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Execution Day in America
By Barry Grey 13 June 2001
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Monday was Execution Day in America. The country awoke to the
smiling faces of television anchors reporting from Oklahoma City and
Terre Haute, Indiana that the final countdown to the execution of
Timothy McVeigh had begun. Good Morning America!
Words fail in attempting to describe the spectacle that unfolded
during the next 90 minutes. The media succeeded in transforming what
was in itself a horrible eventthe state-organized liquidation
of a human lifeinto a day of national shamelessness and
degradation.
No detail of the killing was omitted. The techniques perfected for
high-profile sporting events were marshaled to draw the viewers in
and make them feel like live witnesses, if not accomplices. The
surreal atmosphere was only enhanced by the fact that the cameras
were not allowed within miles of either the death chamber in Terre
Haute or the site of a closed circuit broadcast for the relatives of
victims in Oklahoma Citya restriction that clearly grated on
those who staged the media coverage.
There were interviews with executioners who described the process
that was unfolding behind the prison walls. What was it like to
kill a man? asked reporters, looking for the human
interest angle. What would McVeigh feel as the poison entered
his body? What would he probably be thinking? How would the execution
witnesses react? Would they recognize the precise moment of death as
it occurred? How would they cope with the stress caused by the event?
Were spiritual advisers on hand? Would the witnesses enjoy the rest
of their day? And, of course, would they achieve closure?
The audience was treated to details about the lethal drugs from
experts on such matters. CNN's Susan Candiotti scored something of a
journalistic coup by noting that the chemical cocktail used to kill
McVeigh had been developed in 1977 at the University of Oklahoma's
Medical Center, located in Oklahoma City.
The macabre spectacle was punctuated by advertisements from the
sponsorsAT&T, Wal-Mart, Outback Steakhouse, Toyota. Shortly
before the execution, CBS carried a commercial from Ortho Tri-Cyclen,
a birth-control pill.
Afterwards, reporters present at the death scene and other
witnesses took the podium to describe McVeigh's every gesture: his
facial expressions, his reaction to the drugs, etc.
There was a well-orchestrated attempt to justify the dehumanizing
operation through interviews with Oklahoma City residents who lost
family or friends in the 1995 explosion that shattered a federal
building and killed 168 people. CBS ran an extended silent scroll of
the names of McVeigh's victims.
The basic theme of the coverage was that McVeigh was receiving
just and necessary retribution. A monster was being put to death.
Nothing said that day, by either the media or the government, hinted
that the terrorist crime was in any way related to social conditions
or political realities in contemporary America.
President George W. Bush, speaking to reporters after the event,
reiterated the same theme. He laid McVeigh's execution at the feet,
not of the government, but of the victims of the bombing. They, Bush
intoned, have been given not vengeance, but justice.
There followed phrases about mercy and peace from a man who in six
years as governor of Texas presided over 152 executions, including
people who were certified mentally ill or retarded. Maintaining a
straight face, Bush went on to say, The rights of the accused
were protected and observed to the full and to the end. He
passed over the fact that the Federal Bureau of Investigation
illegally withheld some 4,400 pages of documents from McVeigh's
defense lawyers, and two federal courts set the stage for Monday's
execution by refusing to grant a stay, denying the defense team a
chance to properly study the files and make the case for an appeal of
their client's death penalty.
Turning from the TV extravaganza to the press, one found more of
the same. Most extraordinary was the commentary by the New York
Times. It published an editorial Monday that was almost
hysterical in its insistence that the Oklahoma City bombing was in no
way a reflection of American society. The piece, entitled History
and Timothy McVeigh, denied any connection between McVeigh's
crime and historical events.
The Oklahoma City bomber, according to the Times, was a
paranoid, cowardly megalomaniac, and that was all there was to it.
We have had six years to look into Mr. McVeigh's face,
the Times wrote. What his eyes show us again and again
is the sight of a man who is lost in his own delusional convictions.
The editorial continued: The Army did not form Mr. McVeigh.
The gulf war did not alienate him.... He was his own invention,
formed in the vacuum of a broken family, seduced by an ideal of
militant self-control, tutored only in the infallible but utterly
fallacious reasoning of outcasts devoted to overturning the
government in pursuit of rights they already possess.
The Times went on to call the Oklahoma City bombing a
work of vengeance by a man who had never been wronged. It spoke
of the 1993 Waco massacre without a hint of criticism of the
government's role, and made a passing reference to the
administrative fumblings of the FBI in McVeigh's trial,
echoing the government's claim that the suppression of documents was
inadvertent.
We are left to wonder, the Times editorialists
pondered, what chance event might have turned Mr. McVeigh into
one of us... Perhaps, we would suggest, a multimillion-dollar
fortune like that possessed by the Sulzberger family, who publish the
Times, would have altered McVeigh's fate.
The Times' claim that the Oklahoma City bombing was in no
way linked to the social experiences of the past 30 years, and that
McVeigh's own evolution had nothing to do with the society in which
he lived, is absurd on its face.
No more credible is the attempt to portray McVeigh as evil
incarnate. The world would be far easier to explain if terrible deeds
were simply the product of terrible people. McVeigh was guilty of a
monstrous crime, for which he certainly deserved life-long
incarceration. But he was not a monster.
He was, rather, a complex individual whose personality was, in the
final analysis, shaped by the society in which he lived. He was
certainly not a coward, in any physical or personal sense. What makes
his crime all the more disturbing is the fact that it was carried out
by someone who was, in many respects, typical of millions of people
in Americaa person who, under different circumstances, could
have turned out very differently.
