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"Killology"
Dave
Grossman
This article was originally published in Christianity Today,
August, 1998. It is posted here with the permission of the author.
Introduction
I am from Jonesboro,
Arkansas. I travel around the world training medical, law enforcement,
and military personnel about the realities of warfare. I try to make
those who carry deadly force keenly aware of the magnitude of the process
of killing. Too many law enforcement and military personnel act like
"cowboys," never stopping to think about who they are and
what they're called to do. Hopefully, I am able to give them a reality
check. So here I am, a world traveler and an expert in the field of
"killology," and the largest school massacre in American history
happens in my hometown of Jonesboro, Arkansas. That crime, as the world
now knows, was the March 24 schoolyard shooting deaths of four schoolgirls
and a teacher. Ten others were injured and two boys, ages 11 and 13,
are in jail, charged with the murders.
My son goes to one
of the middle schools in town, so my aunt in Florida called us that
fateful day and asked, "Was that Joe's school?" And we said,
"We haven't heard about it." My aunt in Florida knew about
it before we did!
We turned on the
television and, sure enough, the shootings took place down the road
from us but, thank goodness, they weren't in Joe's school. There probably
weren't any parents in Jonesboro that night who didn't hug their kids
and say, "Thank God it wasn't you," as they tucked them into
bed. But there is also a lot of guilt because you know that a lot of
parents in that city couldn't say that that night.
I spent the first
three days at Westside Middle School where the shootings took place,
working with the counselors, teachers, students, and parents. None of
us had ever done anything like this before. I train people how to react
to trauma in the military, but how do you do it with kids after a massacre
in their school?
I was the lead trainer
for the counselors and clergy the night after the shootings, and the
following day we debriefed the teachers in groups. Then the counselors
and clergy, in conjunction with the teachers, debriefed the students,
allowing them to work through everything that had happened. Only people
who share trauma together can truly give each other the understanding,
acceptance, and forgiveness needed to understand "what" happened,
and then they can begin the long process of trying to understand "why"
it happened.
Virus
of Violence
To
understand the "why" behind Jonesboro and Springfield and
Pearl and Paducah, and all the other outbreaks of this "virus of
violence," we need to first understand the overall magnitude of
the problem. The per capita murder rate doubled in this country between
1957when the FBI started keeping track of the dataand 1992.
A fuller picture of the problem, however, is indicated by the rate at
which human beings are attempting to kill one anotherthe aggravated
assault rate. And that rate in America has gone up from around 60 per
100,000 in 1957 to over 440 per 100,000 by the middle of this decade.
As bad as this is, it would be much worse were it not for two major
factors.
First is the increase
in the imprisonment rate of violent offenders. The prison population
in America nearly quadrupled between 1975 and 1992. According to criminologist
John J. DiIulio, "dozens of credible empirical analyses . . . leave
no doubt that the increased use of prisons averted millions of serious
crimes." If not for our tremendous imprisonment rate (the highest
of any industrialized nation in the world), the aggravated assault rate
and the murder rate would undoubtedly be even higher.
Second, the murder
rate would be much worse if it weren't for new medical technology. According
to the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps, a wound that would have killed
you nine-out-of-ten times in World War II, you would have survived nine-out-of-ten
times in Vietnam. What this means to us is that it is a very conservative
statement to say that, if we had a 1940-level medical technology today,
the murder level would be ten times higher than it is. The magnitude
of the problem has been held down by the development of ever more sophisticated
life saving skills and techniques, such as helicopter medevacs, 911
operators, paramedics, CPR, and trauma centers.
However, the crime
rate is still at a phenomenally high level, and this is true not just
in America but worldwide. In Canada, according to their Center for Justice,
per capita assaults increased almost five-fold between 1964 and 1993,
attempted murder increased nearly seven fold, and murders doubled. Similar
trends can be seen in other countries in the per capita violent crime
rates reported to Interpol between 1977 and 1993. During this period
the assault rate increased nearly fivefold in Norway and Greece, and
the murder rate more than tripled in Norway and doubled in Greece. In
Australia and New Zealand the assault rate increased approximately four-fold,
and the murder rate nearly doubled in both nations. And during the same
period the assault rate tripled in Sweden, and approximately doubled
in: Belgium, Denmark, England-Wales, France, Hungary, Netherlands, and
Scotland, while all these nations had an associated (but smaller) increase
in murder. (In all of these cases the gap between murders and attempted
murders/assaults is a factor of our ever-improving medical technology
saving ever more lives.)
So this virus of
violence is occurring worldwide. And the explanation for it has to be
some new factor that is occurring in all of these countries. There are
many, many factors involved, and we should never downplay any of them:
for example, the prevalence of guns in our society. But the rise in
violence is also happening in many nations with draconian gun laws.
