"TooFar" is not a viral hashtag — yet — but it is the prevailing ethos of the moment, the sentiment animating our politics and our culture, the sense that is propelling a massive backlash across the political spectrum.
For the right, the summer of protests, Black Lives Matter and "woke culture" went too far by toppling Confederate monuments, working to create "autonomous zones" in cities like Seattle and pushing to defund the police.
Conservatives responded by waging a campaign against the 1619 Project and critical race theory, passing dozens of laws designed to clamp down on protests, and hammering the Democrats as soft on crime.
The latter has been so potent and effective, particularly as some crimes have increased, that it has made Democrats — some not fully committed to police reform in the first place — tuck their tails and run. Even the most liberal of cities have retreated from reforms.
Perhaps no city exemplifies this trend better than San Francisco.
In February of last year, London Breed, the first Black woman to be elected mayor of the city, announced plans to redirect $120 million from law enforcement budgets to the Black community. This is, without question, a move that fit squarely with the spirit of "Defund the Police."
Ten months later, after some crimes rose, she directed a surge of police officers in some neighborhoods. "It is time that the reign of criminals who are destroying our city," she said, comes "to an end. And it comes to an end when we take the steps to be more aggressive with law enforcement, more aggressive with the changes in our policies and less tolerant of all the [expletive] that has destroyed our city."
The White House applauded her for the turnabout.