The scariest part about McVeigh

He's a product of the mainstream American culture

"By killing McVeigh, we served only the purpose of avoiding responsibility
for his creation"

Robert Scheer
CREATORS SYNDICATE
06.14.01

It's difficult to get over the idea that we failed Timothy McVeigh and that
his execution fails us all. How deceptive a finale it is that leaves history
neatly packaged in the cemetery of our imagination, safely removed from the
festering reality of life. It happened, it's over, and we can now move on
when we ought not to.

By killing McVeigh, we served only the purpose of avoiding responsibility
for his creation. How convenient to not have a living reminder that this
callow, awkward, unformed youth was a product of mainstream American
culture--varnished by the "be all you can be" Army, no less--and not some
easily dismissed dropout aberration. No, he was us in our darkest moments,
even as we acknowledge gratefully that he was possessed by malevolent forces
that the healthy can conquer.

If he was the devil, how did he get that way, this product of a strong
Catholic family that raised a son to be a patriot, a son who then suddenly
took his own government to be the enemy? What did he learn from us, his
neighbors, the media and the government, that left him plotting in seedy
motel rooms, manufacturing a weapon of mass destruction, while singing the
disturbed loony tunes of the assassin?

His execution is to be denounced because it brings to an all-too-tidy
conclusion a phenomenon that cries out for more complex and sustained
examination. That's true in any capital case, but all the more so that 168
innocent men, women and children died at his hands, and scores of others
were injured. It hardly serves their memory that McVeigh at worst will be
venerated as a martyr by generations of lunatics to come and at best be
dismissed as a weirdo actor in a script that is not of our hand.

We are told that the grieving relatives of those killed in the bombing need
"closure," an unattainable state that has become the basic mantra of denial
of harsh reality. It's a word now inevitably accompanied by the horrid
phrase of "getting on" with the next phase of one's life, invoked even by
McVeigh's lawyers before the execution to refer to their client's "future."
But the so-called closure afforded by capital punishment, as some relatives
of the dead have noted, cheapens the quest for real healing, which can never
be an act of amnesia but rather requires the search for meaning in even the
most dastardly of events.

For that we needed McVeigh alive, to be tormented every day in his own mind
by the enormity of his crime, to the point where that smug
self-righteousness of the killer would be pierced, and he finally would have
to confront the pain of mass death as something other than a clinically
ordered act of ideological game playing. But we too, the uninvolved, needed
his presence as an open wound to remind us of the pain that political
madness, no matter its source, induces. In this case, the madness was, in
effect, condoned when an unshaped youth was taught by his government to
kill.

It should be a matter of deep national soul searching that we as a nation
sent McVeigh to roam the desert on a Bradley fighting vehicle inflicting the
"collateral damage" of the Gulf War. Did his military training prepare him
to differentiate between what he did as his government's agent in Iraq and
his own subsequent war on civilians? The absurdly celebrated mayhem of the
Gulf War was the alternative to the college experience McVeigh never had. He
was at least in need of a crash course on the distinction between what he
called the "collateral damage" of the Oklahoma City bombing and the morality
of shooting Iraqi draftees as they fled the battle.

Unfortunately, McVeigh completed his education at desultory gun shows in
which patriotism often is equated with a defiance born of personal failure,
and fire power is the means to dignity and freedom. That and the literature
of angry white men, who believe their skin color and a musket should be all
that is needed to make them meaningful players in the computerized global
marketplace.

The merchants of madness will now exploit the government's execution of
McVeigh as confirmation of their paranoia. Better to have had McVeigh as an
aging reminder of how horrible the taste can be when the American brew is
curdled.

Robert Scheer's national column appears weekly on WorkingForChange.
http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?ItemId=11387

Miroslav Antic,
http://www.antic.org/

                                    Serbian News Network - SNN

                                   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

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