For all the violence that the media tell us Donald Trump is encouraging at his mega-rallies, you’d think more of it would be coming from the people who actually support him.

On Tuesday, chaos erupted outside a Trump campaign event in Albuquerque, N.M., and by all accounts, people protesting the billionaire’s appearance were the ones inciting it.

CNN reported that protesters “lit fires, smashed a door and threw rocks” while chanting, “F— Donald Trump.”

An anti-Trump crowd broke through a police-erected barrier placed around the rally venue, according to ABC News. Unable to get inside the event, protesters started throwing rocks and bottles at police horses.

This is how Trump’s detractors in Albuquerque fought back against the “hate” (i.e., Trump’s proposal to cut back on illegal immigration).

The local police department Twitter account said that “several” of its officers needed medical attention after being hit by flying rocks. Authorities were forced to use pepper spray and smoke to break up the hostility, and at least one person was arrested.

That same day, Milo Yiannopoulos, a Trump supporter and editor at the right-wing Breitbart website, delivered a speech at DePaul University in Chicago and during the Q&A portion, anti-Trump protesters stormed the stage and shut down the event. One of the protesters, a female, approached Yiannopolous, waved her arms in his face and threatened, “What have you got to say?!”

By contrast, there is, to date, one clear example of an excited pro-Trump guy knocking a protester in the face.

It’s Trump’s opponents, not his supporters, with the history of infiltrating and disrupting otherwise normal campaign rallies, igniting public fires and hurling rocks at cops.

A rally planned for March in Chicago was canceled before it could begin because protesters surged the venue and clashed with Trump supporters.

Just several days later, Wisconsin police recommended that a 15-year-old anti-Trump protester be charged with disorderly conduct when she was seen on video striking the face of a 59-year-old man at a Trump campaign rally.

Presumably the young protesters believed the man got what he deserved for supporting a vicious candidate who wants to “bring jobs back.”

It is Trump, though, who the New York Times said has a “history of encouraging violence.” The liberal Mother Jones said in March that Trump is “basically encouraging violence now.” A headline at the website Vox explained that “the problem with violence at Trump rallies starts with Trump himself.”

Was it Trump who told those protesters to light up Albuquerque in flames and, while they were at it, pelt police horses with rocks?

He must have slipped it in somewhere between his other calls-to-arm speech lines like, “I believe in free trade but it has to be fair trade” and “We’re going to take care of our vets, believe me.”

Over the course of Trump’s yearlong campaign, Trump protesters have: shut down a rally in Chicago; been arrested for punching an elderly man in the face; harassed cops; thrown bottles at police horses, and damaged property.

How much more can they do in the six months left of the campaign?

There is certainly violence happening at Trump’s events, and it’s escalating. But it’s not coming from his team.

Eddie Scarry is a media writer for the Washington Examiner.