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WSWS : News
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America : Violence
in the US
US: What the shootings in Flint and Wilkinsburg have in common
Comment by Kate Randall
4 March 2000
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The two shooting episodes which took place in the US this past
week, though quite different in their details, point at the same
time to certain general conclusions that can be drawn from the
ongoing eruption of violence in American society.
On Tuesday, February 29, a six-year-old in Mount Morris Township,
near Flint, Michigan, shot and killed another six-year-old student,
Kayla Rolland, at Buell Elementary School. The two children had
reportedly quarreled before the shooting. The very next day, Ronald
Taylor, 39, allegedly went on a rampage in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania,
shooting a maintenance worker in his apartment and customers at
two fast-food restaurants. Two had died and three were left critically
wounded before the man surrendered; another man died Thursday
from injuries sustained in the shooting.
These shootings were only the latest in a string of such incidents
that have taken place in the past 12 months. There have been school
shootingsincluding last April 20 at Columbine High School
in Littleton, Colorado, where 12 students and a teacher were killedand
attacks at stock brokerage houses in Atlanta, Georgia last July,
a Jewish Community Center in suburban Los Angeles last August
and a shipyard shooting in Seattle, Washington last November,
to name only a few such events.
While such episodes of violence have become more and more a
feature of contemporary American life, the ages of the children
involved in the Michigan incident have made this latest tragedy
particularly shocking.
The official response to the Michigan school shooting has been
predictable, with the authorities looking for someone to pay for
the death of the young girl. Jameal James, 19, the man police
believe acquired the .32 caliber semi-automatic pistol used in
the shooting in a drug swap, turned himself into police Wednesday
morning. James was charged Thursday with involuntary manslaughter
for keeping the stolen weapon where the child could get hold of
it. The child's uncle, Sir Marcus Winfrey, is being held on unrelated
weapons and drug charges.
It has been virtually impossible for police and prosecutors
in the elementary school shooting case in Michigan to ignore the
impoverished and abysmal conditions under which the young child
lived. Obviously that kind of an environment doesn't give
a kid a chance, commented Genesee County Prosecutor Arthur
Busch. Indicating that they would not seek criminal charges against
the boy, Busch added, We're not a bunch of wimps here. But
we have common sense.
Apparently prosecutors will not invoke the 1997 Michigan law
that allows a child of any age to be charged as an adult for serious
and violent offenses. In nearby Pontiac the Oakland County Prosecutor's
Office tried Nathaniel Abraham as an adult in the shooting of
18-year-old Ronnie Greene, Jr. Abraham, who was 11 years old at
the time of his arrest with the mental capacity of a six- to eight-year-old,
was convicted of second-degree murder last November 16.
In the days following the shooting outside Flint, a horrifying
picture has emerged about the world this boy has inhabited in
his short life so far. His mother, Tamarla Owens, 29, had dropped
off the six-year-old and his eight-year-old brother at their uncle's
house in the week before the shooting, and left her five-year-old
daughter at her sister's. Ms. Owens apparently had been evicted
from her previous residence, and she needed somewhere for her
children to stay while she worked at her job at a nearby mall.
According to neighbors, the dilapidated house was frequented by
drug traffickers at all hours of the day. The young boys slept
together on a couch and made their own way to school, a few blocks
away. The boy allegedly found the weapon he used in the shooting
under some bedclothes, and had learned how to load and shoot it
by observing Jameal James.
The children's father, Derick Owens, was released from prison
last month after serving three and a half years for violating
probation on convictions of cocaine trafficking and home invasion.
He had been working as a janitor at a Flint packaging plant for
about a month before being arrested last Sunday for speeding.
Police claim that he was trying to elude them, a violation of
his probation. For now, the three Owens children have been placed
with their aunt, under the auspices of the so-called Michigan
Family Independence Agency.
The Beecher School District where Buell Elementary School is
located is not dissimilar to countless working class communities
across the country. Hard-hit by the slump in the auto industry,
the district now has few residents employed at the General Motors
factories that used to be one of the area's biggest employers.
