Last night, as you probably have heard, a Dallas man named James Boulware launched a one-man quasi-military assault on the Dallas Police Department headquarters, firing an automatic rife with such abandon that early reports suggested that there were as many as four different shooters. After fleeing the scene in an armored “Zombie Apocalypse Van,” leaving behind an assortment of improvised explosives as a kind of going away gift, Boulware was cornered in a restaurant parking lot; after a long standoff, he was eventually killed by a police sniper’s bullet. It was something of a miracle that no one but Boulware ended up dead.
Boulware’s father told local news that his son had been “pushed past” his “breaking point” after losing custody of his son. Men’s Rights activists often describe men who “resort to violence” after losing a custody dispute as victims of a cruel family court system.
But in Boulware’s case, it appears, nothing could be further from the truth.
Because, you see, he lost custody of his son two years ago — after a violent incident that offered a chilling prequel to last night’s rampage. As the local NBC affiliate reported at the time
A Paris man was arrested after family members reported to authorities that they were concerned he could go on a shooting spree. …
Officers confiscated several guns from a Paris home, after arresting the owner. “There are four or five long guns and three or four pistols, tubs full of ammunition, and the body armor,” says Paris Police Chief Bob Hundley.
James Boulware, 33, allegedly grabbed and choked his mother in Dallas on Tuesday morning, and he has made other threats, police and family members said.
“That he was going to just kill all the adult members of the family and then that’s when he made the comment he may shoot up some churches and schools,” says Hundley.
“He had been talking about the schools and churches being soft targets, being easy targets because no one in them was armed,” a man who identified himself as Boulware’s brother “Andrew” said.
After this incident, a judge handed over custody of Boulware’s son to Boulware’s mother; it seems rather clear that the court was right to deem him unfit to care for the boy.
Further confounding the standard Men’s Rights narrative is the fact that the mother of the child, reportedly a drug addict, was also deemed unfit; both were ordered by the court to pay child support to Boulware’s mother.
Boulware was well-known to local police for this and other family disputes — as well as for repeatedly threatening the judge involved in his case.
Indeed, he littered Facebook and other websites with comments ranting about the alleged injustice done to him, alongside angry and often hateful attacks on “Comrad [sic] Obama” and the “fag loving, abortion have typical queer American brain washed troll[s]” who argued with him online. After a commenter called him “dumb” in one recent discussion of American foreign policy, Boulware declared that “I’M TRYING TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU LIVE SO I CAN DRAG YOU OUT OF YOUR TRAILOR AND BEAT YOUR BITCH A$$!!!!”
His conspiracy theories may have been driven by delusions; Boulware’s mother says her son “heard voices” and that she and other family members had tried in vain to get him the mental health treatment he needed.
After last night’s events, Boulware’s father told local media that, while he didn’t think what his son had done was right, “we all have a breaking point, and they pushed him past it.”
But Boulware, it seems fairly clear, was already plenty broken long before “the system” got to him. And no matter how sad or angry he was about losing custody of his son, nothing justifies a violent attack on innocent strangers with assault rifles and explosives. Most people, even if they were pushed far past their breaking point, wouldn’t respond with attempted mass murder. We are not all rage bombs waiting to go off.
And that’s when this post comes back around to the Men’s Rights movement. No, despite his anger at the police and courts for “taking away his kid,” and his penchant for calling people “BITCHES” in comments sections he doesn’t seem to have been a Men’s Rights activist.
But his was the kind of rage that Men’s Rights activists like to “warn” us all about; his violence was the sort of violence that MRAs all too often excuse.
I’ve written many times before about the way the Men’s Rights movement has lionized Tom Ball, a New Hampshire man who committed suicide several years ago by lighting himself on fire outside a court building — in hopes, as he explained in a long and inflammatory manifesto — of inspiring other men to start fire-bombing courthouses and police stations to avenge the wrongs allegedly inflicted on men by the family courts.
