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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Violent eruptions in Wisconsin and Georgia: the pathology
of a society in crisis
By Patrick Martin
16 March 2005
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The bloody incidents last Friday and Saturday in Atlanta, Georgia
and Brookfield, Wisconsin have dominated the American media for
the past week. And with reason: the killing of seven people at
a Wisconsin church service and four people in and around an Atlanta
courtroom are the latest expressions of an increasingly common
and troubling phenomenon in America: eruptions of apparently random
and self-destructive violence.
The media coverage provides no understanding of the social
meaning of these events. On the contrary, it obscures it, treating
the two gunmen, Brian Nichols in Atlanta and Terry Ratzmann in
Wisconsin, as isolated cases, individuals driven solely by their
own pathologies rather than products of a society that is increasingly
dysfunctional, crisis-stricken and brutal.
In the Wisconsin case, there were initial reports that suggested
the trigger for Ratzmanns attack might have been financialhe
was about to be laid off from his job as a computer technicianor
that he was suffering from depression. Subsequent accounts suggest
that Ratzmann was merely completing a job assignment at the labor-hire
firm for which he worked, and could expect another placement,
and that he was not depressed in a clinical sense.
Instead, attention was drawn to the peculiar religious beliefs
of the church Ratzmann attended, where he opened fire with a .22
caliber semi-automatic handgun, killing six people and then himself.
In Atlanta, the media focus has been on the evident failure
of courthouse security. Nichols, a 210-pound former athlete, was
able to overpower a female sheriffs deputy, take her gun,
kill three people, and then escape from the Fulton County Courthouse,
where he was on trial for rape, facing life in prison if convicted.
He later killed a fourth person and took his car, before surrendering
to police.
There were reports suggesting gross negligence: the attack
on the deputy was visible on a surveillance camera, but no one
was watching the monitor. Surveillance tapes also showed Nichols
escaping on foot, but police nonetheless issued an alert for the
green Honda whose driver Nichols allegedly pistol-whipped in the
courthouse garage. But the car never left the garage.
The Atlanta case follows last months double murder in
Chicago, in which the husband and mother of a federal judge were
killed. While a white supremacist group that had targeted the
judge was originally suspected, that crime now appears to be the
act of a failed litigant in the judges court, Bart Ross.
A former cancer patient who had unsuccessfully sued his doctors
for malpractice, Ross shot himself to death March 9 near Milwaukee,
leaving a detailed confession.
The Ross case, like that of Nichols, involves an individual
who snapped under enormous stressin this case, the suffering
caused initially by cancer, then by the radiation treatment and
surgery which saved his life but left him disfigured and in continual
pain. Accounts by neighbors and acquaintances painted a picture
of a man gradually driven mad as he pursued court case after court
case against his alleged maltreatment by doctors, hospitals, lawyers
and judges.
Ross owed over $18,000 in unpaid credit card debts. He was
forced to sell his home and rent it back, then was evicted and
lived in his minivan during the last weeks of his life. Judge
Joan Lefkow ruled last year that his claims lack any possible
merit, but she expressed personal sympathy toward the victim
of a disease that had left him physically disfigured, in
incessant severe pain and unemployed. Ross nonetheless focused
his rage on her, located her home in Chicagos north side,
went there and hid himself, then killed her husband and mother
when they discovered him.
The Atlanta and Chicago events have led to entirely predictable
calls for a further buildup in security measures for judges and
courtrooms. As always in America, the response of the political
establishment and the media to any violent tragedy is to call
for more police and more repressive measures, continuing the steady
erosion of democratic rights. (Specifically, the Atlanta incident
has led to demands for an end to the local practice of unshackling
prisoners before they are brought into the courtroom for trial,
a humane policy established to avoid prejudicing the jury against
defendants.)
It seems indisputable that Ratzmanns actions were linked
to his religious beliefs. He was a member of the Living Church
of God, an offshoot, via several schisms over the past two decades,
of the Worldwide Church of God, founded by the late Herbert W.
Armstrong in Pasadena, California, and influential in evangelical
circles through its magazine, Plain Truth, and Armstrongs
television broadcasts, The World Tomorrow.
After Armstrongs death, his church gradually abandoned
his emphasis on preparing for an imminent end of the world, moving
towards more conventional evangelical positions. The split-offs
from the church, including the Living Church of God, sought to
retain the focus on the impending end-time and the
separation of the church membership from the rest of humanity,
who were viewed as doomed in the coming Great Tribulation.
The church regards people of northwest European ancestry as
the descendants of the Biblical ten lost tribes of Israela
theological conception that, in a more extreme form, is incorporated
in the racist outlook of white supremacist groups such as the
Aryan Nations.
Ratzmann reportedly was upset by a recent church service, in
February, which included a tape-recorded sermon from the churchs
leader, Roderick C. Meredith, warning that events foreshadowing
the end of the world were beginning to occur with increasing
frequency. He urged his followers to pay off their credit-card
debts and put aside enough cash for at least 60 days living
expenses, in case of a sudden breakdown of the banking system
or a similar emergency. One church member told police that
Ratzmann walked out of that service, sort of in a huff.
