I Hate Crackers

Share a lesson you wish you had learned earlier in life.

Actually the title is bait. But I really do hate crackers. Ritz, Saltines, Wheat Thins, all of them. I don’t care if you give me the most expensive cheese or Beluga caviar, I will not eat crackers.

That’s what the title really means. But it may not be the way you saw it.

That’s because once upon a time, it referred to a hillbilly, a dullard with no education and a hatred for freed slaves, usually African Americans, and this hatred was absolutely deadly. The expression, a derogatory slang, once conjured the image of an old man wearing a battered straw or felt hat, shirtless beneath bib overalls, bare of foot, a corn cob pipe hanging from a mouth with no or few teeth, and in his hands a side-by-side double-barrel shotgun.

More recently it’s been used as a derogatory name for any Caucasian, used by African Americans.

Down in the southern and in the midwestern United States it is more prevalent, but since the late 1990s has faded further north. But you can still hear it.

Racism is everywhere and is a part of everyone’s life, whether we want to believe it or not. You may not think that you are racist, but no matter how you may try not to be, the need for and effort itself means that there is something within you that’s being fought, something you try to bury deep, crammed into shadows you never dare let see the light of day. That’s a great thing. It is noble, this fight, and remember that many before you have fought the same personal battle, each one of them making the world a slightly better place. No brave effort is ever wasted.

Of all the regrets I have that haunt me most, being a blind bigot is at the top. I’ve hurt people, almost exclusively with words. I would sling the “N” word from my mouth as often as the word “fuck”, and that goes way back to childhood.

In my school in elementary grades, what they call “primary” school now, there was one African American girl. Same grade I was in. And did we ever punish her. Also the girls who never washed or bathed, who showed up in white blouses that went as unwashed as they, well we gave them hell too. I got bullied, but when it was the rare girl who set her cross hairs on me, I would be shocked into frightened silence, and the sickening language I used on others would come back to me, but strangely, because there was a certain finesse and panache added in. I hated Cheryl Gant and admired her at the same time for being sick, but eloquent in her loathing for me. After a time, she became attractive to me!

I could never figure out why she hated me, and it spread to her mother, who had the balls to knock on my door after I passed her once on North Shore Road. I thought that was funny, but let my mother handle it because at 17 years of age, I had no way of holding back my emotions and I’d have used language like “cunt” on her. Yep. I’d have done that. Maybe worse.

What Cheryl did, unknowingly, was teach me that hate can come from anywhere. It isn’t restricted to race, gender, religion, or any other factor. Sometimes, it’s just there.

Other times, it’s taught. When parents are both southern bigots, true racists, you do what they do. You say what they say. You feel what they’ve taught you you feel. Being young in redneck Pasadena in the 1960s, lots of prejudice existed, and if a black family moved into the neighborhood, they’d be shunned by most, befriended by few, and invariably suffered vandalism. I rarely heard of violence, except on Walter Cronkite in 1968.

Maryland went into panic as riots broke out in Baltimore City that year, and Governor Spiro Agnew activated the MDARNG. A conservative, Agnew would go on to be Nixon’s vice president before being caught with fraudulent tax records. He was replaced by Gerald R. Ford.

These riots, so close to the cloistered suburbs of Pasadena and North Shore, scared my father silly. He kept a .22 revolver with a 10-inch barrel loaded. Ready for (“the ‘Ns'”) to walk into his yard.

They weren’t coming, but his blind terror of blacks rendered him hysterical and unreasonable. I felt the fear that he did. It made an indelible mark on my soul, and I got worse. If I was a mentally ill loose cannon before, I became a monster later. And the African American girl in my class suffered additional reactionary punishment not just from me, but others. By sixth grade, she’d grown an impressive bosom. The girls wanted to be her because they had nothing in the breast department. Weren’t supposed to, really, but everyone matures at different rates.

By junior high, the bussing situation threw together kids who weren’t prepared. Shock naturally occurred, but with dire consequences. Rednecks regularly carried switchblade knives, and came very close to murder. Fights, rumors of riots,fistfights in the hallways were more limited to the redneck guys, but other scenarios happened. It wasn’t a conducive learning environment. And I hated black people more until I finally got suspended for hate speech. Several times.

I didn’t care. Not for decades would I feel differently.

Being grown, working every day, I was always going to interact with people I’d been taught to hate.

And slowly, ever so slowly, I became less fearful. I interacted with customers, asked stupid questions, but always, they understood and praised my eagerness to learn, to overcome. I wanted the hatred and fear to end, to be no more. I began to see beauty in all people of all races. Women whom I’d never have paid attention to became ravishing. And almost always, and to this day, women of color are nicer to me than most others. They sense things in me: no threat, no danger, always sympathetic and ready to listen, not a man seeking a relationship, but a friend.

