When you stop caring about people, you can do anything.
Ignore any suffering, endorse any wrong. Heck, you can, as Robert Crimo III did, cause suffering and inflict wrongs yourself. Show up at your own town's Fourth of July parade and fire 88 shots from an assault rifle into the crowd of your neighbors, killing 7, wounding 48 more.
You're free to do that, then shrug it off afterward.
We wonder how Crimo could do it, while at the same time imitating him, in our own small way.
Part by necessity. The world is a terrible place. You can't mourn every bird nudged out of every nest, every child who dies anywhere. Life would be continuous agony. You have to be concerned about yourself, primarily, your family, next, if you're lucky enough to have one. Then a few neighbors, co-workers, friends. We make such a big deal out of the tiny fraction we care about, we completely ignore the majority who don't count.
Some cause harm. For a lark. In Crimo's case, he pulled the trigger, he claimed, inspired by friends being shot by police — imaginary friends apparently. Lies are helpful that way, the grease on which our bad deeds slide. Crimo says he was a zombie, a sleepwalker.
There's a lot of that going around. Those who aren't psychopaths prefer to let others do their harm for them. The reasons hardly matter. Our government hurts people based on their immigration status. Their paperwork. It's such a familiar excuse, we forget just how flimsy it is, how false. Just as baseless as other popular pretexts: the color of someone's skin, their religion, gender. Meaningless distinctions that become meaningful to those who want to oppress and hurt, or ignore oppression and pain.
As if the 2022 Fourth of July massacre weren't close enough — a 13-minute drive from my house to Ross Cosmetics, the Highland Park store and social center Crimo chose as a sniper's nest — after the killing I noticed a photo I took at a Trump rally at the corner, within sight of my window.
It was 2020, the COVID Plague Year. Northbrook activist Lee Goodman had taken to posting the COVID death tolls on a sign at the corner of Shermer and Walters — then under 200,000 dead. Trumpers began holding rallies at that corner to register their displeasure at anyone keeping track of something as trivial as Americans dying in a pandemic, the opening salvo of what, five years later, has become a general war on education, experts, data, information.
Not only don't we care who gets hurt; we don't even want to see an official toll. Statistics are for losers.
It might seem facile to draw a line from Crimo to the administration. Why not? Both are motivated by the same blithe unconcern for life. It's only a matter of degree. , and seven dead are a rounding error chump change compared to what's happening right now. Human Rights Watch just issued a paper: "100 Human Rights Harms in 100 Days: The Trump Administration's Assault on Rights in the United States and Abroad."
No. 1 is "Children, adults, and whole families may find it more difficult to feed themselves as the administration eliminated over $1 billion in food assistance for school lunches and food banks in food insecure school districts and communities across the US."
Are those kids going to die of hunger tonight? No. But it's a hint at what's going on — if you don't care about hungry kids, what do you care about? Trans high school athletes, apparently.
Ignore any suffering, endorse any wrong. Heck, you can, as Robert Crimo III did, cause suffering and inflict wrongs yourself. Show up at your own town's Fourth of July parade and fire 88 shots from an assault rifle into the crowd of your neighbors, killing 7, wounding 48 more.
You're free to do that, then shrug it off afterward.
We wonder how Crimo could do it, while at the same time imitating him, in our own small way.
Part by necessity. The world is a terrible place. You can't mourn every bird nudged out of every nest, every child who dies anywhere. Life would be continuous agony. You have to be concerned about yourself, primarily, your family, next, if you're lucky enough to have one. Then a few neighbors, co-workers, friends. We make such a big deal out of the tiny fraction we care about, we completely ignore the majority who don't count.
Some cause harm. For a lark. In Crimo's case, he pulled the trigger, he claimed, inspired by friends being shot by police — imaginary friends apparently. Lies are helpful that way, the grease on which our bad deeds slide. Crimo says he was a zombie, a sleepwalker.
There's a lot of that going around. Those who aren't psychopaths prefer to let others do their harm for them. The reasons hardly matter. Our government hurts people based on their immigration status. Their paperwork. It's such a familiar excuse, we forget just how flimsy it is, how false. Just as baseless as other popular pretexts: the color of someone's skin, their religion, gender. Meaningless distinctions that become meaningful to those who want to oppress and hurt, or ignore oppression and pain.
As if the 2022 Fourth of July massacre weren't close enough — a 13-minute drive from my house to Ross Cosmetics, the Highland Park store and social center Crimo chose as a sniper's nest — after the killing I noticed a photo I took at a Trump rally at the corner, within sight of my window.
It was 2020, the COVID Plague Year. Northbrook activist Lee Goodman had taken to posting the COVID death tolls on a sign at the corner of Shermer and Walters — then under 200,000 dead. Trumpers began holding rallies at that corner to register their displeasure at anyone keeping track of something as trivial as Americans dying in a pandemic, the opening salvo of what, five years later, has become a general war on education, experts, data, information.
Not only don't we care who gets hurt; we don't even want to see an official toll. Statistics are for losers.
It might seem facile to draw a line from Crimo to the administration. Why not? Both are motivated by the same blithe unconcern for life. It's only a matter of degree. , and seven dead are a rounding error chump change compared to what's happening right now. Human Rights Watch just issued a paper: "100 Human Rights Harms in 100 Days: The Trump Administration's Assault on Rights in the United States and Abroad."
