Why Jim Badasci 'Went Postal': How Bullying Bosses and Economic Devastation Are Behind America's Latest Workplace Shooting

Economy

There was another workplace rampage killing last week, just outside of Fresno, Calif., leaving two company employees dead and the other employees grateful to be alive.


Fresno, like so much of unofficial America, is still in a state of shock these days, after suffering from a nonstop barrage of tragic events and trends, of subprime devastation, a three-year drought, and political corruption and machinations that seem to be accelerating with every month.

So, unlike workplace shootings in the past, this one was quickly pushed off the front pages and almost forgotten, just a couple of days after it happened.

But like so many workplace shootings, scratch the surface of Fresno today to get a sense of context, and you'll be shocked by how corrupt, desperate and bizarre the situation has become.

Pull the camera back from the scene of the crime, and suddenly you get Sean Hannity making regular appearances on behalf of agribusiness oligarchs, and beleaguered Mexican farmworkers gang-pressed into marching 50 miles in the Central Valley heat calling for the repeal of the Endangered Species Act … but more on that a bit later.

Here's what happened last Tuesday: Jim Badasci, who had worked at Fresno Equipment Co. for 10 years, showed up Tuesday at 8:57 a.m. with a shotgun, and the first thing he did was kill co-worker Ralph Wallis. About two dozen co-workers scattered at that point, some taking refuge at a nearby car wash, others reportedly hiding inside of a locked vault, as Badasci, wearing a hunting vest filled with ammo, proceeded to "shoot the equipment" -- in this case, John Deere agricultural machinery.

Shooting utility tractors may seem strange or psychotic to anyone who hasn't studied these workplace shootings, but if you believe Badasci was trying to kill the company, which he believed was killing him, then shooting anything on company grounds makes perfect sense.

The really surprising part of the story is how four of the employees managed to stop Badasci from killing anyone else. Although few details have come out about how they managed to persuade an armed man to stop shooting, a close friend of Badasci's believes this proves that he was not a wild madman randomly killing, but rather a normal man who had become desperate.

Rather than kill more fellow workers, Badasci took his own life.

It was all over in a few minutes; as always, the police and SWAT teams arrived just beyond the nick of time.

So why did Badasci shoot? What drove him to it, and who was he after? Officially, we don't know. But one local report on KSEE24 TV, which no one else picked up, offered a rather clear explanation:

We spoke with Michael von Flue, a former co-worker of Jim Badasci, who says that this was out of character for him. That Jim would go out of his way to help others and that he had a good home life. Von Flue did not want to go on camera, but tells KSEE24 News,"This is what happens when a company mismanages their employees and fails to treat them with respect."

In an e-mail exchange with von Flue, he told me that Badasci had been driven to desperation by a particular supervisor and the company's toleration of the supervisor's mistreatment.

Von Flue apologized for all the grammatical errors in his e-mail, noting how difficult the last week has been, and how little he has slept. He dismissed the idea that drugs played a part, but then went on to speculate that maybe he suffered from some kind of mental illness that was triggered by the harassment and mistreatment Badasci suffered.

This is particularly interesting, because I've written about this in the past: the definition of mental illness in today's workplace is when you're too sensitive to mistreatment, bullying, stress, wage cuts, firing, etc., and you want to fight back; a healthy mind should be able to take it all in stride, accept it with a harmless grumble and "move on."

Von Flue said Badasci "loved his job, talking with people" and was very sociable, but that the supervisor had made his life hell, and unfortunately the company owners decided not to do anything about it, even though others had also complained. "It is sad that they didn&squot follow through ... things might have been different I&squom sure."

Von Flue's letter echoes a reader comment I spotted in aFresno Bee story about the shooting:

sweetthgvfwrote on Sept. 23, 11:09 a.m.: To anyone and everyone out there who knows Jimmy and knows what it was like to work at Fresno Equipment Company, Jimmy may have been the one who did this horrible deed, but Fresno Equipment is ultimately responsible because of the way they treat their employees.