And we should never downplay child abuse, poverty, racism or a thousand
things which must be confronted. But there is only one new variable
that is present in every single one of these countries, bearing the
exact same fruit in every case, and that is violence in the media being
presented as entertainment for children.
Killing
Unnaturally
Before retiring
from the military I spent almost a quarter of a century as an Army infantry
officer and a psychologist, learning and studying how to enable people
to kill. Believe me, we are very good at it. It doesn't come naturally,
you have to be taught to kill. And just as the Army enables killing,
we are indiscriminately doing the same thing to our kids, but without
the safeguards.
After the Jonesboro
killings, the head of the American Academy of Pediatrics Task Force
on Juvenile Violence came to town and his primary message was that children
don't naturally kill. It is a learned skill. And they learn it from
abuse and violence in the home and, most pervasively, from violence
as entertainment in television, the movies, and interactive video games.
When considering
the violent crime rate it should give us pause to note that there is
a built in aversion to killing one's own kind. I can best illustrate
this from drawing on my own work in studying killing in the military.
We all know that
you can't have an argument or a discussion with a frightened or angry
human being. What has happened to them is that vasoconstriction (narrowing
of the blood vessels) has literally closed down the forebrainthat
great gob of gray matter which makes you a human being. This forebrain
is what distinguishes you from a dog. When those neurons close down,
the midbrain takes over and your thought processes and reflexes are
indistinguishable from your dog's. If you've ever worked with animals,
you have some understanding of what happens to frightened human beings
on the battlefield. The battlefield and the realm of violent crime is
the realm of mid-brain responses.
Within the midbrain
there is a powerful, God-given resistance to killing your own kind.
Every species, with few exceptions, has a hardwired resistance against
killing their own kind in territorial and mating battles. When animals
with antlers and horns fight one another, they head butt each other
in the most harmless possible fashion. But against any other species
they go to the side to gut and gore. Piranha will turn their fangs on
anything and everything but they fight one another with flicks of the
tail. Rattlesnakes will bite anything and everything but they wrestle
one another. Every species has this hardwired resistance against killing
their own kind.
When we human beings
are overwhelmed with anger and fear, we slam head on into that resistance
in the midbrain that generally prevents us from killing. Every healthy
human being, with the exception of sociopathswho by definition
don't have that resistancehas this innate violence immune system.
What we observe
throughout human history is that when humans fight each other there
is a lot of posturing. Adversaries make as loud a noise as possible
puffing themselves up, trying to daunt the enemy. There's a lot of fleeing
and submission. The ancient battles were nothing more than great shoving
matches. It wasn't until one side or the other turned and ran that the
vast majority of the killing happened and most of that was stabbing
people in the back. All of the ancient military historians report that
the vast majority of killing happened in the pursuit after one side
had fled.
In more modern times,
we know that the average firing rate was incredibly low in Civil War
battles. Patty Griffith demonstrates that the killing potential of the
average Civil War regiment was anywhere from 500 to 1,000 men per minute.
The actual killing rate was only one or two men per minute per regiment
(The Battle Tactics of the American Civil War). At the Battle of Gettysburg,
of the 27,000 muskets picked up after the battle from the dead and dying,
90 percent were loaded. This is an anomaly because it took 95 percent
of their time to load muskets and only five percent to fire. But even
more amazingly, of the thousands of loaded muskets, over half had multiple
loads in the barrel.
The reality is that
the average man would load his musket and bring it to his shoulder,
but at the moment of truth he could not bring himself to kill. He'd
be brave, he'd stand shoulder to shoulder, he'd do what he's been trained
to do, but the at the moment of truth he can't bring himself to pull
the trigger. And so he brings the weapon down and loads it again. One
weapon was found with 23 loads in the barrel. And of those who did fire,
only a tiny percentage fired to hit. The vast majority were firing over
the enemy's head.
During World War
II US Army Brigadier General S. L. A. Marshall had a team of researchers
studying what the soldiers did in battle. Marshall had a revolutionary
idea: for the first time in human history they asked the individual
soldier what he did in battle. And what they discovered was that only
15-20 percent of the individual riflemen could bring themselves to fire
at an exposed enemy soldier. This was consistently true "whether
the action was spread over a day, or two days or three."
That's the reality
of the battlefield. Only a small percentage of soldiers are able and
willing to participate. Men are willing to die, they're willing to give
themselves as a sacrificial offering for their nation, but they're not
willing to kill. It's a phenomenal insight into human nature, but when
the military became aware of that, they systematically went about the
process of trying to fix this "problem." From the military
perspective a fifteen percent firing rate among riflemen is like a fifteen
percent literacy rate among librarians. And fix it the military did.
By the Korean War around 55 percent of the soldiers were willing to
fire to kill. And by Vietnam the rate rose to over 90 percent.
