The strange rush to politicize the Highland Park massacre

Not all mass shooters are inspired by Trump or Antifa

(Photo by Jim Vondruska/Getty Images)

Every time an evil man steps out onto American streets (or into schools, churches, et cetera) and sprays enough bullets to earn his status among mass rather than normal shooters, there is a plainly undignified rush to determine his political beliefs.

Mass shooters can be political animals. Dylann Roof, for example, was a seething white supremacist. Micah Xavier Johnson was a black nationalist. Omar Mateen represented militant Islam.

It is understandable, then, that people take an interest in the politics of shooters. Beliefs are a plausible motive and motives are interesting. There are also political stakes involved….

Every time an evil man steps out onto American streets (or into schools, churches, et cetera) and sprays enough bullets to earn his status among mass rather than normal shooters, there is a plainly undignified rush to determine his political beliefs.

Mass shooters can be political animals. Dylann Roof, for example, was a seething white supremacist. Micah Xavier Johnson was a black nationalist. Omar Mateen represented militant Islam.

It is understandable, then, that people take an interest in the politics of shooters. Beliefs are a plausible motive and motives are interesting. There are also political stakes involved. Everybody wants their outgroup to have the cause that inspires murderous rage. After all, who would want to be associated with a cause that inspires murderous rage?

Still, the opportunistic haste with which people scour the online footprints of mass shooters for evidence of ideological affiliations is absurd. Their clothes, relationships, and even social media likes are treated like DNA at the scene of a crime.

But shooters are not all inspired by politics. Evil has a thousand sons. Elliot Rodgers was a bitter incel. James Holmes was mentally ill. Salvador Ramos appears to have been an incel and mentally ill. Their motivations were more complex than that, of course, but they were not political.

Yet as soon as the depraved mass shooter who killed six people at a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, Illinois, was named, online detectives went to work locating his position on the political spectrum.

The shooter was held by posters on the right to be “Antifa” because he wore black clothing that shielded his identity. Did Antifa invent black clothes and masks? Someone ought to tell drill rappers.

Posters on the left, meanwhile, found pictures of him at a Trump rally and covering himself in a Trump flag. One has to admit that this is more substantial data. It deserves to be addressed. Still, if you’re really invested in this debate, look at a photo of the man. Look at his pink hair. Look at his face tattoos. Look at his multicolored clothes. Does he look like an alt-right terrorist to you?

Okay, perhaps I sound a bit superficial. A wacky sense of dress need not prevent someone from being far right. Indeed, the far right has a long tradition of campy elements. But this criminal does not appear to have had a history of decrying minorities and leftists. What he has is a history of posting awful Soundcloud rap songs where he drones about “skipping class” with a “cutie with a fat ass.” (Can we blame Soundcloud rappers? Can we? Can we?)

Let us grant that mass shooters can be deranged and attention-seeking and political. In the case of the Highland Park massacre, though, the smart money says that the first two characteristics were dominant — with, perhaps, a large helping of drug abuse. (A man who claims to have been an online acquaintance of the killer describes him as an “isolated stoner.”)

He does appear to have been fascinated with violence. One of his music videos (we’ll use the word “music” lightly) shows him in a classroom in tactical gear. Another shows him (in cartoon form) being shot by the police. It would not surprise me if his hideous crime was some sort of absurd performance intended to acquire him instant notoriety.

Desire for fame — even such a perverse, disgraceful fame — has been inspiring mass shooters for decades. The Columbine Effect is the term that has been used to describe how deranged kids are influenced by killers who preceded them. Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, of course, were themselves explicit about their desire for infamy.

The psychologist Brad J. Bushman has written that

the media provide a stage for narcissistic individuals to become “stars” through extreme acts of violence, such as mass shootings. In an interview following the Newtown school shooting, Harvard Professor Steven Pinker said, “[If] you want to do something that guarantees that your name will be on the lips of everyone in the country, what are your options? There’s only one, and that is kill a lot of innocent people.”

Perhaps instead of being obsessed with causes beyond themselves, most — if by no means all — mass shooters barely look beyond their own inflated egos. Perhaps, then, in digging through the words, deeds, and images that surround them, we are incentivizing future acts of violence.

Perhaps — and I may be indulging an excess of optimism here — what will lower rates of mass shootings in the USA is the sheer number of them. The Uvalde shooting took place less than two months ago and I had to look up the name of the killer. Soon, no one outside of Texas will remember him.

When Soundcloud rap first lurched onto the scene, rappers like Lil Pump and Lil Peep were novel and interesting. A thousand pink-haired, mush-mouthed, drug-addled oddballs later, no one cared. Notoriety is for people who stun, outrage and appall us, and perhaps the sheer volume of mass shootings will make them a less plausible route to fame. Still, as attempts to be optimistic go, this is a damn depressing one.

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