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WSWS : News
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Violence
Hawaii, Seattle: latest shooting rampages in the US
By Jerry White
4 November 1999
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An unidentified gunman dressed in camouflage killed two people
and severely injured two others at a shipyard office near downtown
Seattle Wednesday, in the second shooting at a US workplace in
two days. Police using search dogs, helicopters and boats fanned
out across a broad area in the industrial and residential area
just north of downtown looking for the gunman, who escaped on
foot.
On Tuesday morning a Xerox copy machine repairman killed seven
coworkers at the company's Honolulu warehouse. The 40-year-old
assailant, Byran Uyesugi, was reportedly under severe job stress
and may have been close to losing his position at Xerox, where
he had worked for the last 15 years. Company officials denied
that Uyesugi was being laid off, but the Connecticut-based company
has been engaged in a six-year restructuring and has slashed more
than 10,000 jobs, or 10 percent of its workforce.
Uyesugi entered a second-floor conference room with a 9 mm
pistol and shot five members of his work team. He then walked
to another room and killed two more Xerox employees. All of the
victims were men, between the ages of 33 and 58. According to
one witness, Uyesugi calmly left the office, waving goodbye to
those he left uninjured. After a five-hour standoff with police,
the gunman gave himself up.
As has been the pattern in previous shooting rampages, friends
and neighbors expressed shock and disbelief that Uyesugi was capable
of such violence. They described him as a reserved, but nice person,
who had a passion for breeding rare fish and building furniture.
Underneath, however, Uyesugi apparently suffered from the same
type of economic, emotional and psychological distress that has
found expression in one violent eruption after another in the
US.
Police said he had been turned down for a firearms permit in
1994 following an arrest for criminal property damage after an
argument with coworkers at Xerox. Uyesugi had kicked in some elevator
doors and was required to take anger management counseling
for two weeks.
Harry Friel, an office manager at the state Capitol where Uyesugi
regularly repaired photocopy machines, said, He was frustrated,
but in a quiet way. You had to pull it out of him. It eventually
came out that he was under stress, something was bothering him,
and it wasn't right, but he would shrug it off. He didn't want
to talk about it.
Uyesugi lived in a small house in a working class neighborhood
with his father, Hiroyuki Uyesugi, a retired postal worker who
suffers from a heart condition and prostate cancer, and his brother,
a state employee. Police found 18 registered weapons in the house,
apparently belonging to Byran Uyesugi, who had participated in
rifle competitions in high school.
Officials and news commentators expressed dismay that such
violence, which has become a periodic occurrence on the US mainland,
could have erupted in Hawaii. We are the safest city in
the nation. We have the lowest crime rate, said Honolulu
Mayor Jeremy Harris. Things like this just don't happen
here in paradise. This is something that has shaken the community.
But social conditions in Hawaii are far from idyllic. Like
the rest of America, the islands are characterized by severe economic
polarization. While Wall Street mogul Charles Schwab is building
a $30 million mansion in the islands, tens of thousands of working
people are barely eking out a living. The situation has worsened
in part due to the economic crisis in Japan, which traditionally
has close ties to Hawaii. Recession in Japan has led to a fall
in tourism and other business relationships.
Many younger families that bought houses during the real estate
boom have found themselves unable to pay off loans as the value
of their homes has fallen. The official unemployment rate remains
well above the national average, while the bulk of new jobs are
in the low-wage service sector.
Honolulu-based author Lois-Ann Yamanaka said, We hear
about this stuff on the mainland, we don't hear about this in
our own backyard. But it's right under the surface; it's always
right there. Problems of racial and ethnic tension, people
working multiple jobs and the seemingly intractable problems of
drug abuse are ignored in Hawaii, she said.
The Hawaii shooting only underscores that such violence is
a fact of life in every region of America. This year alone has
seen more than a dozen multiple shootings, from Columbine High
School to a psychiatrist's office in Michigan to the Jewish Community
Center in Los Angeles.
In recent years such violence has been centered in the workplace,
from the murder of 14 people by a postal worker in Edmond, Oklahoma
in 1986 to last July in Atlanta, when a debt-ridden securities
day trader killed 12 people and wounded 13, before killing himself.
More than half of American companies have experienced at least
one incidence of workplace violence in the past three years, according
to a national survey scheduled to be released next week. According
to statistics from the National Institute for Occupational Safety
and Health, homicide is the second leading cause of death on the
job, surpassed only by motor vehicle crashes. While the majority
of workplace homicides are robbery-related crimes, 9 percent are
committed by coworkers or former coworkers.
These are symptoms of a sick society. Politicians and the media
may choose to ignore the social tensions building up in America,
but they continue to fester. The political system does not allow
any avenue for tens of millions of people to express their concerns
about worsening conditions. Both political parties speak for corporate
America and support its cost-cutting and downsizing drive. The
official labor movement functions openly as the junior partner
of big business. Under these conditions, social tensions have
tended to erupt in the malignant form of individual violence.
See Also:
Eight dead in Texas church
shooting--the latest eruption of social tensions in America
[17 September 1999]
The Atlanta massacre: What
it says about America
[31 July 1999]
Social
breakdown: violence in US
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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