As
Exceptionally American As It Gets
By
Pierre Tristam
June 18, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Flagler
Live"
- Every
nation has its recognizable rituals, its
routines that make national character
stand out more distinctly than anything
else. Brazil has soccer or Rio’s
carnivals. Saudi Arabia has the Hajj
around Mecca. Spain has Valencia’s
tomato-throwing day or the running of
the bulls in Pamplona. Ireland has St.
Patrick’s Day and India has Diwali, its
five-day festival of light.
We have
mass shootings.
As
in any undisciplined and carefree
nation, our national ritual doesn’t
happen on set days, but it happens more
often than any other nation’s famous
rituals. It’s at once more surprising,
like a flash mob, and more reliable: you
can bet your lifesavings it’ll happen
sooner than later, assuming you’re not
in the line of fire.
By
some measures
it happens almost every day. By more
conservative measures it happens
about once a month: going by the
obliteration of four or more people at a
time, there’s been some 200 mass murders
since 2006, not at all a bad count for
monthly regularity, though as yet
there’s no magazine or cable-TV station
devoted to the custom.
Like all major multi-day rituals, this
one has its predictable set pieces, its
prescribed liturgy. All participants
usually know how to play their part, and
they play it very well. We’ve all had a
lot of practice. Victims of course get
killed, maimed, disfigured, or
debilitated for life. Mountains of
flowers grow and bloom as if irrigated
by the grounds where blood flowed, like
the
red poppies of Flanders. Candles
burn the length of a wick that usually
measures the distance to the next
massacre. The president
makes a speech, filling in the
blanks of the same speech recycled for
dates, place names and maybe number of
dead.
There’s the obligatory debate on whether
it’s traditional murder, hate crime or
terrorism, a modern-day replica of
the middle age’s scholastic disputations
over the length of a saint’s beard or a
heretic’s propensity to burn more
crisply than a Catholic. If it’s
terrorism, for example, it justifies
a new crusade, which has very little
to distinguish it from the old crusades
except that it also applies at home,
where Muslims would be somehow banned
and an inquisition dusted off.
It’s also the perfect foil for the
country’s gun-raving maniacs locked and
loaded on
NRA dogma: The latest mass murder
that would have been impossible without
easier access to guns than to Xanax is
chalked up to a war for civilization, a
weak president, political correctness,
big government, liberals, the
media–anything but guns. There’s an
inescapable parallel with the Black
Plague, which was blamed on Jews,
foreigners, gypsies, bad air, bad wine,
god’s wrath–on anything but
flea-ridden rodents.
We have
mass shootings.
Guns are our plague’s rodents,
sanctified even when they’re the only
instrument of mass-murder. The bigger
the guns the bigger the halo. The same
assault weapons made for soldiers and
mercenaries are worshipped like relics
from the cross. The only problem at the
scene of the murders, to hear the NRA’s
dirty Harrys
rationalize it, is the absence of
more people with more guns. “From 2001
to 2010, 119,246 Americans were murdered
with guns, 18 times all American combat
deaths in the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan,”
writes
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, a former
commander of U.S. and international
forces in Afghanistan. That’s about 40
nine-elevens. McChrystal calls that “a
national crisis.” The NRA sees it as a
fundraising opportunity. It sees it as a
reason to besiege legislatures until
they pass more permissive gun-toting
vigilantism concealed as laws. Lawmakers
who go through the motions of proposing
more gun control are vilified as
apostates, queers or traitors. No
regulations change. Nor does the broken
record. But gun sales, like those mounds
of flowers, soar.
Then there’s the dissection of the
shooter. Whatever his
background–right-wing zealot, Muslim
zealot, black-hater, Jew-hater,
gay-hater, self-hater, postman–the
shooter is demonized. The shooter, that
most common of American creatures
motivated by one of so many choices in
the gallery of American grudges, is
termed a mental case, an aberration, a
character on the fringe of fringes who
in no way represents anything
recognizable. Then he’s added to the
massive database of recognizable mass
killers.
If
the attacker happens to be Muslim,
there’s also the pathetic reaction of
American Muslim leaders who immediately
condemn the act and declare themselves
more patriotic than Betsy Ross’s dog, as
Methodist, Presbyterian, Catholic or
Baptist leaders would never have to do
if the mass murderer were,
as he more often is, Methodist,
Presbyterian, Catholic or Baptist.
As
for the rest of us, we scream, we cry,
we mourn, we fear for our children’s
safety, we tinker with our Facebook
profile or write recycled columns as
pathetic as those Muslim leaders’
pronouncements. And so it goes until the
next mass killing, the next display of
national character, as predictable as
Thanksgiving, Christmas and July 4th. It
doesn’t make you proud to be an
American, necessarily. It shouldn’t. But
it unmistakably makes you feel like one.
In that, we’re unbeatable.
Pierre Tristam is the editor at
FlaglerLive.com.
Reach him at:
ptristam@gmail.com or follow him
through twitter:
@pierretristam
© 2015 Pierre Tristam