War, Murder and the American Way
War, Murder and the American Way
By Robert C. Koehler
June 20, 2015 "Information Clearing House"
- He sat with them for an hour in prayer. Then he pulled his gun out and started shooting.
And today our national numbness is wrapped in a Confederate flag. The young man who killed nine members of Charlestons Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on Wednesday night was an old-school racist. I have to do it, Dylann Storm Roof is said to have explained. You rape our women and youre taking over our country. And you have to go.
Roofs roommate told ABC News the next day that he was big into segregation and other stuff and he wanted to start a civil war. And this is America, where we have the freedom to manifest our lethal fantasies.
But this is bigger than racism and the pathetic monster of white supremacy. Racism is a name for one of the currents of righteous hatred that coils through our collective unconscious, and over the decades and centuries it has motivated terrible crimes against humanity. But the civil war that Roof participated in is, I think, much larger and much more meaningless. And not all the participants are loners.
In a pattern that has become achingly familiar to him and the nation, the New York Times reported, Mr. Obama on Thursday strode down to the White House briefing room to issue a statement of mourning and grief as he called on the country to unify in the face of tragedy.
Indeed, its the fourteenth time, according to The Guardian, he has done this since hes been in office. Its the fourteenth time he has said words like: I am confident that the outpouring of unity and strength and fellowship and love across Charleston today from all races, from all faiths, from all places of worship indicates the degree to which those old vestiges of hatred can be overcome.
America, America, land of the mass murderer.
Mass murders have increased fourteenfold in the United States since the 1960s, sociologist Peter Turchin wrote two and a half years ago, after the Sandy Hook killings. In his essay, called Canaries in a Coal Mine, Turchin made a disturbing comparison: Mass murderers kill the same way soldiers do, without personal hatred for their victims but to right some large social wrong. He called it the principle of social substitutability substituting a particular group of people for a general wrong.
On the battlefield, Turchin wrote, you are supposed to try to kill a person whom youve never met before. You are not trying to kill this particular person, you are shooting because he is wearing the enemy uniform. . . . Enemy soldiers are socially substitutable.
That is to say, I noted at the time, the definition and practice of war and the definition and practice of mass murder have eerie congruencies. Might this not be the source of the social poison? We divide and slice the human race; some people become the enemy, not in a personal but merely an abstract sense them and we lavish a staggering amount of our wealth and creativity on devising ways to kill them. When we call it war, its as familiar and wholesome as apple pie. When we call it mass murder, its not so nice.
Dylann Roof had a toxic cause to reclaim the Old South, to reclaim the country, from an unwelcome human subgroup but the solidarity in which he acted wasnt so much with his fellow racists as with the strategists and planners of war. Any war. Every war.
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