Thursday, June 15, 2017

People Shouldn’t Get Shot

Charles P. Pierce:

Violence doesn’t “intrude” on everyday life in America. Violence is a part of everyday life in America. A little more than a week ago, five people were shot to death in warehouse in Orlando. Is a warehouse in Orlando less innocent than a Virginia ballfield? Is a disgruntled worker taking his mad vengeance less of a demonstration of a country unhinged than a home-inspection specialist who fried his brain over politics? Is somebody who wounds over politics a worse murderer than someone who kills because he got fired? I admire the ability of anyone who can make that measured a moral choice.

On the whole, people shouldn’t get shot. They shouldn’t get shot in the streets. They shouldn’t get shot in school. They shouldn’t get shot in the workplace. They shouldn’t get shot while carrying snack food in the “wrong” neighborhood, and they shouldn’t get shot while they’re trying to surrender. They shouldn’t get shot while dancing in a nightclub. And they shouldn’t get shot on the ballfield on a spring morning.

In the main, one victim is not more “innocent”—and, thus, of more value—than any other one. Their occupation shouldn’t matter. Their politics shouldn’t matter. There is a violence inherent in the country’s history and there is a wildness present in its soul and, on occasion, both of these surface more clearly than is usual. Technology has made the violence more lethal and the wildness more general. The uniquely American conflation of innocence with hubris is a luxury we can no longer afford.

While cable news was live-covering the breaking news from Alexandria, there was another mass shooting in California at a UPS warehouse.  Four people died.  Another day.

One bark on “People Shouldn’t Get Shot

  1. Speaking of hate: avail yourself of the responses to Gabby Giffords’ soothing words in response to yesterday’s shootings. Some tweeters praised her as one who’d gone through what Scalise is suffering now, but a shocking number of responders accused her of using the moment to take away their guns. One even charged her with staging the shooting in the ball park as a reason to counter Article 2 of the Constitution. If we live in a madhouse how can we expect any different behavior?

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