The contention that McVeigh's stint in the army and his experience
in the Gulf War had no bearing on his subsequent trajectory is
similarly inane. McVeigh, according to his own account, went to the
Persian Gulf as a gung-ho recruit, but what he experienced there
traumatized him and turned him more firmly against his own
government. He witnessed first hand a slaughter of virtually
defenseless Iraqis that the US government and the media concealed
from the American public.
This is how he later described the remorse he felt after killing
two Iraqi soldiers: What made me feel bad was, number one, I
didn't kill them in self-defense.... We all have the same dreams, the
same desires, the same care for our children and our family. These
people were humans, like me, at the core.
As for the incineration of the Branch Davidian compound in Waco,
Texas, this was, plain and simple, an act of mass murder carried out
by the government against its own citizens. Eighty-six people were
killed, including more children, 25, than were killed in the Oklahoma
City bombing. One measure of the hypocrisy of the media is the fact
that it has never interviewed those who were injured or lost
loved-ones in that conflagration.
If McVeigh became a gun fanatic, he did so within a definite
ideological environment. Was it not the corporate-owned media that
bombarded American youth with militarism and chauvinism,
mass-marketed in the image of Rambo? The political establishment and
the media have for decades waged a mind-numbing campaign via the
television, radio, records and film to promote the most right-wing
ideologies and encourage every form of backwardness.
Moreover, the Republican Party, as the Times well knows, is
largely controlled by an extreme right element whose political
outlook is barely distinguishable from outright racist and fascist
organizations. How different are the views of Attorney General John
Ashcroftan agent of the Christian rightfrom those of gun
fanatics, survivalists and white supremacists? The main establishment
mouthpiece of the Republican right, the Wall Street Journal,
promotes views not so different from those of McVeigh, albeit with a
somewhat more sophisticated vocabulary.
There are documented links between leading Republicans such as
Georgia Rep. Bob Barr and Mississippi Senator Trent Lott and the
Council of Conservative Citizens, a white supremacist and
anti-Semitic outfit that emerged from the Jim Crow era white citizens
councils. A whole section of Republican congressmen elected in 1994
solicited the support of militia groups and gun lobbies led by
racists and fascists. At the time of the Oklahoma City bombing, one
of them, Steve Stockman of Texas, received a fax informing him of the
explosion from a fascist radio talk show host in Michigan. He relayed
the fax not to government authorities, but to the National Rifle
Association. The time stamp on the fax was actually an hour earlier
than the time of the explosion.
It is, finally, absurd to deny any connection between McVeigh's
anti-government feelings and his own upbringing in a part of New York
state that was devastated by the wholesale closure of auto and steel
plants. Although his anger became channeled along reactionary lines,
it had a very real basis.
The most fundamental feature of American life is the staggering
growth of economic inequality, a process that accelerated during the
corporate boom of the 1990s. The policies of the financial elite and
the two parties that do its bidding have dramatically eroded the
living standards of broad masses of people, while enabling the most
privileged layers to amass unheard of levels of wealth.
These social realities have engendered a growing sense of
frustration and anger in the population at large. The Democratic
Clinton administration, which was swept into power in 1992 on a
pledge to reverse the reactionary social policies of the Reagan and
Bush years, only compounded the social crisis by reneging on its
campaign promises and overseeing a further growth of economic
inequality.
There are reasons why embittered youth like McVeigh could become
susceptible to the political nostrums of the extreme right. Given the
inability and unwillingness of any section of the political
establishment to address the concerns of working people, and the
betrayal of the working class by its ostensible mass organizations,
the trade unions, disillusioned youth look elsewhere for answers. To
the extent that they as yet see no viable alternative to the profit
system, they can become raw material for right-wing demagogues.
It is hardly necessary to say that McVeigh perpetrated a horrific
crime. As socialists, we in the Socialist Equality Party, more than
anyone else, can in good faith denounce what he did and everything he
stood for. But moral outrage is not enough. It is no substitute for
an understanding of the social and political conditions that
ultimately gave rise to the Oklahoma City bombing.
What we wrote at the time of the bombing has been richly
vindicated by subsequent events:
The heinous crime that took the lives of nearly 200 innocent
men, women and children in Oklahoma City has laid bare a political
crisis in the United States long in the making. It has exposed the
growing instability of American bourgeois democracy and revealed the
degree to which its traditional institutions are being undermined by
deep-going social antagonisms.
The Republican-engineered shutdown of the federal government only
a few months after the bombing, the impeachment coup against Clinton,
the theft of the 2000 presidential election, and Monday's degrading
spectacle itselfall testify to the prescience of that analysis.
More than anything else, the New York Times editorial
bespeaks an extraordinary fear that the American people might believe
the existing social system bears some responsibility for what
happened in Oklahoma City. Most strikingand most damningis
the insistence that from a tragedy as great as the Oklahoma City
bombing, there is nothing to be learned. Such a view reflects the
outlook of a crisis-ridden political elite that dares not look
honestly at social reality because it fears what it will see.
See Also: The McVeigh rulinga
travesty of justice [8 June 2001] Why
the government's rush to execute Timothy McVeigh? [26 May
2001] Oklahoma City bomber
Timothy McVeigh: the making of a mass murderer [19 April
2001] The Oklahoma City
bombing: a somber warning to the working class Republished from
the May 8, 1995 issue of the International Workers Bulletin [19
April 2001]
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