If you don't want to believe it, don't, but you can talk to anyone who's quit over the last five years because of management, my husband included, and they will tell you the real story behind all of this. My husband warned the company owners three years ago, when he quit, that if they don't take care of the problem somebody will go postal. Too bad they didn't listen back then….if you ask me both Jimmy and Ralph are victims. Again, our sympathies to both families … but let's face reality here.

This situation has been in the making for a long time. It's called hostile work environment. Maybe now management will listen to their employees when there's a problem instead of sweeping it under the rug.

Just a year ago, this kind of talk would have been dismissed out of hand, because the Reaganomics model in place for 30 years was the still best in the world, and if you weren't on board, it was your own problem.

Now that it's all collapsed, and we're starting to understand how badly we've been burned all these years, revelations about how miserably workers may have been treated at the company Badasci attacked elicit a different kind of shrug -- like, "Yeah, so what, everyone gets screwed over by their companies, what's new?"

Getting screwed over the way we have been these past 30 years is something new -- as are the workplace massacres, pitting employee against company, which only started after the Reagan Revolution handed all power to the shareholders and convinced the losers in that deal -- the 90 percent of Americans whose lives got worse in every measurable way since then -- that in fact it was in our own best interests to turn corporations into little profit gulags, where the inmates could be downsized at will, and mass layoffs in the tens and hundreds of thousands became so common in good times and in bad that it proved Stalin's dictum about "one victim is a tragedy, a million victims is a statistic."

What is surprising is the portrait painted of Badasci -- nothing at all like the cliched "loner who kept to himself." Here is how some people described Badasci in the aftermath -- and remember, it's not easy to publicly talk well of a killer:

One friend said he was unable to explain why Badasci would commit such a crime. Mario Juarez of Kingsburg said he worked with Badasci at Fresno Equipment for two years, and they remained friends after Juarez quit. "We've gone dove hunting and to concerts. We talked from time to time," Juarez said. But Juarez is at a loss to understand the shooting. "I talked to him last week, and he gave no clues that anything was wrong. I've never in my life seen him mad. I would have bet my life savings he would never do a thing like this."

Marie Taylor, who lives down the block, had heard news reports about the shooting, but did not know Badasci was the suspect. She said Badasci was a mechanic and seemed to like his job. "He waved at me twice yesterday when I went by," she said. Taylor occasionally talked to Badasci and his mother, but never saw a hint of trouble in his life. "He kept up the yard. He was good to his mother."

That last part, about how he lived with his mother at age 46, might offer one clue as to what might have been bothering Badasci; that, and the fact that everyone I read or saw interviewed seemed so casual about that, as if living with his mother and treating her well didn't pain him, as if they were unaware that American culture marks such people as losers and laughingstocks, disqualified from the Darwinian Tournament.

If you ask me, that sounds about as miserable as a life can be: living at home with your mother outside of Fresno, in the unbearable heat and dust, at age 46, working every day in a John Deere dealership in a barren strip off Highway 99, where business is bad and tempers are hot because of a three-year drought and a recession, and to top it all off, management treats him like shit. Who wouldn't want to end that violently?

Few would actually do it -- only the mentally sick, of course -- but many, even healthy types, would dream of it…

So even though every person interviewed who knew Badasci had such nice things to say about him, and even though von Flue, and apparently others, seem eager to get the truth out about what went on at the company, officially no one knows why he shot anyone, and officially, no one seems to care.

It is as if we've come to accept these rampage slayings as inevitable, as if there were always worker-on-worker killings in the American workplace, as if the workplace was always a dangerous place, a stressful place, a humiliating, degrading, insecure place where no one could be trusted, from the executives stuffing their pockets to the co-worker you wrongly suspect of being "the type who'd go postal."

