Down the Kyle Rittenhouse rabbit hole: musings on white supremacy, the privilege of self-defense, and America’s judicial rot

The U.S. system has spoken. The conversation is violent. And racist. But I think the real issue has been totally missed.  Passing infrastructure legislation is cool and important – in a normal world. But the other guys are literally preparing for war, so maybe you’d better get in the right mindset.

 

ABOVE: Tweet by the National Rifle Association within moments after the verdict was announced.

 

21 November 2021 – The jury has spoken. Kyle Rittenhouse is not guilty. President Biden says we must acknowledge and abide by the fact that a Kenosha jury found Rittenhouse not guilty on all accounts. Because, he believes, the jury system works.

I watched (almost) the entire trial. Joe Biden did not. But then Joe Biden still uses (as do countless others) outdated frameworks to define “law” and “justice” and “democracy” and “the system works”. A more powerful statement would have been “I have no comment”. 

Watching the trial you came away with this:

– Last year, at 17, Rittenhouse traveled some 20 miles to Kenosha, Wis. He killed two men and injured a third. But it was all self-defense. He wasn’t looking for trouble. He meant to be a helping hand. Armed with an AR-style semiautomatic weapon, he walked the streets of a protest against police brutality to play cop.

– Or was it to be a medic? Oh, it was about property. That’s the story he landed on. Protecting property. “Violence and destruction of property have no place in our democracy,” Biden said in a statement about the verdict Friday afternoon. It’s all about the money. Rittenhouse, after all, was out to secure the car lots.

Steven Beschloss (an award-winning U.S. journalist who I have quoted before) publishes an interesting blog called America, America to which I subscribe (all the good stuff is behind paywalls these days). This weekend he noted:

This is a tough one. It’s possible to reflect on the jury decision in the homicide case of Kyle Rittenhouse and come to the conclusion that the prosecution failed to successfully plead its case. It’s surely possible to look at the antics of the judge and his siding with the defendant and understand why the jury would be positively inclined toward finding the 18-year-old not guilty.

But it’s hard to see how the jury finding Rittenhouse not guilty on all nine counts doesn’t give a green light to radical extremists determined to pursue vigilante justice with a gun. That means, despite the right of peaceful assembly protected by the First Amendment, we may witness a growing population of armed extremists who believe that gun laws (open carry and right of self-defense) give them the ability to threaten, intimidate and even kill. That makes our public square more dangerous.

There’s a deeper human level here, a tragedy that will continue to play out in the days and weeks ahead: A teenage boy who killed two human beings with an AR-15 assault rifle is being hailed like a hero and celebrated by some members of Congress and on Fox News and other right-wing media. He’s even been offered an internship to Congress by GOP extremists. It doesn’t take much insight to suggest that this is a sign of sickness in the soul of America.

And now we find out a FoxNews media team was embedded with the defense. Did Judge Schroeder know? If so, it could explain some of his made-for-TV theatrics.

Oh, and in case you missed it given the Rittenhouse trial information tsunami:

Ah, America, your veneer of “civilization” truly is thin. And by God, Americans, do not dare say “This isn’t who we are”. This is exactly who you are.

I will give Beschloss some points. The desire for the justice system to sort out messy questions with what can seem like careful objectivity is understandable, especially when our (explicitly) political institutions are struggling so mightily. But no shortcuts are available here. The U.S. “justice” system was never made for that. Americans cannot rely on the justice system to do what the political system will not. But both the American justice system and political system are shitshows and this past week is just more evidence.

But Beschloss does not go far enough. There are two much, much bigger issues here. The first is “the narrative”, and  the second is far worse.

 ABOVE: the White Power hand gesture

On Friday, the National Guard had been activated by the Wisconsin governor in anticipation of the verdict. Biden immediately offered his assistance in assuring public safety. Because unless you know or follow the U.S. narrative in these things, it is always that those being crushed by oppression that are vicious. The American inclination is to protect the power structure, to uphold the institutional ideal of whiteness, at all times. And you can be a vigilante when your mission is to serve the system. Rittenhouse knew this. It’s why he so smugly posed with Proud Boys, drinking underage in a bar, flashing white power signs, and selling a “Free as F—” T-shirt earlier this year shortly after pleading not guilty. And after the January 6th assault on the Capitol – he had so many role models to choose from!

White boyhood is an armor that inspired Judge Bruce Schroeder to ban prosecutors from tying Rittenhouse, a self-proclaimed militia member, to the Proud Boys. A flimsy loophole allowed the judge to toss a weapons charge before closing arguments even began — legally armed Black folk don’t get this grace. Remember Philando Castile? Over the weekend, Jeneé Osterheldt, a columnist for the Boston Globe, wrote on his blog:

The judge saw a boy. A white boy whose humanity mattered in a way that did not extend to those protesting for equity and a new way of justice. Attorneys, in a court of law, were banned from referring to the men shot, killed, and injured by Rittenhouse as victims. To call Joseph Rosenbaum, Anthony Huber, and Gaige Grosskreutz, victims, or even alleged victims, would be too loaded. “Rioters. Arsonists. Looters”. Refer to them that way, the judge told the lawyers.

