This thread will mostly cater to American forum-goers, but I welcome all Bay 12ers in order for us to get an international perspective, and possibly fix this problem.
I am writing this in light of the recent tragedy in Newtown, Connecticut. I do not want to politicize the event, merely reflect on what appears to be only an increasing number of tragedies and massacres.
There is something deeply wrong with American culture at the moment. I do not know the root cause of it, I can only guess that it has something to do with our inability to accept our vulnerability as a nation. I do know, however, that something needs to be changed. Our country is going down a dangerous trail, and one where if we keep going down there might be too much darkness to find the right path.
People will say two things about this tragedy: either that crazy people shouldn't be allowed guns, or that guns should just outright be banned. Why aren't we asking why this person did this? Why aren't we trying to figure out the psychology behind this attack, what prompted this man to go crazy and kill children?
This is not normal behavior. Yes, there are higher murder rates in other countries. There are also many countries where there are lower murder rates. Guns help facilitate the violence, but those who support freedoms to own guns are also right: should you go through enough trouble, you can obtain a gun quite easily, be it through the internet, private purchase, or simply a gun show.
East Asian culture promotes balance. The yin and the yang, good and bad, balance each other out. If life is an equation, good and bad are on opposite sides of the equation, and good will equal bad should the equation be balanced. Notice how I use bad, not evil? American society has become accustomed to the protagonist being a great hero, the antagonist an awful villain. In more recent times, culture has shifted to a bleaker tale: the protagonist, a tortured anti-hero who does the right thing for the wrong reasons. The antagonist, a villain who does evil things for the sake of evil. Everywhere we look, conflict permeates the American atmosphere. Television, Politics, Books, Video Games, Movies, Art, Current Events. We are looking at symptoms of the problems as the problems themselves. Why don't we do a reevaluation of American Culture as a whole?
Let's start at the beginning: The American War for Independence, or the American Revolution. This was a war that started when roughly one-third of the British colonies' population decided that they were tired of living under the tyrannical rule of the British, and were going to declare independence and have their own country. Two-thirds of the population were against it: one-third crown loyalists, and the other third neutrals, immigrants who had no vested interest in either side.
When the American Revolution was won, what happened to the loyalists? Were they allowed to live as they had, owning their property and living the American Dream? No, they emigrated, to Canada and other British colonial possessions as the British government offered them free land. The victors of the war reaped the loot, and redistributed the land, sometimes taken forcefully.
America is a unique country, one founded on the idea of liberty and economic security. We must keep in mind the powers that formed it, however: slave-owning plantation owners, and other wealthy, intelligent minds of the time. A constitutional republic best suited those in power because there were so few in power.
People opposed the constitution. Known as anti-federalists, they were a faction concerned with the loose wording of the constitution, and the ability to read it multiple ways. They wanted individual rights guaranteed, and these formed the first Ten Amendments to the constitution, known as the Bill of Rights.
Through working together, a constitution that could work for both sides was agreed upon. It is not a perfect constitution: that is why amendments are allowed for the constitution, and have been made.
We have stopped working together. Any place you go to, there is someone complaining about someone else. Conflict, strife, violence. All of these can describe situations everywhere. Children are becoming incredibly cynical and detached, apathetic to the world. Why? If you teach someone something before they're ready, they won't understand what to do with the knowledge. Everywhere, children are learning so much, and their minds are becoming stressed, tense, and unfocused. What do we do when that happens? We give children medication, tell them that they have a neurological disease.
Maybe we should stop thinking of ADD as a disorder and start thinking about it as a warning sign: America's children are becoming incredibly imbalanced, and as they grow up our future leaders are becoming apathetic, cynical, unfocused, and unsure of what they want to do with their lives. These are generalizations, of course, but the problem is still there: Children are learning so quickly that their experience can't help them understand what they know. The only way they learn to relax is by watching their parents, who do so by sitting down in front of their TVs, drinking alcohol, eating junk food, smoking tobacco, or drinking caffeine.
All of the above mentioned substances will kill you if you ingest too much of any one substance, or a combination of them. I am not endorsing that we stop using these substances: if you simply balance out the unhealthy with the healthy, the good with the bad, the temperate with the indulgent, you won't suffer from these effects as badly. America's culture of excess does not help with this balance.
I'm going to stop typing, as I've written and thought a lot about these problems.
In light of recent turmoil in the World as governments are shifting and trying to solve an incredibly large amount of problems at once, I think it's important to look to the past. Americans especially should look back at
, as I think now, more than ever, is his and all of the past's perspective needed. In these dark times, we must not forget our greatest resource: the knowledge and experience of all of humanity, waiting on us to recall and use it.
Please, Bay 12, I implore you. Start thinking about the problems you see about you. Don't ignore them, but don't think about them from your solitary perspective. Become educated, learn as much as possible. If anything, our generation, with it's access and understanding of the internet, has the power to look on the problems of today and fix them for tomorrow.