'My country is in trouble': Volunteers fighting targeted violence share their stories

Twenty-eight people from across Adams, Dauphin, Franklin and York counties, began serving in the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security’s program known as Uniting to Prevent Targeted Violence in South-Central Pennsylvania, according to founder and executive director Joseph Bubman, last month. Each county will have $10,000 in program funds to support their efforts, drawn from a two-year project budget of $770,000

The program “works to help prevent incidents of domestic violent extremism, as well as to bolster efforts to counter online radicalization and mobilization to violence,” according to the URA’s website.

The URA defines targeted violence as “physical violence aimed at someone because of their perceived group affiliation or identity and intended to intimidate the entire group and call attention to the perpetrator’s beliefs,” according to Kira Hamman, who co-directs the local program with Bubman.

Local residents who have chosen to get involved have done so for an interesting mix of unique and overlapping reasons.

“My country is in trouble, and it is up to us, the people, to address the issues,” Betsy Hower, of York Springs, told the Capital-Star. She identifies politically as right of center and reports never having feared she may find herself in the cross hairs of targeted violence.

Hower, 76, retired, describes herself as a “conservative” in the tradition of Abraham Lincoln “who stated that government should only do for the people what they cannot do for themselves or collectively in a group.” She is former Adams County Republican Party chair.

Tom Cassara, 22, a philosophy major at Gettysburg College, said that his academic research is centered on political extremism and polarization, which he sees as “the number one issue facing our country as we head into the 2024 presidential election and beyond.”

Urban Rural Action to select 28 volunteers to prevent ‘targeted violence’

Cassara is concerned by the increase in hateful rhetoric and actions, not just in the US, but around the globe. “I hope that through this project I can help to prevent targeted violence before it happens by quashing the flames of hatred through honest, open dialogue and education.”

Cassara said he doesn’t fear that he may find himself caught up in targeted violence.

“I am a straight, cisgender, Italian-American man, and since I do not belong to any underrepresented groups, I do not fit the profile of those victims a perpetrator of targeted violence would usually seek out.” he said.

His research generally focuses on authoritarian and populist movements with an emphasis on fascist and religious fundamentalist movements. “A huge part of this work is acknowledging our biases,” he said.

Cassara said he realizes labels can be harmful “but in this context they’re a launchpad from which to learn more about their biases and ways to have honest dialogue.” He identifies as left of center.

Remember those candid discussions you heard in a barbershop growing up?

They still happen, according to Lance Walker, who owns a barbershop in Chambersburg, with a diverse clientele. “I love people, and I love my community,” he said, and “at any given time an eclectic group of people come together in one place for haircuts.”

“The barbershop has always been an institution, a place of gathering, a place of dialogue and dissemination of information,” Walker pointed out.

‘Rich, intentional dialogue’

He said he especially enjoys the “rich, intentional dialogue” that takes place in this environment. He feels he has “a great responsibility to my community to facilitate” good communication.

For Walker the possibility of violence has been real.

“My experience growing up in America as an African-American,” he said, “made targeted violence seem like it could happen” to him. “I remember being removed from my elementary school to attend school in another city because of desegregation. I remember white people riding past me yelling the “N” word.”

Walker, 56, said that “at this point in my life, I’ve grown weary of the boxes people and society try to put you in.”

Identifying with the political center, he said that he’s “a multifaceted complex human being as are all the rest of us. I believe most of the time these boxes don’t represent the fullness of who we are. Therefore, I’m not comfortable allowing labels to represent me.”

Urban Rural Action focuses on preventing targeted violence against vulnerable populations (URA photo).

The diverse clientele Walker mentioned also resembles the volunteer group and the communities they’ll engage with down the road. Hower said she’s found “the experience of working with others who have different points of view a challenging and rewarding learning experience.”

Casara, who said he thrives on debate and open dialogue, told the Capital-Star that he “greatly enjoys working with members of my volunteer group who are not on the same political page as I am.” He feels it’s “a treat to engage with people with radically different perspectives.”

