Are Flagan on Sat, 7 Sep 2002 08:25:00 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Madness and Terrorism |
As an epitaph to Kermit Snelson's forwarding and commentary on Jimmy Carter's hopeful polemic in the Washington Post, this story from yesterday was quickly dismissed as another almost-incident in the tradition of, supposedly, mad and socially isolated Americans assassinating their leaders. (Spot the brilliant contradictions below and savor the priceless final remarks.) I caught a glimpse of this guy on the local news and he was white, suitably pot-bellied from too many Buds in front of Monday Night Football and, with 16 guns, no doubt a pillar of the GOP-friendly National Rifle Association. He wore the same outfit as Bruce Springsteen on the cover of that "Born in the USA" album. Replace this demographic with one of Arab heritage and add "proof" that he has a relative whose associate at work once passed someone on the street who, allegedly, made a phone call to Iraq in 1994 and you probably have...bombs away. Time to pick "Madness and Civilization" off the shelf again. -af ------------------------------------------------------------------------ http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/248/nation/Man_headed_to_White_House_had_1 6_guns_police_say+.shtml Man headed to White House had 16 guns, police say By Douglas Belkin, Globe Staff, 9/5/2002 33-year-old New Hampshire man who collected firearms was arrested 2 miles from the White House yesterday with 16 guns in the car after a friend informed police he thought the man intended to assassinate President Bush, police said. Jeffrey Cloutier, of Newport N.H., left his home on Sunday with his girlfriend, Newport Police Chief David Hoyt said last night. Cloutier began calling the friend - whom law enforcement officials would not name - from New Jersey, saying he was lost and needed directions to Washington. The friend had heard Cloutier make threats against Bush and on Tuesday night alerted Newport police, police said. Hoyt said: "He told his friend he was going to run the country the way it was supposed to be run. As he put it, he was going to take over." Newport police informed federal law enforcement officials, who put out an all-points bulletin for Cloutier, Hoyt said. At some point during his trip, Cloutier's car broke down, and he took a taxi to Philadelphia, Hoyt said. While carrying at least some of his weapons, he told the driver he was headed to Washington and allegedly made threats against the president. The driver called police. In Philadelphia, Cloutier rented a Chevrolet Cavalier. Police picked up him and his girlfriend in Washington about 12:30 p.m. yesterday in the Adams Morgan section, according to District of Columbia Police Chief Charles Ramsey. A spokeswoman for the police department said Cloutier was being held on charges of carrying a pistol without a license and carrying an unregistered firearm and unregistered ammunition. Cloutier had been arrested in 1996 on a charge of simple assault and was known to police as someone who becomes irrational when not taking his medication, Hoyt said. Marjorie Cloutier, the suspect's grandmother, said he collected guns but had permits. She said Cloutier had not worked since he had an operation on his head at age 18. As far as she knew, Cloutier had never left New Hampshire, nor was he political, she said. "I don't even think he knows who the president is," she said. She said Jeffrey Cloutier lived upstairs from her in an apartment with his mother, Virginia, who had been worried about him lately. "She said something was wrong," the Marjorie Cloutier said. "She didn't know what. That's all she knew." # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net