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Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh: the making of a mass
murderer
By David Walsh
19 April 2001
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Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber, is scheduled to
die May 16 by lethal injection at a federal penitentiary in Terre
Haute, Indiana. On April 19, 1995, McVeigh detonated a seven-ton
truck bomb outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building that
killed 168 people, including 19 children, in the deadliest act
of terrorism ever committed on US soil.
The impending execution has once again raised issues surrounding
the bombing and the figure of McVeigh himself. Various commentaries
have appeared in the media, most of them superficial in the extreme.
As a rule, they go no farther than discussing McVeigh's subjective
motives, and generally reach the conclusion that he is nothing
more than a monstrous aberration, whose emergence is not related
to broader social questions.
Approaching McVeigh in this manner is not only inadequate,
it is an evasion. To grasp the Oklahoma City tragedy and the character
of its perpetrator requires seriously examining and coming to
grips with some ugly truths about American society.
The most striking and immediate aspect of McVeigh and the atrocity
he committed is something official commentators pass over in virtual
silencethe intense alienation from society and its official
establishment that he exhibits. What accounts for such a level
of alienation, and the anti-social form it has assumed in the
figure of McVeigh? What is the socio-psychological process that
transformed a working class youth into an unrepentant mass murderer?
McVeigh's cold-blooded act horrified millions in the US and
around the world. But a recently published book, American Terrorist:
Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City Bombing by two Buffalo
News reporters, Lou Michel and Dan Herbeck, reports that McVeigh
has no regrets about his act. He openly acknowledged having set
off the bomb to the authors and claims sole responsibility for
the mass killing. During an appearance on ABC News's Prime
Time Thursday March 29, Herbeck commented, He [McVeigh]
never expressed one ounce of remorse for the Oklahoma City bombing.
Michel described McVeigh's reaction to the explosion's aftermath:
Damn, I didn't knock the building down. I didn't take it
down.
According to Michel and Herbeck, McVeigh claimed not to have
known that a day-care center was located in the Murrah Building,
and that if he had known it, in his own words, it might
have given me pause to switch targets. That's a large amount of
collateral damage.
Michel and Herbeck quote McVeigh, with whom they spoke for
some 75 hours, on his attitude to the victims: To these
people in Oklahoma who have lost a loved one, I'm sorry but it
happens every day. You're not the first mother to lose a kid,
or the first grandparent to lose a grandson or a granddaughter.
It happens every day, somewhere in the world. I'm not going to
go into that courtroom, curl into a fetal ball, and cry just because
the victims want me to do that.
McVeigh's lack of remorse for the deaths of 19 children, as
well as secretaries, clerks, administrators and others employed
by the federal government, and the dozens of people who were merely
visiting the building, should serve as a warning about the character
of elements promoted by the ultra-right in the US. They are brutal,
cowardly and ruthless.
While American Terrorist contains some valuable material,
it provides little insight into the social source of McVeigh's
act. Indeed Michel and Herbeck end their work on the following
note: The same imponderable question haunts those who lost
sons, daughters, spouses, friends, and other loved ones when America's
long-simmering tensions over gun rights and big government exploded
in Oklahoma City. Why? This amounts to an admission
of failure on the part of authors who, by all rights, should have
dedicated their 388-page book to answering that very question.
One would certainly not go to the house-organ of liberal complacency,
the New York Times, for an explanation of Why?
The Times, in a March 30 editorial, denounces McVeigh without
making any effort to explain the conditions that produced him.
The newspaper's editorial asserts that the Oklahoma City bomber's
comments reveal a mind warped by self-induced militancy
and by a detached, phonily objective language of profit and loss.
The editorial writers of the Times imply there are no social
circumstances in the US that would justify militant opposition
to the status quo, from any quarter, left or right. The editorial
absolves American society; McVeigh, according to the logic of
the Times, in no way reflects on the social and political
order as a whole.
Human beings, however, are social creatures and develop their
personalities and psyches as members of a particular society under
definite historical conditions. Their essence is the composite
of their social relationships. Individuality lies in the specific
and unique manner in which a man or woman reflects and refracts
a variety of social and historical processes.
