Dear Kitty. Some blog

April 7, 2009

Gun violence in the USA [Music, Peace and war, Economic, social, trade union, etc., Human rights, Women's issues, Religion, Media, Crime, Film, Social sciences] — Administrator @ 1:48 pm

This is a part of the film Bowling for Columbine by Michael Moore: interview with singer Marilyn Manson, blamed in the United States media for the Columbine massacre. The interview mentions the Yugoslavia war; a more likely cause of that mass murder than rock music.

By David Walsh in the USA:

The mass shootings in America

7 April 2009

Ten years ago this month two students opened fire on their classmates and teachers at Columbine High School near Denver, Colorado, killing 13 and wounding 23 others, before committing suicide. The event, although it was hardly without precedent even then, horrified the nation. Newspaper editors and columnists, self-proclaimed experts on school violence, pundits of various types all weighed in, but their analyses offered little insight.

President Bill Clinton remarked, “Perhaps we may never fully understand.” He added, “Saint Paul reminds us that we all see things in this life through a glass darkly, that we only partly understand what is happening.”

Clinton also said that people should learn from Columbine that violence does not solve problems. However, this in it itself correct statement by Clinton was hypocritical because of the circumstances under which it was made. At the time of Columbine, Clinton’s administration was waging war on Yugoslavia. One of the Columbine murderers, Eric Harris, was from a US Air Force family. Harris had wanted to join that war (not mentioned in the extensive Wikipedia article on the Columbine massacre; not mentioned in most punditry on Columbine); but the US Marines had turned him down for medical reasons.

After the massacre, Greg Butterfield wrote:

Yet on the same day all that hot air was being pumped in Washington, a revealing admission came from Columbine High School officials. Klebold’s and Harris’s English teacher had warned their parents a month before the shootings about the violent character of their sons’ writings.

Why was nothing done?

When the teacher learned that Harris’s father was a retired Air Force officer and that his son hoped to enlist in the military, the teacher concluded that the essay “was consistent with his future career aspirations.” (New York Times, May 11)

Democrats, Republicans and the media condemn violence “in general” while carefully avoiding any mention of their involvement in the brutal U.S./NATO war targeting civilians in the Balkans.

If the Marines would not have turned down Harris, then he might have killed Yugoslav children and teachers (perversely considered “enemies”, though civilians) like he fired at Columbine children and teachers. And Harris might have gotten a military medal for it.

The David Walsh article continues:

Two years ago, also in April, a student at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia killed 32 people and wounded 17 others, also before turning the weapon on himself. The official experts again provided their generally banal and superficial opinions. President George W. Bush commented, “It’s impossible to make sense of such violence and suffering… In times like this, we can find comfort in the grace and guidance of a loving God.”

In the past month, an eruption of violence in the US has accounted for the deaths of 53 people in seven mass shooting incidents. In response to the worst of these tragedies, the murder of 13 people in Binghamton, New York, President Barack Obama issued a statement in which he said, “Michelle and I were shocked and deeply saddened to learn about the act of senseless violence in Binghamton, New York today. Our thoughts and prayers go out to the victims, their families and the people of Binghamton.”

Changing what needs to be changed, the response of the Obama administration is identical to those of its predecessors: uncomprehending, vacuously pious and, in the end, indifferent. No one in Washington cares to say the obvious: That the slaughter is a symptom of a diseased social order.

As for the pundits, the tragedies that all too rapidly succeed one another in the headlines barely stir them into taking up column space or airtime. The comments and attempted explanations become ever more perfunctory.

The New York Times published a brief editorial in response to the massacre that began the recent wave of violence, a rampage in southern Alabama March 10, urging Congress “to reinstate, in tightened form, the national assault weapons ban that it let expire in 2004.” Since then, not a word.

The Washington Post, in the aftermath of the Alabama, Carthage, North Carolina and Binghamton shootings, editorialized: “No one may ever fully understand what kind of fury or demon gripped the gunmen.” The Post too called for tighter gun laws and left it at that.

For their part, the cable television channels, in their pursuit of viewers and ratings, seek to transform the coverage of the carnage into something approaching entertainment, with lurid headlines and promises of “in-depth” coverage that never materializes.

That a human being might suffer a mental collapse under extreme conditions is an element of everyday life. That seven individuals pick up multiple, extremely lethal weapons and attempt to blot out as many lives as they can, often before taking their own, is a phenomenon shaped by social and historical circumstances.

The present socio-psychological environment, in which so many individuals, deranged though they may be, can cause the massive suffering and death of innocent people without flinching, cannot be accounted for without reference to recent trends in American life.