No. 1 is "Children, adults, and whole families may find it more difficult to feed themselves as the administration eliminated over $1 billion in food assistance for school lunches and food banks in food insecure school districts and communities across the US."
Are those kids going to die of hunger tonight? No. But it's a hint at what's going on — if you don't care about hungry kids, what do you care about? Trans high school athletes, apparently.
I have the feeling, he thought he was just in some video game & was killing pixels, not humans. He appears to have low self esteem, the weird face tattoos are proof of that & appears to be the type who probably tore the wings off of butterflies.
ReplyDeleteMy guess is his future is that he likes being confined to prison, the regimentation & not having to make decisions is fine for him. But I also think at some point, some really violent murderer inside will kill him, because he pissed him off somehow.
I remember that day. Horrific. 88 shots and the shooter so young.the price we pay for our freedom is incredibly high.
ReplyDeletedo you know how many CPS students receive free lunches? All of them, a couple hundred thousand kids. some get free breakfast as well. This program is not completely funded by federal money. But that doesn't matter it all starts out as taxpayer money. the feds have a 30 T debt the city has a 2B pension shortfall.
ReplyDeletePPP money was sent by the boat load to people that didn't qualify for it and used it to party while a million of their fellow citizens died during the pandemic. a good portion of the unqualified applicant were federal employees.
our country is fucked up in so many ways. im sorry some of it happened 13 minutes from your normally safe and quiet home. I know it must be hard, there were 357 murders in my ward over the last 4 years and nearly 2000 shootings . I feel you brother
our school district also provides free breakfast and lunch to kids; they found the cost was minimal and easier to do than checking the cards 'certain' kids carried to get free lunch. very popular program and no big increase in cost.
DeleteYou should read this article from Cory Doctrow. No doubt those who got PPP that shouldn't have, probably got it fraudently. They should have been forced to return it. Doctrow says it is impossible to get fraud to net zero. For example there is less than one per cent fraud in Social Security, but yet the government is trying to make it complicated. No doubt there is fraud that you really have to be concerned about. https://pluralistic.net/2025/04/24/hermit-kingdom/
DeletePowerful column
ReplyDeleteThe racist right figure their whiteness is their guardrail. In their minds, being MAGA assures them of a higher position in the caste.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this. Interesting thought exercise to compare Crimo with Kyle Rittenhouse. Two young white men who took powerful rifles to public events and committed mass murder. Rittenhouse did his killing at a BLM protest & got away with it.
ReplyDeleteWhat a foolish comparison. One of these guys used deadly force to defend himself after being violently attacked, and the other ambushed a crowd of peaceful parade goers. If you can’t see the difference there then I’m not going to be able to help you much, but it is the reason that one of them was acquitted and is out walking free and the other is spending the rest of his life in prison.
DeleteOne doesn't carry an assault-type rifle to a highly charged event like that BLM protest (which was quite a ways from his home) without some intent to use it in some capacity. People act differently when they're armed; they put themselves in situations they'd otherwise avoid.
DeleteHomer put it succinctly: "The blade itself incites deeds of violence."
Delete“The blade itself incites deeds of violence”.
DeleteSure, the same way that lowered railroad crossing gates incite people to drive around them.
One was acquitted because in America you're allowed to carry assault weapons to protests and if anyone gives you a push why you can justifiably shoot them in the head. I agree, the two incidents are different, yet, they are equally undefendable.
DeleteNo doubt the Rittenhouse should not have been out there. However I don't know if you can compare him to Crimo. I m not defending him in any way. But this is an interesting video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkTnQfjRvk0
DeleteMost of these gun fondlers really just want to be able to shoot, and kill, others.
ReplyDeleteHonest and powerful column. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteNeil, how in the world did you happen to take a snapshot that randomly included Crimo two years earlier and then go back to the photo and recognize him? I'm just curious since it's such an incredible happenstance. Thanks for the meaningful column.
ReplyDelete
DeleteWell, as you know, he's a Trump fan. He attended one of the Trump rallies by my house. I went and took some pictures. I often scan over old photos, looking for something to write a blog post about. Karie Luc also might have photographed him on the same day, so perhaps I saw one of her shots and so knew what he was wearing.
And he's dressed as Waldo from Where's Waldo. Proof he's a truly weird & disturbed man.
DeleteI had the same question about the photo. One-in-a-million (OK, maybe 100,000) or just dumb luck? What no one seems to have noticed is that the wacko kid is dressed as Waldo. Much as I hate to say it, there is a message someplace in there. He is a sick person and a reflection of the very people who support our sick president. They need attention and are willing to kill to get it. Reminds me of Dostoevsky's Raskolnikov.
ReplyDeleteNeil, sorry I forgot to ID my comment about Waldo. Anonymous comments always bother me. It is refreshing when people take responsibility for their comments.
ReplyDeleteOne of the set aside stories from that day. A fine man named Dean Zelinsky jumped in and lent a hand to the wounded. A Highland Park native. And also a quiet legend in the guitar world. He still lives in Highland Park. Not so far from Max's Deli on Skokie Blvd, actually. Google Dean guitars sometime and learn his story. A visionary who has been kicked out of his own company two or three times over the past 50 years. Yet he dusts himself off and stands up again and returns. Like our good friends from Highland Park.
ReplyDelete