The growth of the extreme right in the US, a process that has
had semi-official sponsorship over a period of decades, made it
virtually inevitable that someone would carry out an atrocious
act like the Oklahoma City bombing. For Timothy McVeigh to turn
out to be that someone, many things in his life had to fall into
place.
Economic blight
Two social processes come together in the life experience of
Timothy McVeigheconomic blight and political reaction.
McVeigh was born in April 1968 in Lockport, a town of some
23,000 in western New York state, 20 miles northeast of Buffalo
and 15 miles east of Niagara Falls. Lockport is cut in half by
the Erie Canal, from whose locks the town gets its name.
The Buffalo area was a major business and industrial center
by the beginning of the twentieth century. In 1910 Henry Harrison
began making automotive radiators in a small shop in Lockport.
By 1920 Harrison Radiator was a division of General Motors and
remained one until 1995, when Harrison Thermal Systems was spun
off to Delphi Automotive Systems. Harrison remains the largest
employer in Lockport. Both Timothy McVeigh's grandfather (30 years)
and father (36 years) worked at the Harrison plant.
By the late 1970s the state of western New York's economy and
the automobile and steel industries that formed its backbone had
begun to worsen dramatically. Harrison stopped hiring in 1979.
The steel mills in the Buffalo area were decimated in the early
1980s by slump and international competition. The city and region
entered into a spiral of decline.
As a 1995 Washington Post profile noted: McVeigh's
teens coincided with the most traumatic economic times since the
Depression. Buffalo's experience was typical of the Rust Belt.
Major blue-collar employersauto and steelshut down
or downsized dramatically. Two major banks failed, throwing thousands
of white-collar workers out of jobs and causing downturns in real
estate, advertising, law and other fields.
On the same day in early April 2001 that the Buffalo News
published the third and final excerpt of Michel and Herbeck's
book on McVeigh, it carried an article reporting that the Buffalo
Niagara region had lost a bigger share of its population
during the 1990s than any major metropolitan area in the nation,
according to an analysis of the recently-released 2000 census
figures. The decline dropped Buffalo-Niagara from the thirty-fourth
to the forty-third largest metropolitan region in the US.
Political environment
Economic decay has been accompanied over the last quarter century
by a growth of social inequality that has increasingly split American
society into two worlds: a small, fabulously wealthy elite and
the vast bulk of the population, either struggling to get by or
living in outright poverty. This has been as true in the Buffalo
area as everywhere else. A few suburbs have flourished, while
the inner city has decayed and once relatively stable working
class communities have deteriorated.
Decay and social polarization, however, cannot entirely explain
Timothy McVeigh's evolution. Why did the discontent in the late
1980s and early 1990s primarily take the form of the growth of
right-wing militia-type movements? Why was there not a growing
movement against capitalism? Why did McVeigh's own disaffection
take a right-wing direction?
McVeigh came to maturity during the years of the Reagan presidency,
a period characterized by a relentless attack on the living standards
and gains of the working class and an equally ferocious assault
by right-wing ideologues against every current of progressive
social thought. Anticommunism, directed against the Evil
Empire of the Soviet Union, militarism, racism, national
chauvinism, religious bigotry and fanaticism, conformism and a
general intellectual deadeningevery form of reaction flourished.
This had its consequences.
In McVeigh's case, the barrage of right-wing propaganda apparently
combined with an emotional vulnerabilityhis parents' marriage
began to break up when he was 11; he was slightly built and bullied
in schoolto form a particular kind of paranoid adolescent
personality.
From an early age, he was obsessed with survivalism. At 14
(1983) he was stockpiling food, camping equipment and weapons
in case of a nuclear attack or the communists taking over
the country, according to a neighbor. Accounts of the tribulations
endured during the gas shortage of 1973-74, plus his own experience
during the great blizzard of 1977, when Buffalo was virtually
shut down and large numbers of people were left without means
of transportation, helped convince McVeigh that individuals had
to learn to fend for themselves.