For Walker, “It feels natural because of my daily interactions with people as a barber. I’m literally having conversations every single day for at least 30 minutes with people I totally disagree with.”

“For some years now we have been meeting with others who have different points of view and find we can discuss or share things in a calm manner,” Hower said.

As part of an initial training session for all 28 volunteers, there were “ icebreakers and exercises practicing listening skills,” Cassara said.

He said he found the exercises beneficial to expanding his listening and conversation skills.

The ABC’s of constructive dialogue

Walker said he learned “the ABCs of constructive dialogue…to help us engage in conversation and better understand the person we’re talking to.”

Hower would “like to learn from the different points of view how to solve problems…and maybe we can collectively come up with some solutions.” Far too many academics remain cloistered in their studies and don’t engage actively with the community,” Cassara said. He’s looking to “advance my conversation and empathy skills.”

Walker wants to “learn how to implement communication strategies to affect positive change in my community. It’s early in the program but I have great expectations.” He also hopes “to network with others to make our country a better place. I’m here to remove wedges and build bridges.”

Hower said she’ll feel successful “If we come up with some ideas to pursue, so that we can individually make a positive difference.” Preventing “even one person who might have gone on to commit an act of targeted violence from doing so” is Cassara’s sign of success.

“It is the connective tissue of a community which prevents these acts of violence,” he said, adding “When that connective tissue is eroded through economic hardship, spiritual struggles, ethnic conflict, or other stressors, the result is this sort of violence. But that tissue can be repaired before the violence starts,” he concluded.

Pennsylvania Capital-Star is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Pennsylvania Capital-Star maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John Micek for questions: info@penncapital-star.com. Follow Pennsylvania Capital-Star on Facebook and Twitter.

Former GOP strategist: Nearly all Republican politicians are 'complicit' and 'an existential threat to our Democracy'

In his new book, Why We Did It: A Travelogue from the Republican Road to Hell, former GOP strategist Tim Miller gives us his autopsy on why so many “normal” people went along with the Trumpist excesses that now threaten our Democratic system.

His bona fides include serving on former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush’s 2016 presidential campaign as communications director and as the Republican National Committee’s spokesman for Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign. Now he’s an Independent voter, an MSNBC political analyst, writer-at-large at The Bulwark, and host of Snapchat’s Not My Party. Miller lives in Oakland, Calif., with his husband, Tyler, and their daughter.

(This interview has been edited for length and clarity.)

Capital-Star: Your book was written with two distinct sections: First, the journey you took “walking right up to the ledge” and the “red flags you saw and ignored.” What happened to you that you walked right up to the ledge? What did you ignore?

Miller: Well, I think that I was doing a lot of the same rationalizations that people who know better and who are in the Republican Party right now are still doing. That is, deciding that you know you liked the candidates that you worked for, and that they were good people with good intentions. I thought that I didn’t need to worry myself about the crazies over there in the corner, the more extreme candidates. I didn’t worry that my candidates, at times, had to pander to the more extreme voters because I knew in my heart of hearts that they were good people.

Capital-Star: A basic, human reaction?

Miller: I think that this is a natural human rationalization, to want to look at the best examples when judging yourself and your intentions … But it’s important not to ignore the actions that reflect poorly on your own side.

Capital-Star: What did you, others ignore?

Miller: The crowds that started showing up when [former Alaska Gov.] Sarah Palin was selected as John McCain’s vice presidential running mate [in 2008]. The people showing up at all the rallies were all just prototype examples of what we later saw with [former President Donald] Trump.

A serious political party does not have someone like Herman Cain leading a presidential primary and that doesn’t even include all the Tea Party candidates who went into Congress with their extreme views.

Capital-Star: Is the GOP now a cult?

Miller: I think that there are cultish elements. I also think there are people that are voting for Republicans that are not in a cult. If I look at the Republican Party, I basically see about 40 percent of the party that is, pretty much, completely in service to Donald Trump and they carry a lot of cult-like behaviors. Another 40 percent of the party is very much in line with Trump’s positions. And then I think there’s a group within the party that would like to move on from Trump. So, I don’t think the entire party is a cult but a significant portion of the party is driving that cultish behavior.