All that is brand new by any historical measure: The first of these modern workplace massacres, pitting abused employee against his own company, took place just 20 years ago this month, at the Standard Gravure plant in Louisville, Ky., when an aggrieved employee arrived at work with a gym bag full of weapons, and killed eight co-workers and wounded 12, before blowing his brains out.

Compared to that body count, Tuesday's shooting at the Fresno Equipment Co. was a mere skirmish: two dead, no injuries. And we aren't learning much, in part because Fresno Equipment's owners barred employees from talking to the media, according to a local ABC affiliate -- and they'll be inclined to listen, given Fresno's 15 percent unemployment rate.

Moreover, Fresno has a particularly nasty socioeconomic culture: at the top, a vicious ruling class of agribusiness plutocrats and their corrupt political tools, who together lord over hordes of pissed-off crackers and endlessly exploited Latino laborers.

In a lot of ways, the region has more in common with a kleptocratic post-Soviet country, or an old Upton Sinclair novel, than what we think of as "modern America."

Below the agribusiness oligarchs in Fresno County is a huge class of people struggling to keep its head above water, and losing. An estimated 41 percent of the people in Fresno County are either uninsured or underinsured, among the worst in the country. Housing prices collapsed out here, and coupled with the drought, unemployment in some Central Valley farming towns reaches as high as 40-50 percent.

The struggle with poverty can mean dozens of circles of hell, levels that you wouldn't imagine possible, like this one described in a recent Fresno Bee feature:

Ask [the Rev. Sharon] Stanley about the cost of being poor, and she whips out a plastic bag with dozens of dead cockroaches inside. They were gathered from one apartment along Lowe Avenue. "Every night, when you turn on the light, roaches scatter," Stanley said.

The roaches, attracted to mold and moisture behind the walls, wiggle into the ears of young children, prompting costly midnight visits to the emergency room, she said.

Families sleep with the lights on, not because they fear the bogeyman, but because they fear pests. The bag of roaches came from an apartment where FIRM [Fresno Interdenominational Refugee Ministries] was conducting an assessment as part of a program to identify substandard housing and organize help.

The task is difficult, because families often won't ask for help or shun it. Many are afraid of being evicted, having rents raised or being ratted out to immigration authorities, advocates say.

And this being Fresno County, you can't forget that familiar demographic that gravitates to hot, dry places like this: the Fox/Hannity crowd, seething with petty white-male malice, always mobilized to fuck up anything good and side with whoever's going to cause the most damage -- out of sheer spite.

* * *

Although the connection is tenuous between the site of the workplace shooting -- a dealer in agricultural machines -- and the larger issues in Fresno -- agribusiness and water -- nevertheless, as in so many other shootings, by digging into the Fresno Equipment killing, I started to get a taste of just how rotten and corrupt Fresno is these days, and the larger context in which the shooting took place.

Fresno is a bad place to be, and it's getting worse: Imagine, just a week before the shooting, Sean Hannity flew into the area to -- get this -- demand federal government handouts.

Since this sort of clashes with his proclaimed hatred of socialism and big government, Hannity, whom Glenn Beck has relegated to role of "Peter Brady of Fox News' celebrity goons," switched enemies: now it's environmentalists who are the "terrorists" and "extremists," headed, of course, by the eco-terrorist No. 1 , our socialist/Marxist/Islamofascist President Barack Obama.

Hannity was joined in his soak-the-taxpayer crusade by a washed-up Latino comedian named Paul Rodriguez, whose failure in showbiz (the best gig Rodriguez landed this decade was a bit part in Beverly Hills Chihuahua -- as the voice of a computer-generated iguana named Chico) drove him to where it drove another failed comedian, Dennis Miller: into the fat arms of the angry Fox News white right-wing crowd -- the last refuge of washed-up-comedian scoundrels.