We’re lucky no one took him up on this suggestion, just as we are lucky today that no one except Boulware died in his assault on the Dallas police.
Boulware’s apparent mental illness, and the extreme nature of his assault on police, may keep him from becoming the MRA martyr that Ball became after his death. But MRAs have been willing to excuse if not justify similar violence in the past.
Consider, for example, “How we kill Johnny,” the story Men’s Rights celebrity Paul Elam has just posted to his new “consulting” site An Ear for Men.
In the story — presented as a true one — Elam describes his feelings upon learning of the murder-suicide of a young man he’d worked with as a substance abuse counselor. After a quick mention of the murder part of the murder-suicide — Johnny was said to have “killed that little girl he was married to” and shot, though not fatally, the man she was sleeping with — Elam moves on to the real victim, in his estimation: Johnny, the guy who pulled the trigger.
Johnny, as Elam sees it, was really only guilty of loving the woman he killed too much.
You see, men love. They love with the most profound intensity and selflessness of which any creature on this earth is capable. And the steely bond between them and women is, unlike their hearts, unbreakable. …
They will lay down in traffic for the women they love and stand in the way of bullets to protect them.
Yes, that’s right. He’s waxing poetic about men protecting the women they love — in the middle of a story about a man who killed the woman he loved.
I hope, more than anything else, that at some point in our future that people start to think. When you see the story on the evening news about a man who set himself ablaze outside a family court, ask yourself what kind of pain could drive someone to cure it with fire?
I can only assume this is a reference to Ball, who hoped that men would rise up to avenge his pain with firebombs.
When you read in the newspaper about the man who holed up in his house with a gun and his children, threatening to take them all out, ask yourself if this is just a crazy man, or a man driven to the brink by a pain so monstrous and devastating that even the unthinkable could become an option?
The fact is we “read in the newspaper” and on the internet about men like this all the time. And they are virtually always men. Murder-suicide, while rare, is an overwhelmingly male crime. Women lose custody too — as did the mother of the child in Boulware’s case — but outside of a few exceptional cases they don’t react to this by trying to murder fathers or judges or an entire police departments at once. Men sometimes do.
Elam has in the past “warned” us all that unless we start kowtowing to angry men like him, and soon, we will create a massive “male bomb” that will tear apart society as we know it today.
But men — or at least the vast majority of them — aren’t rage bombs. Those men who do resort to extreme violence — like Boulware and all the men we read about who kill their partners and sometimes even their children before, as they say, “turning the gun on themselves” — aren’t the victims they and Men’s Rights activists would like us all to see them as. They’re the perps — invariably men with an overgrown sense of entitlement, too in love with their own rage.
Those who use these men as a “warning” to the rest of us are playing a very old game, perfected by domestic abusers and bullies of all sorts. Abusers and bullies learn very quickly that they don’t always have to use violence to get what they want; the threat of violence is enough. “Don’t push me,” they say, and the implicit threat of an “explosion” of rage does the rest, all while enabling the bully to pretend to be the victim.
The Men’s Rights movement, to a large extent, is all about taking that implicit threat to the societal level.
It’s up to us to keep them from getting away with it.
Are people really going against what scientist have studied? Because I’m assume these ecologists have studied this stuff more than people dismissing it here…
@Binjabreel, what’s your point?
If YOUR cat isn’t doing more damage than your yard does good then clearly we should ignore that cats killing wildlife is an ecological problem? Again no one is advocating ending the cat/human relationship (I actually own a cat), but hand waving the problems with a “who cares? there’s lots more birds” is foolish.
@Snuffy
I think the whole hunting thing is why you’re suppose to keep your cat indoors for the most part, not just let them run outside all willy-nilly. Feral cats became feral because they got lost, their owners were careless and/or they didn’t get their cats properly fixed. If people were more conscious about their cats plus help capture and find good homes for feral kitties, we wouldn’t be having adorable little eco-assassins all over the place.
