sides of the spectrum are mobilizing less in the streets — albeit for very different reasons.
An Advancing Agenda
All of this leads to an ironic possibility: Political violence may be declining largely because the would-be perpetrators feel they don’t need it anymore.
The American far right, once relegated to the fringe, now sees its formerly “extremist” ideas being enacted through mainstream institutions.
As the SPLC report noted, positions that might have once only been pushed via hate rallies — anti-LGBTQ+ hostility, attacks on “woke” education, dismantling diversity programs — have seeped into legislation and school board policies.
In 2024, militant groups harassed diversity and inclusion efforts, and soon after, Republican lawmakers, egged on by Trump, moved to ban discussion of race and gender in classrooms.
After Kirk’s killing, White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller went on Kirk’s podcast to vow revenge on left-wing groups. Vice President JD Vance, for his part, announced his intent to attack two of the top liberal foundations and a historic magazine of the left.
Guns and intimidation aren’t necessary.
The decline in violent extremism is welcome, but the apparent reasons behind it should give us pause. What does it say about the state of the country when extremists stand down not because they’ve been defeated, but because they think they’ve won? It suggests that the battleground has shifted. The fights that once took place at the margins — in backwoods compounds or tense street protests — are now unfolding in courtrooms, statehouses, and school boards.
Liberals know it too: The relative quiet on the left could well be a sign of resignation, as if even the opposition recognizes that the hard right’s agenda has the upper hand.
America may be “a very, very dangerous spot” as one expert told Reuters, but not for the reasons cable news would have us believe. The danger isn’t an impending civil war in the streets; it’s a creeping normalization of hard-line political goals that no longer require mob violence to be realized.
The assassins and agitators are stepping back, confident that the system now carries their torch for them.
The danger isn’t an impending civil war in the streets; it’s a creeping normalization of hard-line political goals.
Still, Kirk’s assassination cannot be brushed aside. For all the evidence that political violence has ebbed, singular events can act as catalysts, jolting extremists out of dormancy. This killing could become a ramp toward a new future of violence.
If history is any guide, however, it won’t be in the form of clashes. The capacity, and appetite, for that kind of confrontation seems to have dwindled.
Today’s great danger likely isn’t open war in the streets, but the quiet march of an extremist agenda already advancing through institutions. That may bring with it an even greater violence.
Stephen Miller vows vengeance in Charlie Kirk podcast appearance with JD Vance
White House deputy chief of staff for policy Stephen Miller vowed Monday to use the killing of Charlie Kirk to target a “vast domestic terror movement” of left-wing political organizations that he said without evidence had led to the conservative act…Brandy Zadrozny (MSNBC)
The Asus Gaming Laptop ACPI Firmware Bug: A Deep Technical Investigation into the ACPI.sys DPC latency problems on Asus ROG laptops
- Hacker News;
- Lobsters
:::
GitHub - Zephkek/Asus-ROG-Aml-Deep-Dive: A deep dive into the ACPI.sys DPC latency problems on Asus ROG laptops
A deep dive into the ACPI.sys DPC latency problems on Asus ROG laptops - Zephkek/Asus-ROG-Aml-Deep-DiveGitHub
Apple Photos App Corrupts Images
- Hacker News.
:::
Apple Photos app Corrupts Images
The Apple Photos app sometimes corrupts images when importing from my camera. I just wanted to make a blog post about it in case anyone else runs into the problem.Tenderlove Making
When Africa’s internet breaks, this ship answers the call
Africa’s only internet cable repair ship keeps the continent online - Rest of World
Africa’s internet depends on fragile undersea cables. When they snap, the Léon Thévenin repair ship is dispatched to restore connections.Gayathri Vaidyanathan (Rest of World)
AI-driven pricing systems know who you are and what you're willing to pay
They know who you are, where you live, how much money you make and where you spent your last vacation.They’re watching what websites you visit, tracking your mouse movements while you’re there and what you’ve left behind in virtual shopping carts. Mac or PC? iPhone or Android? Your preferences have been gathered and logged.
And they’ve got the toolkit, powered by artificial intelligence software, to assemble all this information to zero in on exactly how much you’re likely willing to pay for any product or service that might strike your fancy.
The “they” is a combination of retailers and service providers, social media operators, app developers, big data brokers and a host of other entities with whom you have voluntarily and involuntarily shared personal and behavioral information. And they’ve even come up with new labels to make you feel better about the systems that are using your personal data to set a custom price.
