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Letter: Our leaders — federal and state alike — should be working to bridge divisions, not deepen them

(Chris Samuels | The Salt Lake Tribune) Gov. Spencer Cox makes remarks during a news conference on Sept. 12, announcing an arrest of a suspect in the shooting death of Charlie Kirk.

The shooting death of Charlie Kirk was a despicable act and a devastating tragedy for his wife and two children.

Gov. Cox initially urged restraint in the rhetoric surrounding this case, yet later echoed the president in framing the attack as the work of the “radicalized left.” That narrative ignores similar tragedies attributed to extremists from the other side of the spectrum, such as the recent murder of the Minnesota House speaker.

The evidence so far suggests this defendant, like others in senseless acts of violence, is a mentally unstable young man who spent countless hours in the darker corners of the internet and immersed himself in violent video games. This is not the profile of an organized political operative, but rather of someone lost in isolation and instability.

The case is now in the hands of the courts. What is not helpful is the attempt to score political points by painting this tragedy as part of a left-wing conspiracy. As University of Utah professor Ben Lyons recently wrote in The Tribune: “Isolated extremists are driving political violence in America, not large groups.”

Our leaders — federal and state alike — should be working to bridge divisions, not deepen them. We need to return to debating real issues instead of fueling imagined narratives of violent political warfare.

David Bennett, Park City

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