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Saturday, December 15, 2012

Monsters

*
Wanton marquee-grade killing, whether the media label it as "terrorism" or "tragedy," understandably raises the eternal question of where "evil" comes from, and why. Opinions are diverse, understandably, because this is arguably the central mystery of existence to anyone who believes that life has a moral or spiritual dimension (in other words, that the universe is more than a bin of particles that follows "laws of science" to move from chaos toward order). My opinions on that aren't important; they're as unimportant as, say, Mike Huckabee's.

But around these events, the question of what to do about them always struggles to be considered. Predictably to anyone who knows something about post-70s America, Second Amendment enthusiasts and the politicians who exploit their preoccupation tell everyone else that "now is not the time" to talk about gun carnage because, after all, it is people who kill people. Everyone else is also admonished not to "politicize" tragedy, even though it's legitimate and imperative to discuss whether public policy is partially to blame or whether changes in public policy could reduce the frequency and carnage of mass shootings. Corporate media always propagate this conservative admonition, and are its foremost adherents.

I've got nothing profound to offer, but here is a small survey of media response with a comment or two.

This whole Charlie Pierce piece is worth reading. He ties any discussion of gun "tragedies" to the fundamental conservative fallacy---that (to borrow Margaret Thatcher's radical confession of global conservative principles) "there is no such thing as society":
There are things we must do together, in a political context, because these things are too big — and, in this case, too monstrous — for us to handle alone. Self-government and its institutions — public schools, police and fire departments, the ridiculously underfunded mental-health facilities, and all the people to whom we increasingly begrudge their salaries — are the only things keeping us from falling back into barbarism, and the only things keeping us safe and sane when one of us falls back into it on their own.
I agree. The absolute minimal conversation we should be having about gun violence, whether or not conservatives think any time is an appropriate time, is about the necessity of understanding that America needs fully funded and professional education, law enforcement, emergency response, and healthcare institutions... period. If the well off and the Job Creators don't want to pay for the privilege of enjoying an orderly society, they should repatriate their warty asses to China or Haiti.

Second, there is this piece by Maggie Koerth-Baker about "what science says" about gun control. Here is her profound takeaway:
Some studies are funded by biased institutions. Some studies aren't peer reviewed. Some studies feature poorly thought-out methodology.
All of that leads to a mess of frequently contradictory conclusions that can, frankly, be used to support just about any position you'd like to put forward. So, basically, just because you can support your position, don't think that makes you absolutely correct.
As so-called science writers go, Koerth-Baker is especially useless to me, with her patronizing and pseudo-profundities. But I think her conclusion is typical corporate media treatment: it's all just too complicated for us poor journalists and citizens to make heads or tails of, so let's all just love one another. Thanks for nothing, Maggie.

Speaking of the "media role" in public tragedy, the following is something I stumbled across this morning. It's a Roger Ebert anecdote about an interview he gave to NBC news (never aired) after Columbine (via BoingBoing again) in which the reporter was looking to cherry-pick quotes about violent movies causing gun violence. Ebert wouldn't play along:
The reporter looked disappointed, so I offered her my theory. "Events like this," I said, "if they are influenced by anything, are influenced by news programs like your own. When an unbalanced kid walks into a school and starts shooting, it becomes a major media event. Cable news drops ordinary programming and goes around the clock with it. The story is assigned a logo and a theme song; these two kids were packaged as the Trench Coat Mafia. The message is clear to other disturbed kids around the country: If I shoot up my school, I can be famous. The TV will talk about nothing else but me. Experts will try to figure out what I was thinking. The kids and teachers at school will see they shouldn't have messed with me. I'll go out in a blaze of glory."
In short, I said, events like Columbine are influenced far less by violent movies than by CNN, the NBC Nightly News and all the other news media, who glorify the killers in the guise of "explaining" them.
As much as public policy, this is a piece of the problem that needs to be discussed. Logos and branding---bullseye. Personally, I wouldn't dismiss the media's normalization of violence as sensual and pre-political entertainment as quickly as Ebert seems to, but Hollywood is not directly responsible for Columbine or Tucson or Newtown.