According to Michel and Herbeck, he read gun magazines voraciously
and ordered books from advertisements on their pages. One
that captivated him was a volume entitled To Ride, Shoot Straight
and Speak the Truth, by Jeff Cooper, a military man and a
world-renowned expert on self-defense. ... The Turner Diaries
was another book that hit a nerve. The novel by former American
Nazi Party official William L. Pierce (under the pen name Andrew
McDonald) had become a kind of bible for a loose movement of gun
collectors, militia groups, and government protesters after its
publication in 1978. The book's narrative is sympathetic
to Adolf Hitler, suggests that blacks and Jews are inherently
evil, and advocates killing them.
Apocalyptic and anticommunist Hollywood films also captivated
McVeigh, including The Omega Man, Logan's Run, the
Planet of the Apes series and especially the 1983 Cold
War screed Red Dawn (directed by right-winger John Milius)about
a group of small-town teenagers who become guerrilla fighters
when communists invade the USwhich he rented
four times. He also favored militaristic fantasies like First
Blood, the first of the Rambo films, and Missing in Action,
in which Chuck Norris rescues American prisoners of war. McVeigh
began collecting guns and firing them, going so far as to purchase
a 10-acre piece of property in southwestern New York with a friend
where they could fire their weapons in peace.
During the 1980s right-wing politicians and media types stirred
up racism, often couched in attacks on welfare cheats
and the like. McVeigh grew up in a lily-white community where,
according to Michel and Herbeck, brown and black faces were
about as common as Martians. After a brief stint at a two-year
business collegehe scored high on mathematical aptitude
tests and had an early interest in computers and the InternetMcVeigh
went to work for an armored car service in Buffalo. He got his
first exposure to racism during those armored-car runs through
the city. On runs to check-cashing shops on the East Side of Buffalo,
his white co-workers spared little sympathy for the shop's heavily
minority clientele and the minorities who lived in the area.
McVeigh's unhappy or distorted relations with women helped
fuel his rage. His mother took the active role in breaking up
his parents' marriage and left her son behind with her husband.
McVeigh apparently developed a wider resentment. According to
Michel and Herbeck, in interviews McVeigh would also lash
outrepeatedly and emotionallyat the concept of working
mothers and two-income families, which he considered a major cause
of problems in American society. In the past thirty years,
because of the women's movement, they've taken an influence out
of the household,' he told the reporters.
(It can hardly have failed to occur to McVeigh that an explosion
in an office building during working hours would be likely to
kill or injure mostly female employees, which, in fact, his bomb
did.)
Reading about his life, one wonders if McVeighand his
experience was hardly uniqueever encountered a single left-wing
or socialist idea during his entire youth. No one is born to be
a right-wing terrorist. But the social, intellectual and psychological
circumstances of McVeigh's upbringing mitigated against his inchoate
discontent finding a progressive channel.
The unrelenting character of the right-wing propaganda in the
1980s and early 1990s was only made possible by the advanced state
of decay of American liberalism and the Democratic Party. Reaganism
was, in fact, a bipartisan policy; the Democrats, who controlled
Congress, were fully complicit in the attacks on the working class.
They either openly joined in the chorus of attacks on the poor
or adapted themselves to them. In cities like Buffalo, Democrats
participated in cutting budgets and social services. Not wanting
to be outdone by Reagan and his cohorts, Democratic Party politicians
took every opportunity to promote anticommunism and militarism.
Figures like Bill Clinton, a governor of a small, right-to-work
Southern state, were promoted by the right-wing Democratic Leadership
Council, which by the 1990s became the dominant force within the
party.
During these years the Democratic Party abandoned the policies
of social reform identified with the Great Society and the War
on Poverty of the early 1960s (which themselves were of an extremely
limited character), and generally repudiated any form of income
redistribution to lessen economic inequality and improve
the conditions of broad masses of people. The Democrats, basing
themselves on an ever more narrow social base, turned to fiscal
conservatism, catering more and more directly to big business,
and to identity politics, appealing to the more privileged layers
of blacks and other minorities.
It is worth noting in this context that McVeigh became even
more susceptible to the propaganda of the right when, following
his army service, he scored high on civil service exams for both
the state and federal governments and failed to land jobs because,
he believed, of affirmative action programs favoring black applicants.