Dynamic pricing. Personalized pricing. Even “discount pricing.”
How AI-driven pricing systems determine what you’re willing to pay
What is surveillance pricing? Do companies use AI to track your personal data? Do companies mine consumer data to set prices? FTC investigatingArt Raymond (Deseret News)
Android launcher Lawnchair 15 beta adds drawer folders, dock upgrades, and expanded search
Lawnchair 15 Beta 1 is here! | Lawnchair Blogs
Lawnchair 15 Beta 1 is here! This foundational release brings App Drawer Folders, an Android 15 rebase, and much more.lawnchair.app
Technology Channel reshared this.
French privacy agency(Cnil) publishes manga to teach teenagers about identity theft
Digital technology is omnipresent in young people's lives (social media, apps, video games, etc.) and comic books play an important role in developing reading habits among teenagers (source: 2023 Junior City and the French Publishers Association study). It's therefore natural for the CNIL to choose this engaging format to raise awareness among 11-15 year-olds about the issues and risks related to their digital use.Combining intrigue, humor and education, this first volume entitled The Shadow Network follows the adventures of two investigators from The Privacy Agency, Inaya and Isidore. They try to understand why the names of three high school students—victims of online mishaps and marginalized by their class—appear on a list found in a deliberately burnt down building...
To produce this book, the CNIL drew on the combined talents of Faouzi Boughida, video game scriptwriter, and Grelin, illustrator and comic book author.
It addresses concrete topics: hacking and identity theft, cyberbullying, e-reputation, and cybersecurity. All through a suspenseful story, dynamic artwork and engaging characters.
Source: Cnil Press Release.
The CNIL publishes a "manga" in English to raise awareness about data protection and online privacy
An original and accessible format, adopted by the 11-15 years old. Digital technology is omnipresent in young people's lives (social media, apps, video games, etc.www.cnil.fr
Technology Channel reshared this.
Led By Donkeys attacks ‘Orwellian’ arrests after Trump Windsor projections
Four arrested after images of Trump and Epstein projected on to Windsor Castle ahead of president’s visit
Trump arrived in Britain late on Tuesday for an unprecedented second state visit in which he will be hosted by King CharlesGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
China tells tech firms to stop buying Nvidia's AI chips: Report
China's internet regulator has ordered top technology firms to halt purchases of Nvidia artificial intelligence chips and cancel existing orders as part of a broader push to cut reliance on US technology, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday (Sep 17).
China tells tech firms to stop buying Nvidia's AI chips: Report
China's internet regulator has ordered top technology firms to halt purchases of Nvidia artificial intelligence chips and cancel existing orders as part of a broader push to cut reliance on US technology, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday (Se…CNA (Channel NewsAsia)
Aggiornamento a Lemmy 0.19.13
Feddit è stato appena aggiornato alla versione 0.19.13, sembra essere andato tutto bene (🤘) qui trovate tutte le modifiche in questa nuova versione: join-lemmy.org/news/2025-09-10…
Se trovate errori, segnalate pure 😀
Backend
La correzione delle query lente conta attive. di @dessalines in #5907
Utilizza solo mimalloc su x86 ed elimina le immagini nelle attività in background di @Nutomic in #5893
Aggiungi il controllo della profondità dei commenti mancanti di @Nutomic in #5842
Non disinfettare manualmente i contenuti RSS (corregge il numero 5850) di @Nutomic in #5852
Riduci i falsi positivi nella lista di blocchi URL per ridurre il problema di scunthorpe di @Nothing4You in #5807
Frontend
Non mostrare il segno di modifica se il commento è stato modificato in meno di 5 minuti da @jfaustino #3197
Aumenta la lunghezza massima della biografia a 1000 caratteri di @nutomic #3249
Cambia collegamento da element.io a matrix.org di @nutomic #3250
Rimuovi tutte le cache (correzioni n. 3195) di @Nutomic in #3248
Corretto l'ordine dei risultati di ricerca da parte di @Nutomic in #3219
Aggiungi il campo di ricerca alla barra laterale della community di @Nutomic in #3217
Aggiungi casella di controllo per la ricerca solo del titolo per @Nutomic in #3220
[0.19] Fixing active counts slow queries. by dessalines · Pull Request #5907 · LemmyNet/lemmy
The slowness for #5902 is coming from the community and site aggregates activity postgres function. This function collects up and unions the comments, posts, comment likes, and post likes for a com...GitHub
Flagstaff
in reply to Pro • • •Pro
in reply to Flagstaff • • •