Capital-Star: All the signs were there but unacknowledged?

Miller: There was plenty of evidence that the GOP had a very extreme underbelly that evolved into a controlling factor. Pushing the establishment to more extreme places. But up until something as insane as Donald Trump winning the primary, I didn’t I didn’t feel like the situation required any action. I was just one cog in the machine but that’s something I regret.

Capital-Star: Your book’s second section is a more complex “psychological journey” of what to make of those “who saw his [Trump’s] defects clearly and went along anyway.” Why did Trump supporters go long?

What Mastriano, Shapiro have said about Pa’s Medicaid expansion | Tuesday Morning Coffee

Miller: Well, not everybody was doing it with the best of intentions. As I analyzed people that went along with Trump, I came up with a variety of rationalizations. There were some people who thought that it … was important to have good people around Trump, that they were involved in public service. They thought the country required that they go in to make sure the ship of state stayed afloat.

Capital-Star: They saw themselves as front and center to a larger endeavor?

Miller: I think some of those people were maybe pumping themselves up by saying that they were important and it was important to have good people in there advising Trump. Some had purely ideological reasons regarding why they remained in the party. But I also found that a lot of people’s rationalizations were more than just that. Lots of people were simply addicted to being in the mix, to being around power. Like the play “Hamilton,” you want to be in the room where it happens. Consider too, that a lot of people just really didn’t want to take the personal and career risk that stepping away would require. Their involvement was part of their identity, something essential to their career, to their finances.

Capital-Star: And it metastasized from there?

Miller: Oh, lots of people came up with elaborate constructions in their brain about how extreme the Left is. They really convinced themselves that it was the Left that was crazy and not the person that they were working for. I cover the different reasons in my book but they ranged from defensible to extremely self-serving postures.

Capital-Star: Would it be fair to say at this point our political dialogue is officially unhinged at every level, including school boards, city councils?

Miller: Yeah, look, the craziest have taken over the GOP and the people that I write about in this book, the people who know better, have been totally subsumed by folks that are actively arguing for ending our democracy. The people that know better are somehow justifying the fact that they think that the right thing to do is to be normal and quiet. To me that’s crazy! That is the ultimate self-serving choice.

Ads target Mastriano for using social media site where Tree of Life shooter posted manifesto

We need people like U.S. Reps. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo, and Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., who are willing to speak up, speak back to them because it starts with the school board, city councils, all the way up through secretaries of state, gubernatorial and U.S. Senate races. There are so few examples of Republicans who have been willing to speak truth to power about what really happened in 2020. Not many are willing to push back.

Capital-Star: No one out there?

Miller: I can list … on one hand the [number of] people who are willing to just speak the truth about Donald Trump’s actions. The rest of them are either actively excited about putting this man back in power or are sleepwalking their way back into another Trump nomination.

Capital-Star: Do you fear violence approaching the Nov. 8 general election?

Miller: I am definitely concerned about election workers. I don’t know why you would have confidence right now that there’s not going to be violence especially given the type of rhetoric out there. But I’m hopeful and grateful for everybody that serves in that capacity. I’m not an expert on extremism. I think Jan. 6 is unique in the way it provided a location at a time for that sort of mob mentality to form. Will there be another thing like that this year? I don’t know, probably not. But random acts of violence are something I’m concerned about.

Trump endorses television physician Mehmet Oz in Pa. Senate race

Capital-Star: Things are different for you now that you’re speaking truth to power through your book and your commentator work?

Miller: Well yeah, the nice thing is, and this is not me patting myself on the back, I could have found myself being the rationalizer and could have protested a bit less. But because Donald Trump thrust me into this position with his manifest dangerousness, I do feel like now I have the benefit of being able to just be honest, I’m never going to get hired by a Republican again. I don’t think the Democrats are going to hire me after reading in my book about my past.

Capital-Star: The new Tim Miller?