Eyewitness and medical accounts suggest that Ratzmann singled
out the pastor of his church, Randy L. Gregory, 51, a former IBM
engineer, and his 17-year-old son James, executing them with a
single shot apiece before he opened fire more generally on the
crowd of church members. He continued shooting methodically, even
pausing once to reload a magazine, until he was down to a few
bullets. He then took his own life.
As for the Atlanta gunman, his sister-in-law described Brian
Nichols as a good person. She added, He didnt
come from a broken home. Hes not a person who hung out in
the streets and was always in jail. He came up living a good life.
Raised in a comfortable middle-class black family, Nichols attended
two different colleges but dropped out of both, in one case after
facing charges of assault and battery, in the other after he was
dismissed from the football team for theft.
Nichols had lived in the Atlanta area since 1995 and most recently
worked as a computer technician at a subsidiary of United Parcel
Service. He lost that job last September, when he was arrested
and charged with rape. His ex-girlfriend alleged that he invaded
her home, binding her with duct tape and sexually assaulting her
over three days, while armed with a loaded machine gun. He was
held in Fulton County Jail for the past six months, but his first
trial on the charges ended last week in a mistrial. The retrialwith
a life sentence likely upon convictionwas to begin the day
Nichols overpowered the sheriffs deputy and took her gun.
While Nichols did not kill himself, as Ratzmann did, self-destruction
certainly seems to have been his goal. He marched into the courtroom
that was to hear his case and deliberately shot to death the judge
and court reporter. After that, he could have had little hope
of escaping from the Fulton County Courthouse alive. When he nevertheless
made a clean getaway, he made little effort to escape the massive
police dragnet throughout northern Georgia. He told the woman
he took hostage, as he watched television news reports of the
manhunt, Look at my eyes, Im already dead.
Nichols treatment of Ashley Smith, the woman he held
captive for several hours, showed a much different side of his
personality than the killing spree at the courthouse. He reportedly
engaged in long discussions with Smith, responded sympathetically
to her account of herself as a young widow with a small childher
husband had been stabbed to death several years earlierand
eventually allowed her to go, knowing she would call the police.
When they came, he waved some white clothing and surrendered peacefully.
One can, of course, enumerate many superficial differences
between the homicidal outbursts in Georgia and Wisconsin. One
took place in a southern city, the other in a northern suburb.
One gunman was black, the other white. One targeted the representatives
of state authoritya judge, a court reporter, a sheriffs
deputy, a Customs officerthe other directed his rage against
members of his own church. One killed himself at the scene of
his violent rampage, the other fled, took a hostage, then gave
himself up without incident.
The two men were both computer technicians, but otherwise had
quite different social histories.
Nichols had the more comfortable upbringing, his father a businessman
and his mother an Internal Revenue Service employee. He attended
private schools and several years of college. Ratzmann was struggling
economically. Nichols had a record of previous violence and was
in jail facing a charge of sexual assault against his ex-girlfriend.
Ratzmann, unmarried and sharing a home with his mother and adult
sister, had never had contact with the law.
Mediated through such typical accidents of personal biography
and circumstance, what is expressed here is a social tendency.
What made the most recent events exceptional was not their bloody
character, but the large number of casualties. If Ratzmann and
Nichols had killed only one victim and then themselves,
their actions would have drawn scarcely any notice. Such tragedies
take place on a daily basis in the United States. (See An
epidemic of murder-suicide in US) Far from being isolated
events, the killings in Georgia and Wisconsin highlight a pattern
of behavior which must have deeper social roots.
The tensions within American societycompounded of problems
with finances, family relationships, health, even the search for
meaning in lifefind no positive or progressive outlet today.
There is no great social or political movement which gives hope
or positive perspective to the vast majority of the American people
who are not rich and who find themselves in an increasingly difficult
struggle year by year.
The ruling elite is systematically shutting down all avenues
for the expression of these social tensions within the existing
political and economic system. The two official political parties
express only the interests of rival factions within the financial
oligarchy. The organizations such as unions and civil rights groups,
which once provided an avenue, however limited, for the assertion
of the interests of the oppressed, have been completely neutered.
The legal system, the last resort of desperate men like Bart
Ross, is being closed off as well. The current Congress has already
adopted legislation shutting off most class-action lawsuits, and
is on the verge of passing a bankruptcy bill that will remove
that traditional remedy for failed small businessmen and growing
numbers of working and middle-class people. Next on the agenda
is malpractice reform, to prevent victims of medical
errors or malfeasance from having their day in court.
One by one, safety valves are being shut off. But the underlying
social tensions continue to build, fueled by the central fact
of American life: the enormous and ever-increasing social polarizationthe
heaping up of vast wealth for a tiny minority and the increasingly
strained circumstances of tens of millions of working people.
At present, this social crisis is revealed largely in the actions
of the more unstable individuals, where questions of temperament,
mental illness or religious delusion play an important role. Ultimately,
however, these social tensions must find widerand politically
consciousexpression. This requires the building of a mass
political movement from below, one that will break through the
prevailing atmosphere of political and cultural reaction and challenge
the diseased and dehumanizing capitalist order.
See Also:
An epidemic of murder-suicide in the
US
[16 March 2005]
Skidmore, Missouri:
woman carves fetus from a mother's womb
A brutal act in a desperate society
[21 December 2004]
The Scott Peterson
case: a new American tragedy
[11 December 2004]
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