Investigators are increasingly attributing a wave of high-profile killings and political violence in the United States to a contemporary form of nihilism, where attackers express contempt for humanity and a desire for civilization's collapse. These incidents, including shootings, a bombing, and a planned drone attack, defy traditional political or ideological labels. The trend reflects broader frustrations in American politics amid institutional distrust and cultural divisions.
A recent article in The Washington Post by Peter Whoriskey highlights how law enforcement and federal prosecutors are grappling with assailants whose actions lack a clear agenda. As Whoriskey reports, 'The assailants in several cases—shootings, a bombing, a planned drone attack—resisted familiar labels and categories. They were not Democrat or Republican, or Islamist militant, or antifa or white supremacist.' Instead, their manifestos reveal 'contempt for humanity and a desire to see the collapse of civilization,' marking what officials describe as 'a contemporary strain of nihilism, an online revival of the philosophical stance that arose in the 19th century to deny the existence of moral truths and meaning in the universe.'
This phenomenon is contextualized against historical precedents. Commentators note that societies undergoing major dislocations have long bred nihilism and violence, echoing Fyodor Dostoyevsky's 1864 work 'Notes from the Underground,' where he warns of humanity's preference for 'free unfettered choice' over rational advantage, potentially leading to frenzy and barbarism.
Broader analyses draw parallels to the U.S. Civil War era. While that conflict involved intense bloodshed—far exceeding today's levels, as former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton noted in 2016: 'the challenges we face today do not approach those of Lincoln’s time. Not even close'—both sides then affirmed the legitimacy of the American experiment. Southern secession declarations, such as Mississippi's stating 'Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery—the greatest material interest of the world,' mentioned slavery over 80 times, yet post-war reconciliation occurred because shared reverence for the nation's founding persisted. Former Confederate General James Longstreet reflected in 1899: 'Barring a little family misunderstanding of a generation back, the South has never been anything but loyal.'
In contrast, today's divisions are deeper and more diffuse, centered on whether the United States remains a moral enterprise. Disagreements extend beyond policy to competing narratives of the founding, with no singular issue like slavery to resolve. As one analysis observes, 'There is no Appomattox for a conflict this diffuse,' suggesting ongoing cultural and perceptual rifts without clear resolution paths.