Those victims, too, were white like Rittenhouse. But when you are white and perceived to be fighting for Black lives to matter, your life is also up for grabs. There’s a difference between being white and believing in the authority of whiteness. Two men are dead and they weren’t even allowed to be acknowledged as alleged victims. The judge was not interested in neutrality or justice. His scales are weighted in supremacy.

Biden’s beloved democracy is more of a power structure rooted in violence and injustice than anything else. Had Rittenhouse been Black, Latino, or an immigrant, he’d be dead or serving time. And we’d be debating if the cops who killed him should be tried. Or had he been white and protecting Black lives in Kenosha instead of purportedly protecting cars, he’d be in prison. Or maybe cops would have pepper-sprayed him instead of giving him gratitude and water. Rittenhouse has the privilege of white power. As Osterheldt noted:

Rittenhouse left Illinois to cross state lines, armed himself, and told a bevy of lies about why he was at the protests that started over the unjust shooting of Jacob Blake. Shot seven times, mostly in his back, Blake was partially paralyzed by police as he tried to get into a car. In front of his children. Officials didn’t see his humanity or theirs. Blake’s children were not kids the way America saw the boyhood of Rittenhouse.

Blake’s children were Black like Trayvon Martin, like Tamir Rice, like Korey Wise, Antron McCray, Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, and Kevin Richardson. Like Emmett Till.

Meanwhile, the white men who hunted and killed Ahmaud Arbery sat before a jury of 11 white folk and one Black person. This is the jury system Biden says works. Yet, it’s the pastors who gather to stand in prayer with Arbery’s family who are called the problem. A defense attorney in the trial called their mere presence a 21st-century “public lynching”Arbery, young, Black, unarmed, and jogging, ran from those men. They sped after him in a truck, cut him off, and shot him. Again. And again. And again. How is that not the modern lynching? They feared for their homes and their safety, deciding he was a burglar, they claim.

The danger isn’t in having 11 white jurors, the defense feels. The violence isn’t in grabbing your guns and chasing a jogger on foot and killing him. Racism isn’t even a topic of discussion in this trial thus far. It’s part of the defense strategy. “We don’t want any more Black pastors coming in here,” one of the defense attorneys Kevin Gough said Thursday. Yep. Protect the courtroom from the pastors. Protect the property. Protect whiteness. There is an embedded, systemic issue here – the law be damned.

 

But my second point, the far and away bigger issue, is the judicial and political rot and how the U.S. has turned a corner and can never, will never go back absent a catastrophic event. And let’s be honest. When you refuse to enact any gun control, you are restricting law-abiding Americans’ right to live.

The United States is a nation awash in firearms, and gun owners are a powerful and politically active constituency. In state after state, they have helped elect politicians who, in turn, have created a permissive legal regime for the carry and use of firearms, rules that go far beyond how courts originally understood the concept of self-defense. What happened in Kenosha isn’t some fluke. It’s the logical consequence of state and federal laws being written by the NRA and going unopposed for decades. Adam Serwer, a columnist for The Atlantic, noted on his blog this weekend:

These laws have made it difficult to convict any gun owner who knowingly puts themselves in circumstances where they are likely to use their weapon—that is, anyone who goes looking for a fight. It should come as no surprise then, that Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted of all charges after shooting three men in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in 2020, killing two of them. Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber were killed; Gaige Grosskreutz was injured but survived to testify against Rittenhouse at his trial.

According to Wisconsin law, Rittenhouse need not have proved that he acted in self-defense—rather, the state had to prove that he did not. Even if Rittenhouse traveled to Kenosha with a firearm because he wanted to put himself in the position to use it, the narrow nature of the self-defense inquiry is one reason people can escape responsibility for killings that are deeply wrongful in every moral sense. Under some circumstances, Wisconsin law allows an individual to provoke an attack and still claim self-defense.

It is one thing to argue that the jury reached a reasonable verdict based on this law, and another entirely to celebrate Rittenhouse’s actions. Much of the conservative media and the Republican Party, however, don’t see the killings as “wrongful” in any sense, instead elevating Rittenhouse as the manifestation of retributive violence against their political enemies.

The shootings took place across the backdrop of protests and riots in Kenosha that followed a police officer’s 2020 shooting of Jacob Blake, a 29-year old Black man, in the back and side, and the nationwide protests over the murder of George Floyd. Rittenhouse’s critics contend that his intentions were racist, because he showed up armed in anticipation of protests on behalf of Black rights, while his advocates maintain that he was defending the city from rioters and point out that his victims were white.

