An ex-Weather Underground Radical on the Tucson Shootings

In 1970, when I was 22 years old — the same age as Tucson gunman Jared
Loughner — I was a founder of the Weather Underground, an offshoot of
the antiwar group Students for a Democratic Society. At that time,
having fashioned myself “an agent of necessity,” I was willing to kill
or be killed for some romantic notion of “the revolution.” So it’s not
that difficult for me to imagine what might have been in the mind of
someone like Loughner, who perhaps acted (as I did) in the misguided
belief that it was up to him to do what needed to be done.

By the winter of 1970, the members of the Weather Underground had gone
over the edge. A small group of us in New York City, charged with
“taking the struggle to a higher level,” was planning a bombing at Fort
Dix, New Jersey, which was then an army basic training center. Three
pipe bombs filled with dynamite and larded with nails were to be left at
a noncommissioned officers’ dance to remind our fellow Americans of the
millions of tons of bombs our country had been dropping on the
Vietnamese for five straight years.

I wasn’t in the group making the bombs, but I knew what was being
planned and — to my eternal shame — didn’t try to stop it. For a nice
Jewish boy from New Jersey, this was a very strange place to be. In
retrospect, my friends and I had thought ourselves into a corner.

We were heartbroken and despairing over the fact that the war in Vietnam
had dragged on despite massive public opposition and protest. Our
country was murdering millions of people. As students, budding
intellectuals even, we had studied the origins of the war and the nature
of power in this country. We were keenly aware of the violent revolt of
the Third World against U.S. control, in Cuba, China, Vietnam, and in
the ghettos and barrios of this country, and were convinced that the
American system of global domination — we still called it “imperialism”
then — was coming to an end.

What to do? As white people, we could have just stood aside, but that
would have been like the Germans acquiescing to the Nazi concentration
camps. To not be willing to share the risks non-white people were
taking, to stand safely on the sidelines applauding, would only be
evidence of our unearned privilege. The time for action was here:
indeed, hadn’t the Black Panthers taught us to chant at demonstrations,
‘The revolution has come/ Time to pick up the gun’?

So we were the self-appointed elect. It was up to us to act because no
one else seemed to understand the depths of the atrocities being
committed by our government or had the courage to act against them. All
Americans were legitimate targets, too, we thought, because in their
inaction or ignorance they were complicit with the war crimes.

Fatefully, the bombs that were being assembled in the basement of that
townhouse on West Eleventh Street in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, on
the morning of March 6, 1970, went off prematurely. Ted Gold, Diana
Oughton, and Terry Robbins — brilliant young people filled with a
passion for justice — inadvertently sacrificed themselves in order to
avoid an even worse tragedy had the bombs made it to their intended
target that night.

The remnants of the Weather Underground eventually regrouped and issued
a statement that we would not ever target people, taking precaution to
only bomb symbolic targets such as buildings. We had gone up to the edge
of the precipice, looked over, and pulled back to an extent. Over the
next years, as President Nixon escalated the war against Vietnam, the
Weather Underground went on to place small bombs in the Pentagon, the
Capitol building, and about two dozen such targets, always phoning in
warnings. I still thank God that no one was ever killed.

Meanwhile, emotionally shattered, I dropped out of the organization by
the end of that year but remained a fugitive until well after the war
ended, when I turned myself in to the authorities. I spent the next
quarter century trying to figure out why I had made so many disastrous
decisions as a very young man.

I believe that it had something to do with an exaggerated sense of my
own specialness and importance. It had something to do with wanting to
prove myself as a man, a motive exploited by all armies and other terror
groups in all eras. It had something to do with my yearning to be a true
revolutionary, like my “guerillero heroico,” Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara.

In the end, though, it all came around to my believing in the absolute
necessity of violence based on terrible moral grievances. Over the
years, I haven’t forgotten those grievances — my country continues to
wage needless wars, and this society is no more structurally just — but
I’ve completely rejected violence as a solution, for a myriad of reasons
not the least being moral, but also including efficacy. Simply put,
violence doesn’t work.

In theory, a small amount of violence might be moral to stop a larger
violence. In practice in the U.S., violence only isolates the
revolutionaries and gives a great big fat gift to the government: they
can call us terrorists. I’ve become an advocate of nonviolent strategy
because it’s been proven so effective in the 20th century — it is a
truly ‘zen’ answer to the militarism of the U.S.

In addition to the pragmatic advantages of nonviolence, it also has
certain moral and even spiritual advantages. I once heard the Dalai Lama
answer the question of why he doesn’t hate the Chinese, despite what
they’ve done to his country. He said, “They’re our neighbors, and when
this is all over, we’ll have to live with them.”

Right now, the rightwing in America has a profound sense of moral
grievance. The country has lost its way, but instead of looking deeply
at the nature of power — at the banks and pharmaceutical corporations
and military contractors and media conglomerates that have looted our
economy through their control of the government the last thirty-plus
years — they’ve created a simplistic culprit, encapsulated in the absurd
notion that “government is bad, unless we’re running it.” For many in
this camp, there seems to be no sense of a social contract.

To a not insignificant faction, Representative Gabrielle Giffords was a
symbol of “the enemy” and previously had been “targeted” as such, so
it’s not entirely surprising that an unhinged young man would arm
himself with an easily-obtained automatic weapon and do what (he likely
thought) needed to be done. Collateral damage, such as murdering six
people and wounding a dozen more, has to be accepted in war — at least
according to way it is still waged.

As the Weather Underground believed in the absolute necessity of bombs
to address actual moral grievances such as the Vietnam War and racism,
Loughner might have believed in the absolute necessity of a Glock to
answer his imagined moral grievances. Violent actors in this country —
whether James Earl Ray, Timothy McVeigh, or Scott Roeder, who in 2009
killed a Kansas abortion provider — are always armed not just with
weapons, but with the conviction that their grievances demand
satisfaction and their violence is righteous.

But the shooting of Giffords, Judge John Roll, Christina Taylor Green,
and the other victims in that Tucson parking lot was not a means to
anything. It was an end in itself. The gunman’s goal was quite likely
existential — an individual committing a horrific act for its own sake.

I doubt that Loughner, sitting in a Tucson jail, gives these matters
much thought. I doubt that he cares much about who won the 2010 midterms
or who will win the presidency in 2012. I doubt that a man who seems so
confused and desperate cares much about ideology. Sarah Palin and her
cross-hairs map deserve nothing but ignominy, but Loughner probably
didn’t worry that liberals would blame conservatives for the shooting or
that conservatives would take umbrage at every media accusation. If he’s
a political actor, he probably doesn’t know it.

After I turned myself in, in 1977, I spent the next 25 years trying to
understand what had gone so horribly wrong. One of my most profound
conclusions was to make a commitment to pursue only nonviolent action —
righteous action still, but without anger or brutality.

Like me, Loughner — though he’s the product of a different era and may
have been motivated only by his madness — could have a long time to
consider the logic behind his alleged actions. I only hope that he and
those families that were destroyed can find peace.

Mark Rudd, one of the founders of the militant Weather Underground
group, is a retired community college instructor and the author of the
new book Underground: My Life With SDS and the Weathermen.

This article was originally published on NewClearVision.com.

--
http://www.indypendent.org/2011/01/19/from-terrorism-to-nonviolence/
Via InstaFetch

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