Joe Connor was left fatherless in 1975 when a bomb planted by
the Puerto Rican terrorist group the Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación
Nacional or FALN (Armed Forces of National Liberation) exploded at
the historic Fraunces Tavern in New York City. One other person was
killed,* in addition to Joe’s Dad Frank Connor, and sixty people
were injured.
Now, once again, the issue of pardoning a prominent FALN leader,
Oscar Lopez Rivera, is surfacing yet again. The United Church of
Christ is pressing for a pardon and doubtless other groups as
well.
The UCC claims Lopez has the support of the Puerto Rican people
in his drive to free Puerto Rico from the big bad colonial power
that is the United States. In fact, overshadowed by the
presidential election in November, 61% of the Puerto Rican people
voted for Puerto Rican statehood. A mere 6% wanted
independence.
Mr. Lopez is as unrepentant now as he was in his active FALN
years, the latter activities and such small “d” democratic doings
as bomb-making earning him his lengthy visit to federal prison.
For the last several days, Americans have been relearning what
violence means in practice. Frank Connor, peacefully enjoying his
lunch at a tavern once frequented by George Washington, was
brutally killed with every bit as much violence as that which took
the lives of the children and adults of Sandy Hook School.
There is no place for violence in American society. Our friend
Dan Henninger over at the Wall Street Journal this morning
has a considerable
column entitled “No Guardrails, Again.” Writes Dan:
We think it is possible to identify the date when the U.S., or
more precisely when many people within it, began to tip off the
emotional tracks. A lot of people won’t like this date, because it
makes their political culture culpable for what has happened. The
date is August 1968, when the Democratic National Convention found
itself sharing Chicago with the street fighters of the anti-Vietnam
War movement.
The real blame here does not lie with the mobs who fought bloody
battles with the hysterical Chicago police. The larger
responsibility falls on the intellectuals—university professors,
politicians and journalistic commentators—who said then that the
acts committed by the protesters were justified or explainable.
That was the beginning. America had a new culture for political
action and for personal living.
The virtue known as self-restraint was devalued. Certain rules
that for a long time had governed behavior also became devalued.
Whatever else was going on here, we were lowering the barriers of
acceptable political and personal conduct.
What is being asked in the pardon of an unrepentant Oscar Lopez
Rivera is precisely Henninger’s point. There is an attempt by the
UCC and others who will be clamoring for the release of this
violent man to continue “lowering the barriers of acceptable
political and personal conduct.”
It is unacceptable.
And as Christmas approaches for all those Newtown parents who
have lost children, and the children who lost adults — just, in
the latter case, as Joe Connor did so many years ago — it’s time
to demand that the guardrails in American society once again go
up.
There is no place in America for violence.
Feel free to contact President Obama and demand that Oscar Lopez
Rivera not be pardoned.
******
*ONE CORRECTION to my above post: There were 4 killed at
Fraunces Tavern, Frank Connor and three others.
And if you are interested in contacting President Obama on the
pardon issue here is the contact info at
this
link.