@Pandapool, exactly. People need to be aware of the damage their pets can do (dogs can also cause problems) and work to minimize it.
I will never understand feminists who eat meat, because the arguments meat eaters use to justify killing animals are EXACTLY the same as the arguments MRAs use to justify their treatment of women. Ever notice how progressive people are more likely to be vegetarian/vegan, while reactionaries are rabidly proud of how much meat they consume? There’s a good reason for that.
RE: the actual blog post. I’m thinking of the line in Harry Potter where Dudley put his foot through the television because his favorite program was cancelled. He was driven to break the television because he so loved the show that got cancelled.
Clearly not true right? Yet this is the same way these murder-suicide perpetrators think. “Stupid thing not doing what I want it to do!”
But, while most people (probably even daddy Boulware) would see how Dudley’s reaction was illogical and inexcusable, actions like James Boulware’s and Elliot Rodgers’ (and all of the others’) are treated with sympathy and the blame is shifted to the woman! Women literally get less respect than televisions!
There’s also assholes who brag about how they’re vegan/vegetarian. They are often rich assholes who have the money to spend $5 on an heirloom tomato.
There are many reasons why people don’t choose to be vegan/vegetarian, but that doesn’t make them bad. Getting cheap food with meat in it is much easier than cheap food that’s vegetarian and not everyone has the time, space or resources to plant themselves a garden for vegetables, for starters, not to mention all the medical or regional reasons they can’t be vegan/vegetarian.
People shouldn’t try to make certain diets superior to other diets for any reason. It’s classist, insensitive, and above all annoying.
@ Turanga Leela
Well, I can only speak for myself, of course, but as a feminist who eats meat, perhaps I can offer a perspective.
First of all, I don’t eat humans. Not that I absolutely never would, but I certainly wouldn’t do it if there were any alternatives. MRAs and their ilk abuse humans, and probably other animals. But mostly humans, and they mostly do so because they enjoy it.
As to why I eat animals, it’s complicated. One reason is that I can reliably eat certain kinds of meat without getting sick, which I cannot say for a lot of important non-animal sources of protein. I abhor the practices of factory farming, and I support any reforms made with an eye toward improving the health and welfare of the animals. But I’m going to keep eating.
What I find interesting about people who ask questions like you do is that you don’t seem to pay much attention to plants. Do you really not understand that plants can, and do suffer? Every year, studies come out about how plants perceive the world around. How they communicate. We are used to thinking of plants as things, little more alive than rocks or water. They are so very alien to us, but they are certainly living things. They, too, can suffer.
Humans, and animals in general, can’t simply take our energy from the soil, water, sun and air. Our muscles and fancy brains come at a price; namely, that we must consume life in order to survive.
You clearly see animal life as intrinsically more valuable than plant life. That’s fine. No one is obligated to examine their prejudices. Just know, that if you don’t, you come off sounding like kind of a jackass.
Is meat very cheap where you live? Not arguing, just curious. Personally, I’ve found that eating a vegetarian diet is less expensive than eating meat, if I’m buying and cooking my own food. A pound of ground beef in the local store is more than $8. Most non-meat protein sources (eggs, lentils, beans, chickpeas) are cheaper… oh, but not nuts (unsalted pistachios are glorious, but so effing expensive).
Anyway, my experience is just in being a meat-eater… and then not eating meat but still eating eggs/dairy… and now, eating meat again, but less often.
I can see how having a vegan diet might cost a lot, what with finding replacements for foods that usually have milk and eggs (like bread and mayonnaise and so on).
About medical reasons, that’s a good point. I had a friend who used to be vegan but gave up because of nut/soy allergies.
(Sorry if this is terribly off-topic.)
@eptiome
You can get 10 HUGE chicken breast for $6 often where I shop and $3 for a pound of ground chuck . Plus, you can easily buy meat in bulk and freeze it for later, unlike veggies which you often have to buy fresh weekly or get sodium-rich canned crap.