One feature of Michel and Herbeck's book that jumps out at
the reader is the absence of a single reference to the unions
and, in particular, to the United Auto Workers. UAW Local 686
at Harrison Radiator was formed in 1943. The Washington Post
depicts McVeigh's father, Bill, as a registered Democrat
and union man who on a recent afternoon sported a black nylon
United Auto Workers windbreaker and baseball cap.
It is a damning indictment of the AFL-CIO unions that right-wing
militia groups emerged in industrial states where years of layoffs,
carried out with the complicity of the unions, had devastated
the working class.
The UAW, to which members of the McVeigh family had been paying
dues for 52 years by the time of the Oklahoma City bombing, had
long ceased to represent a progressive social force. Corporatism
was now its official policy, and union leaders had intervened
for years to help impose wage cuts and other concessions as agents
of the auto companies. The UAW and United Steelworkers had been
at the forefront of the chauvinist frenzy during the 1980s, with
their anti-Japanese campaigns. In towns like Lockport they played
a deeply reactionary social role.
Local 686, with approximately 9,700 active and retired
members, according to a column in the UAW's Solidarity
magazine, continues to promote chauvinism (although the Harrison
Thermal Division makes parts for every major European, Japanese
and Korean auto manufacturer), sponsoring a Buy American
weekend each year and ... staunchly promoting American- and union-made
products.
The US Army and the Gulf War
In May 1988, after six months of the armored car job and seeing
no future for himself in Buffalo, McVeigh, just turned 20, joined
the US Army. Along with the other recruits, he underwent a process
of brutalization in the military.
Michel and Herbeck comment: During dawn runs and their
long, exhausting marches over the Georgia sand, their sound-offs
revolved around killing and mutilating the enemy, or violent sex
with women. Blood makes the grass grow!' recruits were taught
to chant. Kill! Kill! Kill!' I can't hear you!' barked
the sergeant. Blood makes the grass grow! Kill! Kill! Kill!'
McVeigh continued to develop and promulgate his right-wing
views in the army. It was here he met Terry Nichols, his fellow
conspirator in the Oklahoma City bombing. McVeigh ran into difficulty
with his evident racism in the army, when he was accused, as a
sergeant, of assigning blacks to the worst jobs.
His love of the army and its discipline conflicted with his
views of the US government as oppressive and representative of
the New World Order, stalking horse for a UN-dominated world government
and so on. The experience of the Persian Gulf War, during which
he operated a Bradley fighting vehicle, apparently deepened his
misgivings about the role of the US military.
McVeigh, a crack shot, was gung-ho about the war when it began
in February 1991. However, Michel and Herbeck write: The
American soldiers pictured their adversaries as bloodthirsty zealots,
slashing throats and firing chemical weapons. Instead they found
a bedraggled horde of Iraqis, poorly trained, organized, and equipped....
McVeigh felt as if he were one of the bullies, one of a type he
had reviled since childhood.
McVeigh left the army in late 1991, embittered with the military
and the US government. He expected that some employer would be
happy to employ a Gulf War hero. Michel-Herbeck comment: But
it didn't work out that way. Western New York, its economy still
struggling as it had been when he went off to the Army, didn't
have much to offer McVeigha realization that hit him hard.
The next thirteen months back in Pendleton [where his father had
moved from Lockport] would turn out to be the most disappointing
time of his life, and it would drive him into a deep depression.
McVeigh obtained a job as a security guard for Burns Security.
He began writing letters to local newspapers and politicians,
expressing his right-wing, populist views. Here is a typical confused
passage:
Racism on the rise? You had better believe it. Is this
America's frustrations venting themselves? Is it a valid frustration?
Who is to blame for the mess? At a point when the world has seen
communism falter as an imperfect system to manage people, democracy
seems to be headed down the same road. No one is seeing the big'
picture.
Maybe we have to combine ideologies to achieve the perfect
utopian government. Remember, government-sponsored health care
was a communist idea. Should only the rich be allowed to live
longer? Does that say that because a person is poor he is a lesser
human being and doesn't deserve to live as long, because he doesn't
wear a tie to work?
