Manichean
Military honor yadda yadda. Ronan Farrow reports:
As insurrectionists stormed the U.S. Capitol this week, a few figures stood out. One man, clad in a combat helmet, body armor, and other tactical gear, was among the group that made it to the inner reaches of the building. Carrying zip-tie handcuffs, he was captured in photographs and videos on the Senate floor and with a group that descended on Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office suite…
…A day after the riots, John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at Citizen Lab, at the University of Toronto’s Munk School, notified the F.B.I. that he suspected the man was retired Lieutenant Colonel Larry Rendall Brock, Jr., a Texas-based Air Force Academy graduate and combat veteran.
A patriot, storming the US Congress. What would unpatriotic look like?
Two family members and a longtime friend said that Brock’s political views had grown increasingly radical in recent years. Bill Leake, who flew with Brock in the Air Force for a decade, said that he had distanced himself from Brock. “I don’t contact him anymore ’cause he’s gotten extreme,” Leake told me. In recent years, Brock had become an increasingly committed supporter of Donald Trump, frequently wearing a Make America Great Again hat. In the days leading up to the siege of the Capitol, Brock had posted to social media about his plans to travel to Washington, D.C., to participate in Trump’s “Save America” rally. Brock’s family members said that he called himself a patriot, and that his expressions of that identity had become increasingly strident. One recalled “weird rage talk, basically, saying he’s willing to get in trouble to defend what he thinks is right, which is Trump being the President, I guess.” Both family members said that Brock had made racist remarks in their presence and that they believed white-supremacist views may have contributed to his motivations.
Farrow talked to him, and he told a touching story about going there for patriotic reasons, and thinking he was welcome to go into the Capitol (which I think does apply to some public areas at some times, but probably not so much when there are barriers in place and there’s a riot happening and the cops are trying to push back, and which I’m quite sure doesn’t apply to the floor of the House or Senate or to legislators’ offices without an appointment or invitation).
Legal experts said that people who breached the Capitol could face a range of criminal charges, from disorderly conduct to seditious conspiracy. “Presumably this person broke into Congress in order to stop or intimidate or interfere with the counting of the Electoral College certification, a fundamental feature of the peaceful transition of power in the United States,” Alan Rozenshtein, a professor of law at the University of Minnesota, said.
Well, yes, that’s what he went there for, but aren’t we welcome to do that? Or no?
Brock’s family members and his friend said that his service in the Air Force was central to his identity. Several of Brock’s e-mail addresses and social-media accounts featured his call sign and military nickname, Torch. One family member said that Brock derived “this weird sense of power” from his time as a military pilot, along with a Manichean world view. “He used to tell me that I only saw the world in shades of gray, and that the world was black and white,” the other family member said.
The military can instill some fine qualities in people, or…it can do the other thing.
What did you mean by the title of the post, “Manichaean”? As in the religion?
I took it from the family member’s account of Brock. What I meant by it was a kind of raised eyebrow, meaning I think Brock was cruder than that.
The word is pretty much defined by context in that paragraph–it literally means seeing the world in a black-and-white, good vs. evil view, with no allowance for nuance or differing perspectives.