RAW STORY
Police in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, say they’re investigating the
role racial hatred played in the killing of three Muslim students by
suspect Craig Stephen Hicks. They’re saying the 46-year-old white man
had a history of fights over a parking space with the victims,
suggesting the killings could be reduced to road rage.
Meanwhile, Hicks’ social media posts show
that he was an ardent atheist who equally mocked Muslims and
Christians, an avid defender of the Constitution’s separation of church
and state, and a gun nut who posted pictures of his revolver. The
Associated Press quoted
neighbors who say “he always seemed angry and frequently confronted his
neighbors” and “his ex-wife said he was obsessed with the shooting
rampage movie Falling Down” and showed “no compassion at all.”
The Wall Street Journal further reported
that the father of two victims, who were sisters, “said this man was
hateful. He was picking fights, knocking on their door.” The Journal also said
Hicks obsessively called tow truck companies to have his neighbors’
cars towed, and once even met tow truck drivers in the street waving a
gun.
We can safely say that Craig Stephen Hicks fits the profile of the
most common type of domestic violent extremist—a white man with
grievances and guns. Whether he was
provoked by road rage, rage against neighbors who wore traditional
Muslim clothing, or other simmering grudges and pathologies, his alleged
killing of three young Muslims underscores a trend that mainstream U.S.
media avoids: that the face of violent extremism in America since 9/11
is predominantly white. Muslims in America, while not exempt from crime,
simply do not compare.
There’s no shortage of crime statistics confirming this. A 2001-2015 “Homegrown Extremism” analysis by
the New America Foundation parsed the “ethnicity, age, gender and
citizenship” of people who killed or violently attacked others, whether
they were motivated by jihadist philosophies or other “right wing, left
wing or idiosyncratic beliefs.” Of 448 extremists counted, white men who
were U.S. citizens outnumbered every other demographic by wide margins.
“Quite a few reports agree, that more Americans have been killed by
the radical right since 9/11 than by jihadists,” said Mark Potok,
spokesman for the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate crimes
and focuses on the radical right. “Obviously, if you go back one day to
9/11 (2001), nearly 3,000 people were killed.”
Potok said some hate crimes can be simple and spontaneous, while others are more complex to unravel.
“When you look at Chapel Hill, it seems to be a classic case of a
very tangled-up motive,” he said. “Who’s to say how much a parking
dispute played, or how much this man’s antipathy toward religious
people, or Muslims in particular, played a part. The women [who were
killed] told their father he didn’t like the way they dressed.”
Chapel Hill police may never determine the precise role racial or
religious hatred played, he said, if they can find enough other evidence
to try and convict Hicks of murder. That’s because it may be easier to
prove he stalked and shot them, no matter what the motives, than to
prove what was going on inside his head. “The criminal penalty is often
about the same,” Potok said.
The FBI lists
nearly 6,000 hate crime incidents in 2013, its latest statistics. Only a
fraction of these make the national news, like the Chapel Hill murders.
But the big picture, as CNN’s national security reporter, Peter Bergen,
reported
last April on the anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombing, is that
“since 9/11, extremists affiliated with a variety of far-right wing
ideologies, including white supremacists, anti-abortion extremists, and
anti-government militants, have killed more people in the United States
than have extremists motivated by al Qaeda’s ideology.”
Right-wing media, such as Breitbart.com, doesn’t want
to hear that analysis. It attacked Bergen—who also works with New
America Foundation—for “gimmick” statistics, such as counting “Andrew
Joseph Stack, who flew a plane into an IRS office in Austin, Texas, in
2010.” It wrote, “This is surprising given that Stack’s manifesto/suicide
note included attacks on the ‘monsters of organized religion,’ GM
executives, health insurance companies, wealthy bankers, [and]
‘presidential puppet GW Bush.’”
On Thursday, GOPUSA.com sought to replay that script and portrayed
Hicks as a liberal, by reporting his Facebook likes included Rachel
Maddow, gay marriage groups, Neil deGrasse Tyson and others. That
relabeling is absurd on many levels, because Hicks appears to fit the
pyschological profile of violent extremists—regardless of their
ideological stripes—and that includes many white Americans.
As the Violence Policy Center noted
Thursday, Hicks had a state-issued concealed handgun permit and was a
“champion of Second Amendment rights.” Moreover, on Thursday, SPLC
issued a report, “Age of the Wolf,” which focuses on how unstable individuals—not organized groups—have become the predominant domestic threat.
The report examines extreme violence in America between April 2009
and February 2015 and found “that domestic terrorism and related radical
violence—as opposed to terrorist attacks emanating from overseas” is
what plagues the nation. The report comes as the White House will host a
summit on violent extremism next week.
“There’s no question the jihadist threat is a tremendous one,” SPLC
wrote. “But that is not the only terrorist threat facing Americans
today. A large number of independent studies have agreed that since the
9/11 mass murder, more people have been killed in America by non-Islamic
domestic terrorists than jihadists.”
SPLC found that “almost half of the attacks during the period
apparently were motivated by the ideology of the antigovernment
‘Patriot’ movement, including ‘sovereign citizens,’ whose movement has
been described by the FBI as ‘domestic terrorist.’” The other half were
from people with “ideologies of hate, ranging from white supremacy to
misogyny to radical Islamism.”
Most assailants were not young like the Boston Marathon bombers, but
“were clustered most heavily between 30 and 49 years of age, although a
surprising number were older than that,” it said. “This suggests that
perpetrators spend many years on the radical right, absorbing extremist
ideology, before finally acting out violently.”
That summation strongly resembles Craig Stephen Hicks.
“The one thing we know is that the psychology has always been the
same,” Joe Navarro, a former FBI agent and co-founder of the agency’s
Behavioral Analysis Program, said in a Q&A in the SPLC report. “By
that, I mean you have individuals who are collecting wounds, they’re
looking for social ills, or things that have gone wrong, and they are
nourishing these things that they’re ideating, that they’re thinking
about. The solution for them is violence.”
“What they have in common is that once they begin to ideate this
philosophy, whatever their passion is, whatever their hatred is,
whatever their ideology is, they certainly all begin to communicate this
to people around them,” Navarro said. “And when we go back and do the
post-event analysis, we find that they were talking about this, they
were telling people about this, and the people either ignored it, didn’t
pay attention or didn’t think it would go any further.”
Potok, the SPLC spokesman, said that domestic law enforcement did not
want to believe that white people could be terrorists—or even violent
extremists—until Timothy McVeigh bombed the Oklahoma federal building in
1995. Then they shifted gears and focused on many domestic
anti-government and ideological groups. But that focus changed, he said,
after the 9/11 attacks in 2001, as law enforcement again saw radical
Islam as the primary threat.
Just as the Violence Policy Center hopes the Chapel Hill killings
will push politicans to reconsider concealed handgun permit laws, SPLC
hope the threat of lone-wolf violent extremists—especially white
right-wingers—will prompt police and mainsteam media to stop demonizing
Muslims.
“But no,” David Neiwert wrote in a recent AlterNet piece,
“Why Doesn’t American Media Freak Out When the Terrorists Have White
Skin?” “Instead, we are having conversations in Europe and America about
how to deal with Muslims.”
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