He added ominously: Is civil war imminent? Do we have
to shed blood to reform the current system?
The events at Ruby Ridge in August 1992, during which a FBI
sniper shot and killed the wife of a white supremacist in Idaho,
hardened McVeigh's resolve. The massacre of the Branch Davidians
at Waco, Texasthe site of which McVeigh had visited earlier
in the siegeon April 19, 1993 by federal law enforcement
forces helped to send him over the edge. Now dividing his time
between Arizona, Michigan and western New York, McVeigh began
associating with militia groups and producing pamphlets of his
own. In a letter to an ex-friend in July 1994 he wrote: Blood
will flow in the streets, Steve. Good vs. Evil. Free Men vs. Socialist
Wannabe Slaves. Pray it is not your blood, my friend.
By the autumn of 1994 McVeigh had apparently decided to blow
up a federal building. He claims that Terry Nichols and Michael
Fortier, both of whom were charged in the crime, were his only
accomplices. This seems dubious. McVeigh by this time had connections
throughout the extreme right-wing underworld and it is known that
before the bombing he called a number of fascist and racist organizations
in search of a prospective hideout.
McVeigh justified his bombing, now set for the second anniversary
of the Waco massacreApril 19, 1995on military and
tactical grounds. Michel and Herbeck note: The Army had
been his teacher in the horrors of war.... You learn how
to handle killing in the military,' he explained. I face
the consequences, but you learn to accept it.'
It was the same tactic the American government used in
armed international conflicts, when it wanted to send a message
to tyrants and despots. It was the United States government that
had ushered in this new anything-goes mentality, McVeigh believed,
and he intended to show the world what it would be like to fight
a war under these new rules, right in the federal government's
own backyard.
McVeigh was shaped, and warped, in a very direct way by both
the internal and external sides of the deepening crisis of American
capitalismthe growth of social inequality and political
reaction at home, and the eruption of American militarism abroad.
McVeigh's politics
Michel and Herbeck are incapable of explaining, even defining,
McVeigh's political outlook. Concerning the period following McVeigh's
graduation from high school, they write: For the first time
in his life, Tim was reading widely, and really beginning to think
about himself and his place in the world. He knew he loved guns,
the outdoors, and heading off in his car to explore things. And
it must have been around this time that he fixed upon the idea
of freedomas his guiding principle, as the value he loved
most of all.
Freedom is sympathetically identified here with
McVeigh's extreme individualist and even misanthropic sentiments;
it is divorced from the project of liberating humanity from economic
and social oppression. Because of their own political blindness,
Michel and Herbeck come dangerously close to offering an apology
for McVeigh and his actions in this passage and others. The authors
confuse their subject's social dissatisfaction with the anti-social
and reactionary means he found of expressing it.
Michel and Herbeck paint a picture of McVeigh's ultra-right
conceptions, but they are incapable of going beyond characterizing
his politics as anti-government, making no distinction
between right-wing and left-wing opposition to the status quo.
McVeigh opposed the federal government for its intrusions and
repressions, but he largely saw it not as the representative of
an exploiting elite, but as the embodiment of collective versus
individual activity. And he identified the federal government
as the defender of minorities, women and others who, he believed,
were eating away at his perceived status as a white male.
McVeigh's act of mass terror heralded the emergence of a fascist
tendency in the US. As the statement printed in the May 8, 1995
issue of the International Workers Bulletin (predecessor
of the World Socialist Web Site), which we are posting
today, explained: The bombing was a conscious political
act. From the standpoint of the fascists who carried it out, their
present lack of popular support was all the more reason for an
outrage of huge proportions. It was their way of announcing their
arrival on the political scene.
Fascist is not simply an epithet. The appeal of
ultra-right militia movements in the US is attributable, in the
first place, to the worsening of economic conditions that have
thrown wide layers of the population off balance, deeply alienating
many. A small minority of disoriented middle-class and working
class elements have evolved an opposition to the status quo that
rejects parliamentary-democratic norms and embraces what it conceives
to be revolutionary means, i.e., terrorism.