But whereas Miller found himself a comfortable spot as Bill O'Reilly's monkey boy, Rodriguez is taking on a much more sinister role as the Latino face of agribusiness oligarch interests, fronting for rich landowners and farming conglomerates. They set up Rodriguez as the head of a shady new advocacy group, "The Latino Water Coalition," a front group set up by his rich agribusiness sponsors to make it seem that pobre fruit-pickers' interests are indistinguishable from those of their rich exploiters.

The agribusiness plutocrats who rule Fresno County are as horrible, greedy and shameless as the villains in an old Upton Sinclair novel, something even they seem to grasp.

So they hired the notorious PR firm Burson-Marsteller to mask their role. Burson-Marsteller is the perfect firm for the job: it has spent decades whitewashing Third World dictators, genocidal maniacs and kleptocrats, helping them get away with murder and mass theft all across the globe. So for them, this was a piece of cake.

What B-M and the agribusiness tycoons decided to do is redefine the debate over taxpayer-funded water -- shift attention away from all the state welfare money that the tycoons have been feeding off and want more of, and superimpose a new false debate over water: as a choice between an endangered guppy versus vulnerable, impoverished Latinos, the apple of every liberal's bleeding heart.

Taking astroturfing to a new and darker level, in April, agribusiness interests gang-pressed a couple thousand migrant Latino farmworkers into "marching" 50 miles over four days in the scorching Central Valley sun, calling for the repeal of the Endangered Species Act and for taking out the taxpayer credit card to finance and subsidize more cheap water.

The New York Times reported that marchers were paid by their employers, something I haven't seen since Russian Vladimir Putin's PR goons would bus in thousands of workers and students for rallies that either were bribed into attending, or told they better attend.

"In reality, this is not a farmworker march," said Arturo Rodriguez, president of the United Farm Workers of America, the 27,000-member union founded by Cesar Chavez, which did not participate in the march. "This is a farmer march orchestrated and financed by growers."

And in July, a couple thousand Latino farmhands were pressed into marching on Fresno City Hall to demand the repeal of the Endangered Species Act, opening up more cheap water, and ultimately, building the loathed Peripheral Canal, which would cost taxpayers billions of dollars and deliver enormous amounts of cheap water from Northern California to the Central Valley, converting their farm land into much more valuable suburban tract-home development land.

At that July 1 rally, once again, some protesters said to reporters that they were either paid to protest, transported in by their bosses or told that if they wanted to keep their jobs they better show, according to the Associated Press:

On Wednesday, nearly 4,000 people carrying professionally printed signs proclaiming, "No water, no jobs, no hope, no future," marched through downtown. One man, who declined to give us name, said his Kettleman City (Kings County) employer had driven him and other workers there and were paying them for their time. Another woman said she came with 50 other employees of a Tulare agriculture contractor for free, to protect their jobs.

So basically the super-rich landowners and farming oligarchs are using the poorest and most vulnerable demographic – Latino migrant workers -- as human shields, in order to steal money from taxpayers while daring them to fire back: "What, liberal eco-terrorists, you have more compassion for a guppy than for this poor Mexican, who sleeps with his lights on out of fear of cockroaches? What sort of heartless eco-terrorist are you? Sign the $12 billion Peripheral Canal deal now, or you'll have the blood of millions of Mexicans on your hands!"

It really is that sinister. Rodriguez even bragged about it to a convention of nearly all-white right-wing Republicans in May.

Rodriguez assured them they had nothing to be worried about his group being "Latino," because he, Rodriguez, was using his less-fortunate fellow Mexicans as human shields to front for their wealthy agribusiness profits.

According to a top-notch local investigative reporter, Lloyd Carter (who has written some amazing stories on the water/race/astroturfing issues in the region), Rodriguez was invited to Bakersfield to speak to the right-wing Republican Assembly, where the former comedian went out of his way to assure his new white masters that there was nothing to be afraid of in the "Latino" name of his "Latino Water Coalition" group -- it's all a Trojan horse to advance their rich, white Republican interests!