The ideological battle lines recall the 2013 George Zimmerman trial in Florida.

NOTE: I was intimately involved with this case. My nephew was a cop in Florida, in that jurisdiction. I got access to some of the proceedings, some of the background briefings. But a few years later my nephew was involved in a case where he nearly killed an unarmed Black man with his taser. He left the police force, tried to sue for “unjust dismissal”, and lost. Thankfully. That side of my family is racist beyond belief and it’s something I have never written about, but next year I will. I spent two weeks in Chicago (where I attended law school) riding in police cars, interviewing cops and victims, trying to wrap my brain around “policing”. One of those research projects that sits on your desk, screaming for attention. 

In Zimmerman’s case, prosecutors said he assaulted 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. Zimmerman’s defense claimed the then-29-year-old had been attacked by Martin, whom Zimmerman had been following. Even though Martin would have had reason to be concerned about a grown man following him, the law was designed to accommodate people like Zimmerman, who was armed, and his defense attorneys were able to create enough reasonable doubt among the jurors to secure his acquittal. Conservatives saw Zimmerman as a martyr who acted in self-defense, unfairly vilified by a liberal press.

NOTE: one of the Florida newspapers ran a story that indicated most police supported Zimmerman because “we are stretched out too thin and we need these citizen adjuncts”.

Martin’s supporters saw him as yet another Black teenager perceived to be menacing both by authorities and by those who consider themselves adjacent to the authorities, as one of many Black children never extended the benefit of the doubt to which others are accustomed. But Zimmerman wasn’t simply acquitted; some on the right embraced his actions as the fulfillment of a violent fantasy.

Few people ever use a firearm in self-defense – doing so is rare even for police officers – so the extreme elements of right-wing gun culture have to conjure the specter of impending catastrophe in order to maintain their political salience. Sometimes this manifests in deranged reveries of armed revolution, sometimes in overt fantasies of murdering urban minorities, and sometimes in the make-believe of resisting a supposedly tyrannical government.

Look at it this way. Right-wing gun culture is not unlike the wellness industry, in that it requires the cultivation of a sustained insecurity in its audience in order to facilitate the endless purchase of its products. You can never be too skinny, and you can never have too many guns to stop the impending communist takeover.

Side note: Not content to maintain that Zimmerman was innocent of murder, some of his supporters lived vicariously through his gunning down of a Black teenager. People bought Trayvon Martin shooting targets. Right-wing pundits marked his birthday with jokes, and spread falsehoods about his background in an attempt to retroactively justify Zimmerman’s killing of him. Some people turned Zimmerman into a hero, because he killed the kind of person they liked to imagine themselves killing. The fact that then-President Barack Obama empathized with the fear of many Black parents, that their children will be seen not as children but as dangerous threats, by saying that if he had a son “he’d look like Trayvon,” only added to the fantasy’s appeal.

The legal questions in the Rittenhouse trial – like those of the Zimmerman trial – have become entangled with the political ones. In the aftermath of the January 6th attempt to overthrow the results of the 2020 election, some conservative media have escalated their justifications of political violence. In this context, Rittenhouse has become a folk hero for the same reason Zimmerman became one – not because they see him as a scared child who acted rationally in a frightening situation, but because they see him as a soldier in a war against the enemies of America as they want it to be.Like Zimmerman, Rittenhouse killed the kind of people some on the right like to fantasize about killing.

In his blog post Serwer notes:

As the historian Caroline Light writes in “Stand Your Ground”, English common-law traditionally held that self-defense could be invoked only as long as one attempted to retreat, if possible. There were important exceptions such as defending one’s home, a concept known today as the “castle doctrine.” In the aftermath of Reconstruction, American courts began expanding the circumstances under which certain men could invoke the right of self-defense; an Ohio court determined in 1876 that “a true man, who is without fault, is not obliged to fly from an assailant, who by violence or surprise maliciously seeks to take his life, or to do him enormous bodily harm.” In the 21st century, state legislatures passed legislation such as “stand-your-ground laws” that extended the circumstances under which “self-defense” could be invoked further. But from the beginning, such laws were bound up in the perceived social morality of the invoker, and those whom the right was being invoked against. The “true man” could take his castle anywhere.

Consequently, which acts of violence are considered legitimate self-defense has always been highly political. For most of American history, white men alone had a right of self-defense that included both their persons and property. Although the concept of armed self-defense is not inherently racist in the abstract – many 1960s civil-rights figures bore arms when not protesting – in practice the American legal system has tended to see certain claims of self-defense as more legitimate than others. “Our embrace of lethal self-defense has always been selective and partial,” Light argues, “upholding a selective right to kill for some, while posing others as legitimate targets.”

