When Jake Burris got home with his four kids Sunday night, his 5-year-old son got a shock when he reached the porch. The family’s cat was dead — its head smashed and its eye hanging out — and some sick person had scrawled “liberal” on the side of the body with a marker.
Burris is the campaign manager for Ken Aden, a Democrat who is running against Republican U.S. Rep. Steve Womack in Arkansas’ Third District. Police are investigating as a case of animal cruelty. (You can see a picture of the dead cat at this blog, but I’m not posting it here.)
Aden has pretty much no chance of winning. Arkansas’ Third District is overwhelmingly conservative and Womack received 72 percent of the vote in 2010. Although Aden is certainly pushing his views, this isn’t a hotly contested seat that could go either way. To put it more bluntly, Aden doesn’t have a chance.
Still, someone is taking the race seriously enough to murder a family’s pet cat. Why?
In the two decades I’ve worked in politics, I’ve known people cold-blooded and evil enough to do this sort of thing if they calculated that it would give them a political advantage. Almost anybody who’s been in the business for very long has known of certain sick individuals who you can call on for dirty tricks. There’s a slimy underbelly to the system that’s so evil that nobody wants to believes it’s there. So when I hear a story such as this, I know that I’ve known people who would have been capable of doing it.
What kind of person are you if there’s not a word to define you?
My old fear of looking foolish is strong incentive to do good work
Drug raid in Birmingham points to folly and failure of the ‘drug war’
Maybe we’re doomed to replay past until we finally get it right
What does it say about my life if my biggest motivation is a dog?
Slow death of painful past leaves me trapped in fog of depression
Years later, I see that I was an outsider who could never fit in
Letting go of dead dreams can lead to path you need to follow