JUNE 15, 2016
Counterpunch.org
How do
we even talk about the horrific killings in Orlando, which left at least 50
LGBTQ revelers dead and more than 50 more injured in the middle of pride
month? First we mourn. Then we rage. Then we hug our loved ones,
especially our LGBTQ friends, comrades, and family members.
Then
we look again, and we see the horror — that this murderer was licensed to carry
guns and had no trouble buying incredibly powerful military-style
weapons. So casually. So legally. So common, across our country.
That’s when we start to rage again.
More troubling still, Omar Mateen worked for a company that was
perpetrating systemic violence against vulnerable people long before he took up
arms against his LGBTQ neighbors. For nine years Mateen worked for G4S Security, a
British-based corporation that contracts with the U.S. and Israeli governments
for work that often violates human rights on a massive scale.
G4S,
which brags about having 600 staffers on the southern border, has contracts
with U.S. immigration authorities to detain and deport people back to Mexico,
as well as to run private juvenile detention facilities. In Israel,
meanwhile, G4S profits from providing equipment and services in Israeli prisons
and interrogation centers where Palestinians are routinely tortured. It’s also
involved in running Israeli military checkpoints in the occupied Palestinian
territories.
Incidentally, G4S is the company that trained Mateen to work as an armed
security guard, which licensed him to carry and use weapons. And although his
coworkers told supervisors that Mateen “frequently made homophobic and racial comments,” the
company did nothing. It kept him on board — and kept him armed.
Should
this company continue to profit from multi-million-dollar contracts with the
U.S. government?
Since 2012, there’s been a major campaign
against G4S, resulting in decisions by major mainstream institutions
— like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Methodist Church, numerous
European universities, important charities in South Africa and the Netherlands,
UN agencies in the Middle East, and more — to divest from G4S holdings, or to
cancel or not renew service contracts. G4S is profiting from exactly the
kind of anti-Arab and anti-Latino racism, Islamophobia, and xenophobia that are
all on the rise in the U.S. right now.
If the early reports are accurate, G4S’s long-serving employee is
responsible for the worst mass shooting in modern U.S.
history.
And
here let’s continue to be careful with our numbers. As my IPS colleague Karen
Dolan and others have been pointing out, our nation’s origins are grounded in
genocide and slavery. Earlier history has to take into account things like the
1890 massacre at Wounded Knee, when between 150 and 300 children, women, and
men were gunned down. That mass shooting is part of our history, too.
But
our nation’s history also includes the great movements that have risen against
war, racism, sexism, homophobia, and more. The party at Orlando’s Pulse club
was part of a month-long Gay Pride celebration rooted in the extraordinary
movement that grew out of the 1969 Stonewall revolt, when bar patrons fought
back against police brutality toward gay men and lesbians.
June
12, the night of the massacre, happened to be Latin Night at the Pulse.
Reverend William Barber, a leader of the Moral Mondays movement in North
Carolina, reminded me that June 12 is also the anniversary of the 1963
Mississippi assassination of the great civil rights leader Medgar Evers.
One
more link between our movements — from Stonewall to Orlando, and Mississippi to
Palestine.
Phyllis
Bennis directs the New
Internationalism Project at the Institute for Policy Studies. Her most recent
book is Understanding ISIS and the New Global War on Terror: A
Primer.
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