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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Violence
in the US
A new round of shootings in the US
By Kate Randall
16 March 2000
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The latest in the seemingly unending rash of shootings in the
US took place last weekend.
At 11 p.m. Friday, March 10, outside a dance at Beach High
School in Savannah, Georgia, 19-year-old Darrell Ingram allegedly
opened fire as 300 students left the event, hitting three male
students. Stacey Smalls, 19, died at the scene and Ramone Kimball,
16, died on Saturday from injuries sustained in the shooting.
The other victim was treated and released. Ingram is not a student
at Beach High, but school officials said that the three shooting
victims were students in the district. Ingram has been charged
with two counts of murder and one count of aggravated assault.
On Saturday night, March 11, Robert Leonard, 36, shot himself
in the chest with a high-powered rifle as he was being pursued
by a highway patrol helicopter in Troy, Missouri, a rural area
about 60 miles north of St. Louis. Leonard was being sought in
connection with the fatal shootings of four people the day before,
when he allegedly walked into a home, argued with his wife who
was with another man, and then shot her, the man and another couple
at the house. Five young children, including three of the suspect's,
who were in the home at the time, were not harmed.
Other shooting incidents over the past two weeks have included:
February 29a six-year-old student shot and killed another
six-year-old, Kayla Rolland, in a classroom at the Buell Elementary
School in Mount Morris Township, Michigan.
March 1Ronald Taylor, 39, went on a rampage in Wilkinsburg,
Pennsylvania at an apartment building and fast-food restaurant,
leaving three dead.
March 1Vincent Smith, 16, was shot and killed by sheriff's
deputies in Brown County, Kansas after opening fire on three troopers.
The teenager had stolen his father's gun and mother's car from
their home in Buffalo, New York and driven 1,000 miles to the
Midwest, allegedly fatally shooting a sheriff's deputy about two
hours before the shootout with troopers.
March 8Fred Williams, a former city fireman, called firefighters
to his Memphis, Tennessee home, and then ambushed and killed two
firefighters and a sheriff's deputy as they arrived on the scene.
The body of the wife of the gunman was later found inside the
house.
March 8John K. Bridgeford, 37, of Champaign, Illinois,
allegedly stabbed his 76-year-old father to death and then chased
his 75-year-old mother to a nearby elementary school and stabbed
her in the arm before being subdued.
March 8A 16-year-old girl near Worcester, Massachusetts
was charged in the bludgeoning death of her mother, a prominent
psychiatrist who specialized in criminal behavior.
In a sense, all of these cases are unique. In certain specific
ways, intense pressuresfinancial, personal, psychologicaldrove
the individual perpetrators to snap. But taken as a whole, and
as a recurring trend, these tragic incidents say something deeply
disturbing about the overall condition of American society.
Certainly economic factors are at work. The six-year-old child
in Michigan, for example, was living in horrible conditions of
poverty and backwardness. His father was in jail and his mother,
evicted from her home and apparently involved with drugs, left
him with a relative at a home where stolen weapons were traded
for drugs. He found the gun used to shoot his classmate under
a blanket and learned how to shoot it by watching a young man
who lived in the house.
The conditions of life faced by this child are appalling, and
the media and authorities have been unable to ignore his situation
when discussing the incident. But how is one to explain what is
at work when individuals from better-off circumstances lash out
in desperation and violence?
Even bourgeois commentators have noted of late the buildup
of tension and anxiety in America. Financial pressures play no
small role in this process. Millions of Americans live daily with
the threat of losing their jobs. According to Challenger, Gray
& Christmas, a firm that tracks job cuts, US companies announced
675,000 layoffs in 1999 and 678,000 in 1998. This compares to
111,285 in 1989.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics, whose figures include layoffs
not publicly announced, says the number reached 1.57 million in
1999, and this figure excludes layoffs of less than 50 workers.
Even skilled technical workers, such as software designers, can
become obsolete in only a few years' time.
Of late corporations have taken to firing one set of workersusually
the less skilled and those tied to more mundane sectors of the
economywhile hiring others, more often than not, workers
with skills geared to e-commerce and hi-tech. The practice is
called churning.
Nowhere in the world is the fate of the population tied so
closely to the workings of the market. In this sink or swim
society, while the nouveau super-rich build mansions and assemble
jet fleets, many workers are forced to work two jobs or more,
while their incomes are drained by rising costs for day care and
other necessities, and they struggle under a mountain of consumer
debt.
There are definite economic and social reasons why more than
125 million prescriptions for antidepressants were written in
the US in 1999, and drugs to combat social phobia
are now being advertised on television.
Add to this a culture that glorifies violence and brutality,
and the mix becomes explosive. The problem-solving methods of
the government provide a model of cruelty and violenceassembly-line
executions, vindictive prison terms, tougher laws against juveniles,
military aggression around the globe. Violence as the ultimate
solution to problems is reinforced on television, in the movies,
in video games.
The ready availability of weapons in the US is undoubtedly
a contributing factor. According to the US Department of Justice
and the National Rifle Association, it is estimated that between
65 million and 80 million Americans own between 200 million and
225 million firearms, close to one weapon for every man, woman
and child.
However, the calls of President Bill Clinton and others for
stricter gun controls ring increasingly hollow with each tragic
incident. The Democrats have seized on the slogan of gun control
in order, as one party insider put it, to "make crime a Democratic
issue"i.e., to gain short-term electoral advantage
and distract public attention from an examination of the social
roots of the increasing number of tragic and violent outbursts.
The reasons why, under more and more difficult conditions,
some individuals become unhinged and turn homicidal are complex.
But when such episodes become part of daily life, it is a sure
sign that the society in question has lost its bearings.
Job insecurity and financial hardship exert a tremendous pressure,
but these factors alone cannot explain why the response has to
this point taken the form of individual violent outbursts, rather
than mass protest against the system responsible for these economic
conditions.
The main political parties provide no outlet for the dissatisfaction
dominating much of the population. There are no politicians who
even speak of the tremendous social polarization between the rich
and poor in America, let alone suggest that anything is wrong
or should be changed.
Television and the print media present an image of prosperity
and foster an intellectual atmosphere of stifling conformity.
To the extent that any social ills are alluded to, the reasons
for these problems are never explained. Rather than point to a
failing system, the individual is singled out. Invariably the
solution proposed is for more police and longer prison terms.
Several decades ago, working people felt they could look to
the trade unions or the civil rights movement to defend them,
but today these organizations have abandoned any pretense of fighting
against the status quo. The political spectrum has shifted so
far to the right that a policy of fiscal responsibility
has replaced any talk of reform, or programs to aid workers and
the poor.
While there are some signs of a radicalizationthe anti-WTO
demonstrations in Seattle, opposition to the death penalty, outrage
over police brutality in New York City and Los Angelesthe
dissatisfaction and anger felt by masses of people finds, for
the most part, no progressive outlet. Instead the pent-up social
discontent and anxiety tend to be expressed in anti-social acts
of individual violence.
Tensions will, at a certain point, find expression in a more
positive way. Tremendous social and economic forces will come
into play, especially when the stock market bubble bursts, as
it inevitably must. But an essential prerequisite for channeling
these pressures in a progressive direction is the development
of a politically conscious element within the working class that
has reached the conclusion that there is something fundamentally
wrong with the capitalist system itself, and sets out to build
a political movement to replace it with a higher, more rational
and humane social order.
See Also:
US: What the shootings in Flint and Wilkinsburg
have in common
[4 March 2000]
Social
Breakdown: Violence in the US
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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