And finally, there's this last word on the topic, straight from the mouth of a genuine monster:
Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee attributed the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in part to restrictions on school prayer and religious materials in the classroom. 
"We ask why there is violence in our schools, but we have systematically removed God from our schools," Huckabee said on Fox News, discussing the murder spree that took the lives of 20 children and 6 adults in Newtown, CT that morning. "Should we be so surprised that schools would become a place of carnage?"
As Rob Bechizza said about Huckabee's comments back on BoingBoing: "Don't be angry. Just understand what he understands: that this is political."

I think the conversation needs to be much more far-reaching than the topic of gun control. It needs to examine how this society has become so detached from its own collective humanity that even a discussion of gun control is taboo within both of our major political parties while kids are slaughtered on their mats in kindergarten.

6 comments:

  1. Good work here. If this event will focus attention, debate and hopefully policy and funding toward proper mental health care and sane requirements for gun ownership, ammunition capacity, and gun culture generally, then great. So far nothing else has been enough to do that.

    When the "debates" are only arguments between people wanting something substantial done, changed, corrected vs. insane morons calling for arming teachers with firearms and prayers then there is nothing useful going to be accomplished. Any lawmaker wasting another second of society's time trying to drag this down to the absurd needs to be immediately be shut up-- censured, condemned and removed from the effort. They're not just useless now, they're harmful.

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  2. Randomly strung and loosely connected tangential thoughts:

    1. Austrailia reacted (assault weapons ban) - USA....don't hold your breath and paint an average of 5 to 20 bulls eyes per year on random innocents (probably much higher in wider urbania)

    2. Illinois is currently the ONLY state without a conceal carry law...Chicago being the main holdout. And the state has been ordered to comply by a Federal judge. Just which way is the tide flowing here?

    3. Recent reading on female serial killers speaks of "attachment disorder" (as in none or at best deeply twisted). One quote along the lines of just get the execution over with was "This life don't mean nothing to me." More generally many teens do have a formative phase to negotiate to various degrees -- some don't make it.

    3b. I've heard of a child psychology categorization in response to tribulations that boils down to: metal, wood, glass (i.e., bounces off, leaves impressions/gouges, and shattering).

    4. A local library that sells coffee had a "good karma bucket" for tips. The policy has now changed to no tips since the "bucket" was stolen (successfully).

    5. Davey Crocket named his rifle: "Tick Licker"

    May the cold dead hand not be thine own.

    Mr. Thanatos Two-Step



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    1. One of my many problems with the reflexive authority so many people delegate to The Invisible Hand is that there's always a loaded Glock within its reach.

      I have to say that I always cringe when, regarding some aspect of human progress, a person draws a conclusion in the present to the effect of "that will never happen." The reason I cringe is that, while it's fair to say that certain things are highly improbable in current conditions, there is never any good reason to assume that something unexpected won't happen in the near future. Think about what has happened in terms of public acceptance of gay marriage; who would have predicted the changes that have occurred between 2004 and now? (Who can even explain it?) Basically, though, what seems to have happened is that a majority of polite society has decided to defy and shout down the haters. The number of vocal, stubborn homophobes probably hasn't decreased appreciably, but they've been put on notice that most people are sick of their filthy attitude.

      It could happen that polite society rallies to put gun nuts on notice that their obsession with their hobby, through nests of motherfuckers like the NRA, is costing Americans undue hazard, loss, and grief. "Responsible gun owners," if there are any such things, will have to come out of the closet to help force an uncensored discussion of the issue.

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  3. Everyone's a "responsible gun owner" until they're not.

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    1. Yes, like the parents of this child:

      http://newsok.com/oklahoma-3-year-old-dies-in-accidental-shooting-authorities-say/article/3738015?custom_click=masthead_topten

      "He said criminal charges will not be filed." Because there's no such thing as "reckless child endangerment" in Oklahoma. Guns don't kill toddlers; toddlers kill themselves.

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