Zimmerman had a right to defend himself; his supporters could see Martin only as the sort of person the right of self-defense was meant to be invoked against. In Georgia, Travis McMichael, on trial for murder after he, his father, and a friend chased Ahmaud Arbery through their neighborhood, before pulling guns on him, has similarly sought to justify his actions as self-defense. “It was obvious that he was attacking me, that if he would’ve got the shotgun from me, then it was a life or death situation,” McMichael testified. “And I’m gonna have to stop him from doing this, so I shot.” Even the white nationalists facing a civil lawsuit over their 2017 riot in Charlottesville, Virginia, have sought to invoke their right to self-defense.

 

And so it begins. Noting David French, another columnist for The Atlantic:

There is a paradox of fragility here, in which a moment of fear – perhaps one imbuing the deceased with supernatural strength – is invoked to justify homicide, and the dead who would be alive but for this moment of terror subsequently become a symbol of the frightened man’s valor. At a certain point the logic of this sort of “self-defense” becomes indistinguishable from a custom that simply allows certain people to get away with murder. This is the legal regime that a powerful minority of gun-rights advocates have built—one in which Americans are encouraged to settle their differences with lethal force, preferably leaving as few witnesses capable of testimony as possible.

That’s the shit that scares the hell out of me. The fact that Rittenhouse has become a folk hero among Republicans points to darker currents within the GOP, where justifications for political violence against the opposition are becoming more common. The party finds the apocalyptic fear of impending leftist tyranny useful not only for turning out its supporters, but also for rationalizing legislative attempts to disenfranchise, gerrymander, and otherwise nullify the votes of Democratic constituencies. Engineering the American political system so that Republicans’ political rivals are unable to contest their power is a less forceful solution than killing people, but the political goal is similar: to never have to share power with those they disagree with. This thirst for retribution is overpowering.

For this reason, the party defends those who engage in rhetoric threatening violence against their political enemies and silences those who denounce it. Whether it’s Donald Trump justifying his attempts to overturn the 2020 election, Republican members of Congress threatening their colleagues, or Fox News hosts praising Rittenhouse for “doing what the government should have done,” the desire to kill your political opponents is a sentiment no longer confined to the dark corners of the internet. The principle that canonizes Rittenhouse as a saint for defending his city from rioters, and the mob that stormed the Capitol as martyrs, is the principle that the slaughter of the right’s enemies is no crime.

“At this point, we’re living under corporate and medical fascism. This is tyranny,” said an attendee at an event held by the conservative group Turning Point USA in October. “When do we get to use the guns?” The audience responded with applause. “How many elections are they going to steal before we kill these people?” Most of this is idle bluster from keyboard gangsters on social media. But the more it is encouraged by mainstream political leadership, the less likely it is to remain mere talk.

Rittenhouse’s trial was a matter of law, and the outcome should not have been dependent on the political questions raised by the events that led to his indictment. But his acquittal will be seen by some on the militant right as a validation of the sentiment that someday, perhaps soon, they will get to kill all “these people.” No one they would listen to will tell them otherwise.

* * * * * * * * *

CONCLUDING THOUGHTS

 

 

At the end of the day we are talking about the infrastructure of autocracy. Donald Trump governed as an autocrat. The insurrection he inspired in January was his last gasp attempt at creating autocracy in the United States. What is critical to understand, however, is that this desire for an autocrat state has been taken up by the Right, including state politicians, commentators, members of Congress, and the nonprofit world. Techniques that autocrats have historically used to achieve their goal include gerrymandering, changing election and voter eligibility rules, and placing allies on electoral commissions. Sound familiar?

Most of the coverage of the rash of Republican anti-democracy legislation populating state legislatures has focused on voter suppression, i.e., making it harder for citizens of color to vote. While this is serious stuff, the real goal of these state laws are the provisions that allow partisan subversion of the vote. Exemplary of this is Georgia’s subversion law, SB 202. It ensures that Republican state officials can replace the state’s election board in Fulton County, nullifying the actual vote. Fulton County, of course, has one of the largest Black populations in the state. Its voters were responsible for Biden wining Georgia and the election of senators Warnock and Ossoff. Georgia is not a “one off.” There are 216 bills across 41 states that would allow state Republican lawmakers to interfere, subvert, or, in some cases, criminalize local election administrations. Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Idaho, Missouri, North Dakota, and Tennessee have already passed laws that preempt local election polices.

This is being done so that Republicans in those states can control the outcome of the upcoming midterm elections and 2024 presidential election. But it is not limited to near-term elections. It’s part of a well-funded and thought out right-wing movement aimed at replacing American democracy with authoritarianism.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

scroll to top