More than 82 percent of the district's students qualify for free
or reduced-priced lunches, higher than the rate in Detroit. Only
24 percent of fourth graders scored satisfactorily in reading,
compared to 60 percent statewide. It is an integrated area, with
about 60 percent of the residents black and 40 percent white.
But while details of the Owens family's life fill the papers
and newscasts, discussion stops short of a serious analysis of
the connection between these conditions and the tragedy that took
place on Tuesday. The media and the authorities point a finger
at a lack of parental responsibility. Gun control
proponents, led by Bill Clinton, contend that if laws mandating
trigger locks had been passed the shooting could have been averted.
But isn't it ludicrous to advocate family values and
gun control in this young boy's situationwhen he was living
without his parents, in wretched poverty, in a house where drugs
and weapons were being illegally traded?
Wilkinsburg, on the east side of Pittsburgh, where Ronald Taylor
went on his rampage on Wednesday, has long been impoverished.
Even before area steel mills began to shut down and lay off workers
the area was economically depressed. A primarily black community,
70 percent of its children live below the poverty line. It has
one of the worst public school systems in the state, and teachers
there have been without a contract since 1994; the school board
refuses to negotiate with them.
Ronald Taylor, who is black, has been arraigned in connection
with the shooting on one count of ethnic intimidationthe
Pennsylvania version of a hate crimeas well
as five counts of aggravated assault, a count of arson, carrying
a firearm without a license, and one count of causing a catastrophe.
Taylor was evidently mentally disturbed, having spent 37 days
in the psychiatric unit at St. Francis Medical Center last summer.
Police and FBI agents searching Taylor's apartment found notes,
many signed by Taylor, including such statements as Death
to Jerusalem, white trash and denunciations
of Asians, Italians, the police and the news media. One list labeled
The Satan List includes the addresses of various businesses
in the Wilkinsburg-Pittsburgh area. Although it is not known whether
Taylor had any connection to an organized political group, in
such oppressed areas there is no lack of demagogues who seek to
channel discontent in a reactionary or racist direction.
John DeWitt, a maintenance man in Taylor's apartment building,
reportedly told police that Taylor called him and another maintenance
worker, John Kroll, white trash and racist pigs. After
DeWitt left Taylor's apartment to answer another call, Taylor
apparently shot and killed Kroll.
The shootings in Mount Morris Township and Wilkinsburg have
this in common: both took place under extremely depressed economic
conditions. Both the Owens family and Ronald Taylor live in an
environment plagued by violence and poverty. They are the so-called
losers in American society, that segment of the population confined
to neighborhoods where little hope survives, neighborhoods dominated
in many cases by drugs and violence, including police violence,
to many of whose residents jail time is no stranger. Schools are
substandard in these areas and most job training programs have
been eliminated. With no institutions or organizations to represent
them and speak for them, the seething frustrations find no conscious
expression and the most vulnerable individuals erupt in anti-social
behavior and violence.
Despite the exposure of the deplorable circumstances faced
by the young boy in Michigan, and the disturbed and depraved mental
condition of the gunman in Wilkinsburg, the media and the authorities
approach both incidents in the main as police issues. Someone
must be prosecuted. But one would search in vain for any serious
attempt to explain what it is in American society that produces
this seemingly endless chain of tragedies.
Dozens of school, workplace and mass shootings have now taken
place. If repeated errors or worse occurred in any other sphere
of life, a systems analyst would be brought in to
analyze the problem. It would quickly be determined that something
was fundamentally wrong with the system as a whole.
Instead, true to form, the response of US authorities and the
media to the wave of violence is to lock up still more people,
pass more anti-crime laws with yet stiffer penalties,
install metal detectors in grade schools, harden their zero-tolerance
stance. To dig deeper into the social conditions lying beneath
the surface, which are ultimately responsible for tragedies like
those of the past week, would reveal a critically diseased society
which has alienated and maimed large numbers of people.
See Also:
Six-year-old Michigan girl shot and killed
in classroom
[1 March 2000]
Social
Breakdown: Violence in the US
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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