And the girl in my class all those years ago, who alone had to bear racism from white students surrounding her?

One night I read a newspaper article. She’d made the headline. Babysat one night. And the baby wouldn’t stop crying… she tortured and killed it. I never knew, and never will, if what she went through in school, because of boys like me, played a part.

You know what I’d like to think.

But the abuse we piled on her for years would almost certainly be part of her hell.

All actions and words have consequences. And the potential to harm, and harm greatly. I wish I could have learned that lesson much earlier. Then, maybe, though damaged and full of my own sorrow, rage and bitterness, I could have learned respect and how to love…instead of having so many hurt left behind me in time. A painful lesson that hurts more because I took so long to learn it. I often think back to those who I had hurt and hated. Too late to apologize. Too distant. And some are long gone. As is one infant whose name I will never know.

The Vigilantes of Skidmore

One night in 1982 I watched a segment on the TV show 60 Minutes and never forgot it. In the town of Skidmore Missouri, while sitting in his pickup truck, the town’s nightmare, a bully by the name of Ken Rex McElroy, was shot to death.

During the segment I never once had any shred of sympathy for him.

Here is that segment.

https://youtu.be/7SWSGV3Xr3M

Years passed. I never forgot that segment, done by my favorite correspondent, Morley Safer, one of the most intelligent, charming yet daring news reporters I had ever had the pleasure to watch. In the story above, it seems he was blatant about asserting McElroy’s death was a justified crime. But watch closely and it’s clear that he talked to people who wouldn’t go on record; he was no one to be superficial in his job.

Then, in 1992, I met one of McElroy’s relatives while working retail. She was a new hire, and for some reason I one night happened to mention the story. That’s when I learned that she was related to him, and I can’t remember the exact familial relationship, but she told me that my ideas about his death were justified.

I knew she was telling the truth. He was the reason she had moved as far away from Missouri as she could, the Eastern coast of the United States. Oh, he was long dead, but people remained who were brainwashed by the bully (clearly his wife and attorney were) and she had to get away from the situation. (1)

It’s hardly insignificant that his wife, a witness, either failed to identify McElroy’s killers, or, if she had, nothing came of it, and that in this report, her chance to go nationwide with names, she still didn’t do it.

There’s an active link about the town that got away with murder everywhere I look now, down amongst the click bait below news stories. I haven’t bothered.

Because there are only two reasons to keep this story alive: politics on the right, and politics on the left, in a deepening polarizing of the country and its issues.

The woman told me that there was much more to the complex reign of terror and the man who claimed the right to run it than anyone else in the country could know. She herself had been terrified of him, and would not go into detail except to mention that she was young. The fact did not escape me. Anyone who can terrorize children, know that they are doing it and even face charges but show no remorse, especially after beating the rap, is a serious threat to society. (2)

Police arrived that July afternoon to find the streets empty, and Ken Rex McElroy dead. At least two shooters were involved. Probably still others were there with firearms. McElroy had pushed people beyond the limits of the human brain, a place where it says, no more, and something visceral and primeval takes over. There’s no reason to believe any other motive. Anyone who has been relentlessly bullied can reach this point and will strike back with calculating lethality. This is basic human nature.

But Ken Rex McElroy was not killed because he was a bully. He was an established criminal who shot a man and didn’t intend for him to live through it. He’d fired at a pastor. Molested a child. Shot random animals and stolen others and the justice system utterly failed the people. He needed to go. Even though his wife won’t say a word against him, she too carried weapons to help him threaten a man’s life.

Was it justified? Can vigilantism ever be condoned?

I ask one question: how many people would he have gone on to hurt, traumatize or even kill? He was about to get another slap on the wrist when he died. That slap would undoubtedly have empowered the man. It’s a court, writing a blank check, to a known menace. It happens every day, across the country, always has. How many have died because of it? How many are yet to?

I do not approve of vigilante justice. Murder is a crime against God, man and nature. One doesn’t need to ask their higher power anything; it’s wrong.

Still, I cannot help feeling that at a time in history, destiny caught up to Ken Rex McElroy, and he got what he deserved, but more than that, his death served the greater good.

Even his family said it was so.

Notes

(1) Defense attorneys are forbidden to betray a client. Even if they know the client is guilty they can never divulge such a thing.

(2) A child abuser is almost always a sociopath, able to intellectually differentiate between right and wrong, but incapable of feeling guilty. As such, sociopaths are, under the wrong conditions, a severe danger to society. They will repeat offend until the day they die.