Alison
Parker, a rookie news reporter at WDJB, the Roanoke, Virginia CBS
affiliate, had turned 24 just days before she was murdered on August
26. Her work partner, photojournalist Adam Ward was about to move
to Charlotte because his fiancé a producer at WDJB had a new job.
Both Parker and Ward were described in superlative terms by their
bosses, she as a “star” who lit up the screen and had a limitless
future, he as a capable and thorough cameraman, dedicated to his
jobs. By now, most have seen the gory footage of them being
murdered on camera as Parker was interviewing Vicki Gardner, who led
the local chamber of commerce. She was shot in the back, and has
survived.
These
on-air murders are about as grisly as they come, and there can be no
explanation, except insanity, to account for them. What was wrong
with Bryce Williams aka Vester Flanagan? Why did he stalk and
then kill two of his former colleagues. He’d sued his former
employer for racial discrimination and had his claim
rebuffed. Still, he maintained a sense of outrage because
he felt he was treated unfairly.
You
probably have never heard of Lonnie Gilchrist, a Wharton MBA, who was
dismissed, he said, because of racism. He walked into the Merrill Lynch
office in Boston and shot his boss, George Cook, saying, “no
billionaire is going to ruin my life”. He worked on commission,
and according to many, was treated more like an office boy than a
professional. The noted attorney Charles Ogletree (current
Harvard Law Professor) defended him in 1988-89, was one of the three
defending attorneys. Gilchrist pleaded not guilty by reason of
insanity, and his lawyers used “racial rage” as one of the reasons that
Gilchrist killed Cook. The jury took five days and nearly 30
hours, and deadlocked before reaching a conclusion. The case
might have been a slam-dunk, but the jury obviously found at last some
merit in the racial rage defense.
Nobody
deserves to be massacred at any stage of their life. The folks at
Mother Emanuel AME Church had lives to live and they were cut
short. The little children at Sandy Hook Elementary School, in
Newton, CT had full lives ahead of them. Anyone who picks up a
gun and decides to fire at a group of people publicly has clearly taken
leave of their senses. Yet there is a difference in the way
crazed people are discussed in the media. Bryce Williams aka Vester
Flanagan was immediately described as angry and crazed, a judgment the
media did not rush to when Dylann Roof, shooter at Mother Emmanuel in
Charleston and Adam Lanza, shooter of Sandy Hook embarked on insane
massacre activity.
Can race be a factor? What happens when mental illness collides with racial rage?
The
man who shot Alison Parker and Adam Ward either experienced or
perceived racial slights. The station manager Jeff Marks said
Flanagan was “a man with a lot of anger”. If even a fraction of
the slights Flanagan said he’d experienced were correct he had a right
to be angry. Watermelon jokes? Monkey slurs? In the
21st century? Come on people. Some of us can turn the slur
around or ignore it. White folks might find this funny and some
African Americans might find themselves profoundly offended. Those who
already feel beleaguered might feel so offended that they’d respond
angrily enough to be labeled “hostile” by a human resource manager.
Lonnie
Gilchrist was also labeled an “angry” man. One of his bosses said
he got so angry at criticism that he reacted with such an outburst that
“we were very frightened”. How much stereotyping goes into
labeling some black men as frightening? Do they have to be
taller? Larger? Or simply blacker? Descriptions of Williams
aka Flanagan as an angry black man need to be contextualized. Some
describe him as an arrogant man with a chip on his shoulder. Some of
those terms are subjective.
How
many African Americans have been described as “angry” when they simply
attempt to hold their own in a mostly white space. One coworker
said Flanagan was angry because he responded crisply when she observed
him as “too quiet”. I guess if he laughed aloud he may have
been considered “too boisterous.”
Even
as we mourn Alison Parker and Adam Ward, we have to ask why their
murderer snapped. We have to ask why there are so many angry
black men. They don’t all scream, they don’t all shout, they
don’t all shoot; most let their corrosive anger swallow them from
inside. Many of those outwardly functioning black men die a
decade earlier than their white counterparts because of the anger
they’ve internalized.
What
happens to a dream deferred, wrote Langston Hughes? Does it dry
up like a raisin in the sun? Does it fester like a sore and then
run. Maybe it just sags like a heavy load. Or does it
explode?
Lonnie
Gilchrist exploded. Flangan exploded. We can call them
deranged, disturbed, or simply angry. Yet we do ourselves a
disservice if we fail to examine race as one source of their explosion.
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