Miller: I’m now a rare, former political operative who can just say out loud the truth of the moment and not angle for something. The truth as I see it is that nearly all the Republican Party’s politicians right now are complicit in a very dangerous line. That is the existential threat to our Democracy. I don’t mean to say that the Democrats are perfect. I’m happy to criticize them when they deserve it but they are not the prime threat that I see. A lot of my old friends and colleagues don’t like it. Still, I’m going to keep talking about it all.

Report: Even with strong protections, gaps in poll worker policy remain | Wednesday Morning Coffee

Capital-Star: Ever worked on a Pennsylvania campaign?

Miller: In 2020, I was very active with a Republicans Against Trump effort in Pennsylvania.

We had a couple of people on the ground. We had billboards and TV ads featuring real people from Pennsylvania who told their stories about why they were former Republicans who would be voting against Trump. We ran a bunch of ads in the Harrisburg region which we saw as our main market with the effort. I’m on the board of the Republican Accountability Project which has similar billboards up right now for this election cycle. When I was involved with America Rising, we did some research on Pennsylvania races but I never actually worked on a campaign in your state.

Capital-Star: Regarding Pennsylvania and the Nov. 8 general election, FiveThirtyEight reports that on election day 60 percent of voters will have an election denier on the ballot. For Pennsylvania, that’s 10 Republicans and most of our congressional delegates denying the validity of the 2020 election. What do you think we’re in for nationwide and in Pennsylvania with that many deniers on the ballot?

Miller: Obviously Pennsylvania is in the middle of contested races, as has been reported to me by people on the ground. [Republican governor nominee] Doug Mastriano against Josh Shapiro [the Democratic nominee] is one of the three most important races in the country when it comes to protecting our democracy.

I say the stakes are high because Mastriano can appoint his own secretary of state who would have ample opportunity to mess with 2022 and 2024 results by not certifying results. I’m deeply concerned about 2024, when for example, one state like Pennsylvania or Arizona could surface as the deciding state in who wins.

Capital-Star: Your impressions of our governor’s race?

Miller: Mastriano is running against a totally mainstream Democrat, Shapiro, who is running, I think, a good campaign. He’s not an extremist like his opponent or a far left progressive. I really hope that Pennsylvania voters, swing voters and Republicans like myself can just accept who Shapiro is. He will not be a wild card like Mastriano when it comes to what he might do in 2024. .

Capital-Star: The U.S, Senate race between [Democrat] John Fetterman and [Republican] Mehmet Oz is in a statistical tie. And polls show Shapiro ahead of Mastriano by more comfortable margins. Why the difference?

Miller: I’m not surprised since in some ways the campaign has evolved into ‘the better man question.’ Factor this in too: People act like there are no swing voters anymore, but that is wrong. Maybe there aren’t as many as there used to be but two categories remain persuadable.

Capital-Star: The two categories are?

Miller: The college-educated voter and suburban women and their daughters, especially after Roe’s reversal. Many of these voters are former Republicans. It is surprising to me that Oz would appeal to them, given how extreme he can be. And it’s not surprising to me that some swing voters would look at Fetterman deciding he’s too progressive for them. Fetterman is not gaining working-class swing voters which can explain the difference in the Senate and gubernatorial polls. Let me be clear – I’m not endorsing that to you, but I can easily imagine there will be a significant number of swing voters on both sides particularly in the kind of suburbs and exurbs heading out towards Harrisburg.

Capital-Star: Your take on Trump versus Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2024?

Miller: I don’t think that there’s a 0 percent chance of DeSantis being the GOP candidate. Question is: Are there enough voters willing to move on from Trump in a primary setting? Exactly how do you run a campaign against Trump and not alienate the many people who still like him? Who knows what DeSantis might do the first time Trump throws a punch at him? Will DeSantis be able to resist the Trump Show in a Republican primary?

Pennsylvania Capital-Star is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Pennsylvania Capital-Star maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John Micek for questions: info@penncapital-star.com. Follow Pennsylvania Capital-Star on Facebook and Twitter.