Monday, February 21, 2022

Linda Thompson (1953-2009), Right-wing activist & Militia movement pioneer

Interesting thread from Mark Pitcavage, a historian and analyst of far-right wing groups. He works with the Anti-Defamation League and was the creator of the now-archived Militia Watchdog website. The site has been an archive since 2000 when Pitcavage took the position of Director of Fact Finding for the Anti-Defamation League.

Today I thought I'd share another thread-profile on a historical American right-wing extremist. Up this time is Linda Thompson (1953-2009), a key pioneer in the militia movement and an unfortunately significant influence on Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh.

Some extremists are active for decades, but Linda Thompson was different, suddenly rising from obscurity to become a national figure, then disappearing from the scene after only a few years.  But her timing was unfortunately impeccable.

Thompson grew up in Georgia, served in the U.S. Army from 1974-1978 (allowing herself subsequently to call herself a "Vietnam-era veteran) as a clerk/stenographer, and graduated from law school in Indiana in 1988. She opened a law practice, first in Georgia, then Indiana.

The early Linda Thompson was a sort of libertarian liberal, even getting involved in two abortion rights cases (although conspiratorial even then, claiming that certain doctors were involved in a nationwide antiabortion conspiracy to delay pregnancy test results). As late as 1992 wrote letters to the editor to their local papers recommending the tape. RIght-wing columnists--including Walter Williams--also promoted the tape. Using unaired footage from satellite intercepts (you used to be able to do this before signals were encrypted), it had a mesmerizing effect. 

Thompson's AJF [American Justice Federation] received hundreds of letters and phone calls each day--she had to hire people just to open the mail. One caller, in August 1993, was one young man named Timothy McVeigh, who watched the tape over and over again. Thompson followed up the video with others, including Waco II: The Big Lie Continues and America Under Siege, a classic black helicopter-style conspiracy video. Through her videotapes, her computer BBS, her appearances on mainstream and extremist shows (including her own short-lived shortwave radio show in 1994), and more, she played a huge role in propagating militia conspiracy theories across the country. 

Trying to capitalize on her prominence, on April 19, 1994, the anniversary of the bloody end to Waco, she issued a call for an armed march by militia groups on Washington DC to try and hang treasonous members of Congress. She regretted her earlier event at Waco had been peaceful, saying, “Now I wish we had gone armed and killed every one of those bastards. They’re all traitors and criminals.” She also issued an ultimatum to Congress and penned a new Declaration of Independence. She got tacit support from some militia groups and considerable support from the influential William Cooper, but others in the movement attacked her for such a grandiose plan. The John Birch Society even warned its followers against her. 

Perhaps because of these factors, it soon became clear that no one was going to show up in D.C. There would be no storming of the Capitol in 1994. So Thompson canceled the event in August, declaring victory--she said her real purpose had only been to spur the creation of militia groups (the movement was growing but not because of her march). This was Thompson's first clear defeat. It made her bitter and increasingly she attacked other militia figures--who responded in kind.

Thompson received another huge burst of publicity as a result of the actions of one of her fans--Timothy McVeigh, who blew up a federal building in OKC on April 19, 1995. The media now "discovered" the militia movement and Thompson was one of its most visible promoters. She was now featured in countless articles--one in Esquire Magazine was titled "The White Woman from Hell." Much of the publicity was negative, with other militia figures eager to criticize her to reporters. Thompson decided this was because she was a woman (there was some truth in that, but she was also just really hard to get along with) and she lashed out even more. 

Her influence rapidly diminished (though her Waco vids remained popular), exacerbated by the fact that she had no group of her own and also by the fact that, unlike similar people, such as the young Alex Jones, she never really was able to take advantage of the Web. 

She didn't disappear entirely. She helped to create the "Clinton body count" conspiracy theory and in 1996 and 1997 she provided legal assistance in militia-related incidents/trials in GA & MA, but after that she largely fell off the radar screen. This was due to personal issues as well as her loss of influence. One of her sons ended up in foster care and she soon divorced her husband. Not long after, she had a disastrous gastric bypass surgery, complications of which required more surgeries and IV-fed nutrients. These issues led to more issues, and considerable pain and wasting away. 

After years of misery, she died in 2009 of an overdose of the pain medication she was taking to provide relief. Virtually no one--not in the militia movement nor in the mainstream media--even knew she'd died.

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