You can also often get very cheap food at fast food places that are mostly meat items.
I don’t know where you shop but $8 for a pound of ground beef sounds like 100% non-GMO, no hormones, fed only the corn and hazelnuts with a gentle massage everyday kind of meat, which goes back to the part that not everyone can afford grade-A meats like that.
I mean, fuck, seriously, what is that? Kobe beef? You need to shop elsewhere if it’s fucking $8 for a pound of ground beef.
I expected there to be backlash so that’s fine, and hopefully no one else is too upset by this either.
I understand the classism accusation, Pandapool. There’s no way around it right now. The difference in our opinions is probably because your greatest concern is that people not be shamed for eating what’s cheap, and my greatest concern is reducing pain: I believe pain is experienced by animals in the same way that it is experienced by humans, and given the choice between minimizing shaming and minimizing physical pain, my priority would be to minimize physical pain. It’s hard to walk the line between not pissing people off too much, but still saying “There is widespread torture that people dismiss because it takes a nonhuman form, and that’s not ok.”
Vucodlak, I’ve seen the “plants have feelings too” argument. I actually have thought about it, and the deciding factor for me is, even if plants are sentient on another plane of existence or something, more plants die supporting the meat industry than they would if the demand for meat disappeared.
I’ll gladly be labelled “kind of a jackass” and “classist” and really, all kinds of things if even one morsel of what I say makes some lurker think one tiny thing over for one second. That’s what I signed on for when I made that comment. *shrug* If activism doesn’t piss someone somewhere off, then it’s not necessary anymore.
Time to flounce, at least for this thread. This was a really good and important post by David and I don’t want to derail too much.
As genuinely as I can muster over the internet: everyone have as good a night as you can.
Eh. Not dismissing the ecologists. But cats and humans go together and have for thousands of years. That’s not going to change. We should absolutely for both the good of the cats and the rest of environment keep the feral population down. Humanely by catching them and fixing them. But short of committing worldwide cat genocide, we’re not going to stop cats from hunting small animals altogether. Cats are only an invasive species because humans are. We’re the ones who’ve brought them all the over the world and given them homes so their populations proliferate.
I guess I just don’t see the purpose to interrupting a discussion about how we like cats to point out about how cats kill lots of small animals. My cats are both indoor only. They’re both fixed. They’re both rescues. Neither of them are hunting anything that isn’t a household pest. And that’s only Dracarys. Darrow is so lazy he’ll let a bug crawl a couple of inches away from his face and he’ll do nothing but look at it . I didn’t do anything wrong and resent the implication that by liking cats I’m an environmental problem.
About the vegetarian thing; some of us ( like me) live with and/or cook for people who refuse to go meatless and don’t have the time to do a bunch of extra cooking in order to persue a vegetarian/vegan lifestyle.
I’m sure there are many others who have reasons of their own that don’t make them bad feminists.
It’s all well and good to be an ethical vegan but food deserts are a thing. Come on. Also, I question whether shaming people for eating meat is effective. We do need to consume less of it, but I think encouraging a reduction in meat eating is a lot more sensible and realistic than just implying that someone is bad if they eat meat.
I’m not sure what percentage of budgets is agriculture in other countries. But in the US it’s huge and policy impacts what people eat a lot. The better route is try and change ag policies. People will eat what’s easy to obtain and affordable. That’s not going to change. Ever. Different policies can change what’s easy to get and what’s cheap. Right now, a vegan diet isn’t what public policy is making the easier thing.
The same is true for the environment. There’s a lot of focus on individual conservation, but ultimately turning out the lights you’re not using and bringing a cloth bag to grocery shop (things I do, don’t get me wrong) are better than nothing. But only barely. As long as dirty energy is subsidized and as long as punishments for corporations that violate environmental regulations are a slap on the wrist, the collective carbon footprint is staying huge.
