April 20th marked the 30th anniversary of the young military veteran and far-right radical, Timothy McVeigh’s attack on the federal building in Oklahoma City . The bombing was met with near-universal revulsion at the carnage he created and at the ideology that inspired it, reported The Guardian.
A crowd
yelled “baby killer” – and worse – as 26-year-old Timothy McVeigh was
led away in chains from a courthouse in rural Oklahoma where the FBI caught up
with him two days after the bombing. He had the same crew cut he’d sported in
his army days and stone cold eyes.
An hour
and a half’s drive to the south, 168 people lay dead, most of them office
workers who had been providing government services, along with 19 young
children in a day care centre directly above the spot where McVeigh parked his
moving truck packed with ammonium nitrate and other explosives.
The
children were, most likely, his prime target.
Bill
Clinton, then president, rallied the country by vowing justice that would be
“swift, certain and severe”. His attorney general wasted no time announcing she
would seek the death penalty. Whatever flirtation the country had been
entertaining with rightwing
militia movements in the wake of a national assault weapons ban that
enraged gun rights activists, and controversies over the heavy-handedness of
federal law enforcement, came screeching to a halt.
Even
elements of the radical right, McVeigh’s fellow travellers, were stunned by the
sight of firefighters pulling dead babies out of the wreckage. Before the
bombing, they had been full of heady talk of war against the government, but
many of them imagined this would involve an attack on federal judges who had
displeased the movement, or blowing up a building at night.
“Didn’t he
case the place?” one acquaintance of McVeigh’s asked incredulously. “The
bastard has put the Patriot movement back 30 years,” lamented an erstwhile
mentor of McVeigh’s from Arizona.
Fast-forward
those 30 years, and the movement is not only very much revived but has moved
from the outer fringes of American politics to the very centre.
McVeigh
wanted to strike at what he saw as a corrupt, secretive cabal running the US
government – what Donald Trump and his acolytes refer to as the Deep State and
are now busy dismantling.
McVeigh
believed the US had no business extending its influence around the world or
becoming entangled in foreign wars when white working-class Americans from
industrial cities such as Buffalo, his home town, were suffering – an early
expression of Trump’s America First ideology, which won him tens of millions of
blue-collar votes last November.
McVeigh’s
favourite book, a white supremacist power fantasy called The Turner
Diaries, blamed a cabal of Jews, black people and internationalists for
perverting America’s true destiny – a sentiment now finding coded expression in
Trump’s twin wars on immigration and on diversity, equity and inclusion.
McVeigh
believed it was up to ordinary citizens like him to take up arms and fight
against a tyrannical ruling order, no matter the cost in innocent lives,
because that was what the country’s founders had done during the American war
of independence. The T-shirt he wore when he was arrested carried a quote from
Thomas Jefferson: “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with
the blood of patriots and tyrants.”
During the
Capitol riot on 6 January 2021, the QAnon-friendly Republican
congresswoman Lauren
Boebert expressed much the same sentiment as she cheered on the
rioters smashing and bloodying their way past uniformed police officers into
the halls of Congress. “Today is 1776,” she tweeted.
The
parallels have not been lost on political veterans of the 1990s. Clinton
himself observed in a recent HBO
documentary: “The words [McVeigh] used, the arguments he made, literally
sound like the mainstream today. Like he won!”
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