Such a state of affairs must be bound up with the decades of political reaction in the US, rooted in economic decline and characterized by the promotion of force as the solution to all problems, the encouragement of militarism and chauvinism, the worship of “free market” ruthlessness and selfishness, and a popular culture pervaded by brutal imagery and lyrics. …

The economic crisis is undoubtedly exacerbating these tendencies, as it places the psychologically vulnerable under far greater than usual stress. All the more under conditions where America’s social safety net, highly porous at the best of times, has been shredded by Republican and Democratic governments at every level.

A Florida social agency reports that “as a direct result of the economic crisis” domestic violence centers have reported a 37 percent increase in demands for services.

A University of Buffalo news release in January cited the comments of Sampson Blair, a family psychologist at the school: “Family murder-suicide is still relatively uncommon, but I expect an increase in such incidents over the next few years because economic strain on families provokes depression and desperation.”

Blair added, “The economic situation also portends a significant increase in other forms of family violence, including spousal and child abuse, child neglect and other forms of dysfunctional behavior like substance abuse. What makes this situation even worse… is that there is also a clear association between suicide rates and the state of the larger economy.”

Job loss has been a factor helping to trigger a number of the recent mass shootings.

A study reported in the American Journal of Public Health in 2003 found that unemployment is the single strongest predictor in cases where men murder their wives. An abuser’s lack of employment increased the risk fourfold, the research found.

5 Comments »

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  1. If you want to find out what really happened at Columbine I suggest you read what the eyewitnesses had to say:

    http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/columbineeight.php

    Comment by starviego — April 8, 2009 @ 3:04 am

  2. Hi starviego, both that site as a whole and that Columbine page do not look very credible to me. The site is full of ads for questionable “Get rich quick” schemes and conspiracy theories. And the Columbine page has 101 quotes claimed to be by eyewitnesses; however, without sources for those quotes. And it ends with gun lobby propaganda and another conspiracy theory.

    Comment by Administrator — April 8, 2009 @ 9:48 am

  3. I haven’t been consistently following the news, but this summary of all the gun massacre since Clinton’s administration makes it more look obvious that nobody really care (those that are in the position to do something out of this). Who knows when is the next gun shooting going to happen and where? We don’t know because we have no idea. It’s a sad world that we all live in.

    Comment by Ez — April 25, 2009 @ 12:03 am

  4. Hi Ez, I agree this is a sad situation. A grassroot movement of pressure to improve policies may help.

    Comment by Administrator — April 25, 2009 @ 9:13 am

  5. May 9, 3:22 PM EDT

    Texas boy, 7, dies after shot in mistaken trespass

    HOUSTON (AP) — A 7-year-old boy who was allegedly shot in the head by a couple who thought he and three other people were trespassing on their property died Saturday, authorities said.

    Donald Coffey Jr. died Saturday morning at a Houston hospital, less than two days after the boy was struck in the head by shotgun pellets, Liberty County Sheriff’s Cpl. Hugh Bishop said.

    Sheila Muhs and her husband, Gayle Muhs, both 45, were charged with second-degree felony counts of aggravated assault in the shootings Thursday. They were being held at Liberty County Jail with bail set at $25,000 each and had not yet retained an attorney, Bishop said.

    Bishop said the district attorney could upgrade the charges to murder on Monday, but investigators were “still trying to get the circumstances behind the incident.”

    The boy, his 5-year-old sister, their father and a family friend were off-roading near a residential area about 40 miles northeast of Houston when they were shot after stopping so the children could go to the bathroom.

    Authorities said the couple fired after they mistakenly thought the group was trespassing on their property.

    Bishop said the area includes a dirt road, trees and overgrown brush and that it wasn’t uncommon for people to go off-roading there. The Houston Chronicle reported that a sign in front of the suspects’ home reads: “Trespassers will be shot. Survivers will be reshot!! Smile I will.”

    Liberty County Chief Deputy Ken DeFoor said Sheila Muhs fired a 12-gauge shotgun once, then handed it to her husband, who also fired once.

    DeFoor said Sheila Muhs then called 911 and told the dispatcher: “They’re out here tearing up the levee, so I shot them.”

    DeFoor said the levee belonged to the subdivision and was not private property.

    Bishop said there was no indication the unarmed victims did anything threatening toward the Muhs.

    Donald Coffey Sr. suffered a pellet wound in his right shoulder and his daughter, Destiny, suffered a wound to the elbow. The family friend, 30-year-old Patrick Cammack, was in serious condition Saturday with a head wound, Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center spokeswoman Alex Rodriguez said.

    Comment by Administrator — May 9, 2009 @ 9:26 pm

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