@WWTH, you’re literally the one who brought up how cats kill animals and asked “who cares?”, which I answered. Saying “No matter how many birds and rodents they kill, there’s still plenty more around” is extremely short-sited because of the overwhelming evidence that cats hurt local animal populations. Liking cats isn’t the problem, ignoring the harm cats can do is the problem.
@WWTH
I didn’t see anything about liking cats is an environmental problem though? It’s just that as a responsible cat owners, everyone have the responsibility to make sure our cats are fixed and doesn’t go off, messing up ecosystems by overhunting. All animals in any ecosystem are important (except for pandas), from mice to insects to birds to arachnids, which all cats like to hunt.
You are not contributing to the problem because you’re a responsible cat owner, but other cat owners are by letting their cats run around. If all cat owners think their cat going off and hunting isn’t causing damage to the ecosystem, when they clearly are, it’s a problem that’s just gonna get bigger.
Just make sure to call out irresponsible cat owners and report any feral cat you see.
…And I find this so ironic considering we’re always talking about people not being directly affected or not seeing [whatever]ism doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist and crap.
On an unrelated note.
Fallout 4…
Fallout 4…
Oh. My. God. Fallout 4.
http://www.reactiongifs.com/r/drool.gif
@Lea That sounds good. I’m curious how one makes “milk” out of an almond, but I generally don’t consume milk anyway outside of coffee and hot chocolate.
I don’t really understand the American fascination with milk. I remember watching Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and the part that stuck out to me the most wasn’t the aliens but the fact that the family drank milk with their dinner.
And the more I look at it, the more rational it seems to be to be a vegan or at least vegetarian to stat out. I fee that claiming to support animal welfare while eating meat is like claiming to be a feminist while beating your wife.
This has actually gone on for a while. I’ve never found a good argument for why people should eat meat, but I just love the taste of it so much that I could only argue based on emotion. (Ironically, it’s the carnists that tend to be more “feels over reals” a lot of the time.)
Also, I’ve found that carnists tend to be as obnoxious, if not more so, than the straw-vegans in their head. (Yes, you eat meat. You want a fucking medal?)
My “who cares! comment was just me being flip although I know that doesn’t necessarily come across. I was responding to a comment Allison made. We were discussing pets and she is the one who asked why people didn’t realize they were predators who are killing all the animals in populated areas. That’s what I was talking about. She was implying that by discussing cats in a positive light we were somehow doing something wrong.
I’m not the one who started this topic. At all.
@WWTH I apologize for saying you started it. But I stand by my pointing out that the “who cares” attitude is hand-waving a huge problem and an ignorant stance to take.
@WWTH, the reason cats are an ecological worry in the first place is because humans are careless, the “who cares” attitude is exactly why it’s a problem. That’s what I take issue with.
I thought cats hunting mice was a good thing, not an ecological menace.
I don’t have any background in ecology, so I could be wrong.
Like I said, I wasn’t being all that serious. I was annoyed that somebody barged into a previously interesting and pleasant conversation about the relationship between pets and gender to make a snotty comment about the downside to cat domestication. I wouldn’t have said that if the topic was ecology, irresponsible pet ownership, etc. I was being snarky to somebody who was derailing. Somebody who was being kind of a jackass in a different thread the other day.
Part of how we deal with the horrible, horrible shit that is covered here is to talk about cats and post kitty brain bleach. I’m really not going to take kindly to any attempts to mar that tradition. It’s necessary for us.
I will now say for the third fucking time. I am all for humane measures to keep the feral cat population under control. I don’t see how I can make that any clearer. I am also for spaying and neutering pets. And adopting rescues rather than going to breeders or pet stores.
@Krib you would be very hard pressed to find an ecologist that doesn’t think cats are a problem that need to be addressed.
I also wonder if some of the hunting cats do is a good that’s invisible because we’re taking it for granted. Rodent borne disease isn’t as big of a menace as it used to be now that we have antibiotics. But there’s still plenty of sanitation issues around rats and mice and I’m betting there would be a whole lot more of them if we didn’t have cats.