"When I say Latino Water Coalition, a lot of you automatically say, 'Why Latino? Doesn't everyone need water, Paul? Why just you Latinos, and as a Caucasian person I take offense to that, why does everything have to be segregated?' I don't know. I don't know, but we're using this. We're using this race card in a positive manner, a cloak. You know everybody's welcome to this. The reason why we call it the Latino Water Coalition [is] because it gives them a pause. 'Better not attack these Latinos, we don't know.' If we call it the Caucasian Coalition, you bet they would already be attacking us. Because Caucasians, sadly to say, who is defending you? I am. You know, just to put that to rest, there's no division."

Rodriguez really couldn't go any lower than this: from Beverly Hills Chihuahua to Westlands Mexican Hairless; from Chico, the talking CG iguana, to Paul Rodriguez the Republican-generated talking monkey, a mean soulless prick willing to sell out his own to get a pat on the head and a chew stick from his white masters.

To get an idea of just how vicious the ex-comic has become, watch him attack this guy in this video.

And this is where Hannity comes in.

A week before the shooting, Hannity flew in to the nearby town of Huron and hosted a show-cum-rally called "The Valley That Hope Forgot." One guest, former Republican mayor and TV actor Alan Autry, denounced Obama as fulfilling an al-Qaida terrorist goal because a federal judge ordered the state to temporarily reduce the taxpayer-subsidized water flows to 86 percent of normal due in part to damage to fish stock in the north of the state.

Hannity:I never saw an issue where it was so simple: Just turn the water on.

Autry: Yeah, Sean. But that message has, there's a very powerful forces at work here. And there's an old saying, it's not paranoia if they're really after you. I made a statement not too long ago, and I stand by it, and I'm going to stand by it today, and you saw Evangelina and Joe, turning this water off is not just bad politics, it's an act of domestic terror.

[CHEERS AND APPLAUSE]

Now, Sean, the last thing I want to do is come here and go over the top. Let me tell you why it is. As mayor for eight years, I worked with Homeland Security after 9/11. One of the things we were charged with by the federal government was to work together locally to protect the water supply to farming communities so they could continue to provide food for the nation. Now, if you would have told me that those -- that water would have stopped -- I would have believed maybe al-Qaida struck, not the federal government.

[CHEERS AND APPLAUSE]

In an article on the right-wing site newsbusters.com about Hannity's rally, commenters (perhaps B-M astroturfers) reached for even more hysterical analogies:

Sept. 18, 2009, 12:53 ET by GrannyGrump42: What's the proper term for what Stalin did to the Ukraine? Because that's what this smacks of.

Sept. 18, 2009, 3:39 ET by ConservativeRex: Granny, the proper term is Holodomor … 'hunger plague' or in other words 'death by starvation.' I think it is ironic that all Obama would have to do is stroll around D.C. and see the memorial made to the Holodomor. But since one of his heroes implemented it, he won't pay attention to it.

Sept. 18, 2009, 12:52 ET by GrannyGrump42: It all puts me in mind of what Stalin did in the Ukraine. Beck mentioned this last week

Sept. 18, 2009, 4:32 ET by candance: It all ties in to the effort to devalue human life. Who cares if 70 million people starved to death under Mao? Humans are an inconvenience to mother earth anyway. Once you accept this premise, no argument against government can be framed around damage to citizens.

What I don't get about these right-wing bleeding-hearts is that if they're so familiar with the tragedies they cite, and if they feel the pain of those tragedies so deeply, then how is it that they can, with a clear conscience, degrade those tragedies by comparing a situation where 6 million starved to death or 70 million starved to death on the one hand, and a situation where no one starved to death on the other hand.

I know what their response is: retreat into an imaginary future tense, where nothing can be disproved, and therefore their warnings that 70 million Americans will die because the government won't fund the Peripheral Canal is as valid as if I say they won't die, which is as valid as if someone else says that the Four Horsemen will align with the Age of Aquarius. Whatever, it's like trying to reason with the street people in Berkeley…

And then there's Rodriguez, the failed comedian who is being paid by agribusiness oligarchs to betray his own people, and in particular the United Farm Workers union, the real target of the Latino Water Coalition front group he heads up.

