Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Erhalten Sie unbegrenzten Zugriff auf über 9.000 Zeitschriften, Zeitungen und Premium-Artikel für nur

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jahr

Versuchen GOLD - Frei

The young assassins who think murder is protest

The Observer

|

May 25, 2025

David Aaronovitch

The young assassins who think murder is protest

The cold-bloodedness is striking. A man supposedly motivated by his horror of the death of innocents shoots two young strangers in the back. As the woman tries to crawl away, he shoots again, emptying his gun. The wounded woman sits up; he reloads and shoots again. And so Sarah Milgrim and Yaron Lischinsky died outside Washington DC’s Capital Jewish Museum. A man called Elias Rodriguez has been detained.

Horrible, but what's new? Americans kill each other with a terrible frequency. The US, for all its many virtues, has a violent past and a weapon-sodden present. Its murder rate is more than four times that of the UK, and up to 80% of those killings are carried out using firearms. Rodriguez had flown to Washington from his native Chicago, having declared that he was carrying a gun in his luggage.

It hasn't just been American presidents who have been assassinated. State politicians, campaigners, judges and fringe religious leaders have also been targeted, victims of grudges or of those whose voices guide them to committing righteous murders.

But there are trends in murder as there are in everything. Rodriguez was a man of the far left, who, just before the killings – under the heading “Escalate For Gaza, Bring

“The War Home” - allegedly wrote that murder would be a proper response to what he described as the genocidal state of Israel.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Observer

The Observer

I wouldn't touch Starmer with a barge pole. He's completely untrustworthy

In the first of a new weekly series in which we ask a public figure to take us on a walk of significance, Rachel Sylvester, our political editor strolls through London's Stoke Newington with Zack Polanski. The leader of the Greens talks about tax hikes, leaving Nato and why former Labour politicians are welcome to join his party

time to read

8 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

Short-beaked echidna

Old does not mean primitive. Let's get that straight at once. Sure, we're mammals and sure, we lay eggs, which makes us unusual in the late Holocene but that doesn't mean we're backward.

time to read

2 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

Help with cost of living to make tax smorgasboard easier to swallow

These have been the leakiest, most fevered pre-budget weeks in modern British political history.

time to read

4 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

It's not easy being green: high energy costs threaten UK's net zero business endeavours

Missed decarbonisation targets, high prices and political uncertainty are seeing Labour's bid to make the nation a clean utility 'superpower' drift off into the ether.

time to read

8 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

The trail of bad decisions and delays that led to 23,000 avoidable deaths

As the second official report into Britain's Covid response is made public, a story emerges of a government failing to heed warnings and a first lockdown that was too little, too late.

time to read

4 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

Europeans rush to foil Ukraine deal favouring Kremlin

Kyiv's allies seek to thwart Trump negotiator's peace plan that gives in to Russian demands and turns the screw on embattled Zelensky

time to read

4 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

'We saw so many bodies that we lost count': uncovering the hidden horror of El Fasher

Using eyewitness reports, satellite images and social media videos, Isabel Coles and Fred Harter record the carnage when RSF fighters seized the famine-stricken capital of Sudan's North Darfur

time to read

10 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

It's not easy being green: high energy costs threaten UK's net zero business endeavours

Missed decarbonisation targets, high prices and political uncertainty are seeing Labour's bid to make the nation a clean utility 'superpower' drift off into the ether.

time to read

6 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

My lost afternoon with Elisabeth Lederer

I will come on to the eye-watering price shortly, but let's start with the art. Is the painting any good?

time to read

1 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

The Lords they are a-leaping as vandals in ermine do their damnedest to frustrate ministers

Andrew Rawnsley

time to read

4 mins

November 23, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size