Fascism finds its ideological sources in the filth thrown up
by decaying bourgeois society: racism, anti-Semitism, the cult
of guns and violence. The authors of American Terrorist
flatter McVeigh when they attempt to make a coherent ideology
out of the hodgepodge that he puts forth. While endowed with native
intelligence, McVeigh holds political notions that are at best
banal and confuseda mix of slogans about the Second Amendment
(the right to bear arms), a few phrases about the dangers of One
World Government and the New World Order, racist
White Power prejudices, inchoate populist nostrums,
and so on.
The confused ideology reflects the internally contradictory
position of the militia and Patriot movements. Certain
sections of the petty bourgeoisiefrom the ranks of small
businessmen, middle managers, civil servants, professional employeesparticularly
in the decaying industrial states, and disoriented, disaffected
working class youth like McVeigh, deprived of a relatively secure
life in the factory by economic dislocation, come together out
of desperation and frustration. In the final analysis, fascism
involves the whipping up of the disoriented petty bourgeoisie
against the working class in the interests of big capital.
In essence, fascism is the politics of regression and despair.
McVeigh came to see himself as a soldier in a crusade,
and an inevitable martyr. He acted in revenge for the Waco massacre
and other crimes of the US government, but with little real hope
that his act would spark a popular uprising. He was deeply pessimistic;
indeed, according to the interviews conducted with Michel and
Herbeck, he contemplated suicide on a number of occasions. He
suggested that he knew he would be caught and eventually executed,
and referred to the bombing as state-assisted suicide.
Timothy McVeigh is the product of a political and social malaise,
bound up with the decay of American capitalist society. As conditions
for masses of people worsened in the late 1980s and early 1990s
and a social chasm yawned, the political establishment was shifting
sharply to the right, encouraging the growth of ultra-right forces.
The Democratic Party was repudiating its own history of social
reformism and any consideration of the needs of working people.
The putrefaction of the trade unions had reached an advanced stage.
This coincided with the more general, international collapse of
the traditional labor organizations, which found its highest expression
in the demise of the Soviet Union. Triumphalist reaction encountered
a working class betrayed and politically disoriented, and therefore
unable to mount any serious resistance.
At the same time these processes were working away at the foundations
of American bourgeois democratic institutions. The semi-fascist
organizations with which McVeigh had associations were finding
an increasingly sympathetic ear within the extreme right of the
Republican Party. By the time of the Oklahoma City bombing, many
state and federal Republican legislators had close ties to militia
organizations and other fascistic and racist political outfits.
There is a continuum that extends from these circles to the top
echelons of the Republican Party.
It was revealed in December 1998 that Senate Majority Leader
Trent Lott of Mississippi and Congressman Bob Barra Clinton
impeachment zealothad addressed gatherings of the Council
of Conservative Citizens, the direct organizational successor
of the Citizens Councils that organized segregationist forces
in the 1950s and 1960s, serving as a more respectable ally of
the Ku Klux Klan.
The Democratic Party has adapted itself to this process. It
proved incapable of seriously opposing either the anti-Clinton
impeachment drive or the successful effort by the Bush forces
to hijack the 2000 presidential election.
There is an urgent need to draw the lessons of the Oklahoma
City bombing and McVeigh's evolution. There are many signs today
that the acute contradictions of American society are beginning
to break through the surface of political reaction. What shape
this process takes will very much depend on the political education
and preparation of the forces now coming into struggle.
The American working class faces the task of freeing itself
from the grip of the Democratic Party and the semi-corpse of liberalism
and establishing its political independence. By placing itself
firmly on the basis of a socialist program and demonstrating its
determination to break the stranglehold of the financial and corporate
elite over society, such a workers movement will appeal to the
broadest layers, including many sections of the middle class,
opening the way for a new social order based on genuine democracy
and equality.
See Also:
McVeigh interview sheds
light on the social roots of the Oklahoma City bombing
[30 March 2000]
The Oklahoma City bombing
A somber warning to the working class
[Republished from the May 8, 1995 issue of the International
Workers Bulletin]
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