Rodriguez, an immigrant from Mexico, now gets paid to put a suffering Latino face on the same rallies where migrant workers are pressed into marching for their masters -- the failed comedian is reduced to performing in front of an audience that's literally paid to see him, or threatened with their jobs if they don't.

And he's performing his role as the Tio Tomás of Fresno County better than his masters could hope for. Rodriguez is so overzealous in his new collaborationist role that he's cooking up his own plans to out-anti-Obama his pals in the angry white Tea Party movement.

One plan he's working on is to use these same gang-pressed migrant workers, hundreds or even thousands, to form a giant "HELP" sign visible from the air, aimed at Obama. Another plan is a petition drive he wants to hold to rename Fresno County as "Nobama County."

Here's an excerpt from Rodriguez's appearance on Hannity's show a couple of weeks ago in nearby Huron:

Rodriguez: You know, we're not going to be farmers any longer. We're going to be selling firewood, because our trees won't last another six months without water. It's really a sad situation that those of us who choose to farm, my mother and my family in the central San Joaquin, perhaps the most fertile soil in the world, are now just sitting there ready to go on welfare or some other kind of support because we can't farm.

Hannity: Paul, this is so serious, and it's almost mind-numbing that this could happen. All right. So we showed the little Delta smelt, this little minnow fish that is now on the endangered-species list. Now, they literally have shut down -- you are getting, and farmers are getting, zero percent water. Their trees and their farms are dying. Is that right?

Rodriguez: Yes …

Incidentally, just over a week after Hannity's "The Valley Of No Hope" rally in Huron, the mayor of that town was arrested on charges of grand theft, real estate fraud, possession of stolen property and "a wide array of criminal activity." Hannity really knows how to pick 'em.

A couple of days after the Fresno Equipment Co. shooting, the big story making local headlines was about how scores of Fresno State Bulldogs fans were thrown out of the stadium during the football game against Boise State, accused of "politicizing" the game, which was broadcast live on ESPN.

Certain students, supposedly forming a group called "The Cause," wore pro-water T-shirts and waved pro-water signs for the cameras -- a classic PR stunt that smells of something subcontracted by Burson-Marsteller.

The reason the students were thrown out wasn't just because they had brought politics into a college football game, but because some of the signs and shirts used profane language against Obama.

Meanwhile, as Fresno continues to slash its police force and city employees, the county approved another $5 million tax subsidy for agribusiness landowners, even though the state budget can't pitch in anymore. For the super-rich in Fresno, there's no such thing as furloughs and shortfalls.

Which brings me back to the Fresno Equipment Co. shooting. When you pull the camera back a bit like this, and put the shooting into a larger context, it starts to make more sense.

But remember, even though it's easier to understand these shootings since last year's collapse, they're a product of the brutal Reaganomics we've been living under for 30 years.

Workplace shootings, in which an employee stages an armed suicide attack on his company, or supervisors, or co-workers, only began a couple of decades ago, after Reagan's Revolution successfully stripped whatever power and leverage employees once had and handed it all to the shareholders and executives.

Since then, it's been hell for an increasing number of Americans, and it's no coincidence that a brand-new crime of desperation appeared with the Reagan Revolution: the worker who "goes postal."

The first massacres began in the mid-to-late-1980s, and the shootings have repeated with such regularity that it seems we've gotten to the point where we almost accept them as part of the landscape, as if they're inevitable and they've always been with us, and always will.

Maybe that's why no one seems to have noticed or cared much that the man who shot his fellow worker, the company equipment and then himself, may very well have been mistreated and driven to the brink. Given just a small sample of what's going on in Fresno County, it's a wonder we're not all taking up arms and heading to the source of the pain.

Because Fresno County is most of America today -- the rule, and not the exception.

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