The
Methods in this Madness
How the military
increases the killing rate of soldiers in combat is instructive because
our culture today is doing the same thing to our children, but without
the safeguards. The training methods the military uses are brutalization,
classical conditioning, operant conditioning, and role modeling. I'll
explain these in the military context and show how these same factors
are contributing to phenomenal increase of violence in our culture.
Desensitization
Brutalization and
desensitization is what happens at boot camp. From the moment you step
off the bus you are physically and verbally abused. Countless pushups,
endless hours at attention or running with heavy loads, while carefully
trained professionals take turns screaming at you. Your head is shaved,
you are herded together naked, and dressed alike, losing all vestiges
of individuality. This brutalization is designed to breaks down your
existing mores and norms and to accept a new set of values which embrace
destruction, violence, and death as a way of life. In the end you are
desensitized to violence and accept it as a normal and essential survival
skill in your brutal new world.
Something very
similar to this desensitization toward violence is happening to our
children through violence in the media, but instead of 18-year-olds
it begins at the age of 18 months when a child is first able to discern
what is happening on television. At that age a child can watch something
happening on television, and then they can mimic that action. But it
isn't until they're six or seven years old that the part of the brain
kicks in which lets them understand where information comes from. They
are developmentally, psychologically, physically unable to discern the
difference between fantasy and reality.
This means that
when a young child sees somebody being shot, stabbed, raped, brutalized,
degraded, or murdered on TV, to them it is as though it were actually
happening. To have a child of three, four, or five watch a "splatter"
movie in which they spend 90 minutes learning to relate to a character
and then in the last 30 minutes of the movie they watch helplessly as
their newfound friend is hunted down and brutally murdered, is the moral
and psychological equivalent of introducing your child to a friend,
letting them play with that friend and then butchering that friend in
front of your childs eyes right in your living room. And this
happens to our children hundreds upon hundreds of times throughout their
lifetimes.
Sure, they are told:
"Hey it was all a joke, it's all for fun. Look, this is not real,
it's just TV." And they nod their little heads and they say okay.
But the reality is that they cant tell the difference. Can you
remember a point in your life or in your children's lives when dreams,
reality, and television were all jumbled together? That's what it's
like to be at that level of psychological development. That's what the
media are doing to them.
The Journal of the
American Medical Association published the definitive epidemiological
study on the impact of TV violence. The research demonstrated what happened
in numerous nations after television made its appearance, as compared
to nations and regions without TV. The two nations or regions are demographically
and ethnically identical: only one variable has been manipulated, the
presence of television. In every single case in the nation, region,
or city with television there is an immediate explosion of violence
on the playground, and within fifteen years there is a doubling of the
murder rate. Why fifteen years? That's how long it takes for the brutalization
of a three to five year to reach the "prime crime age." That's
how long it takes for you to reap what you have sown when you brutalize,
traumatize, and desensitize a three year old.
Today the data that
we have linking violence in the media to violence in society is superior
to that linking cancer and tobacco. We now have hundreds of sound scientific
studies that demonstrate the social impact of this brutalization in
the media. The Journal of the American Medical Association, probably
the worlds most prestigious medical journal, stated in their June
10th, 1992 issue, that "It is concluded that the introduction of
television in the 1950s caused a subsequent doubling of the homicide
rate, i.e., long-term childhood exposure to television is a causal factor
behind approximately one half of the homicides committed in the United
States, or approximately 10,000 homicides annually." The article
goes on to conclude that "...if, hypothetically, television technology
had never been developed, there would today be 10,000 fewer homicides
each year in the United states, 70,000 fewer rapes, and 700,000 fewer
injurious assaults."
Classical Conditioning
Classical conditioning
is like Pavlov's dog. Remember, in Psychology 101, how Pavlov's dog
learned to associate one thing with another: the ringing of the bell
with food? And from that point on the dog could not hear the bell without
salivating.
The Japanese were
masters at using classical conditioning with their soldiers. Early in
World War II Chinese prisoners were placed in a ditch with their hands
bound behind them on their knees. And one by one, young, unbloodied
Japanese soldiers had to go into the ditch and bayonet "their"
prisoner to death. This is a brutal, horrific way to have to kill another
human being. Up on the banks there was an officer who would shoot the
Japanese soldiers if they did not kill; and all of their friends would
cheer them on in their violence. Afterwards, they were treated to the
best meal they've had in months, sake, and to so-called "comfort
girls." The result? They learned to associate committing violent
acts with pleasure.
This technique is
so morally reprehensible that there are very few examples of it in modern
US military training, but there are some clear cut examples of it being
done by the media to our children. What is happening to our children
is a reverse version of the movie Clockwork Orange. In Clockwork Orange
a brutal sociopath, a mass murderer, was strapped to a chair and forced
to watch violent movies. Unbeknownst to him, a drug was injected into
him that made him nauseous and he sat and gagged and retched as he watched
the movies. After hundreds of repetitions of this he began to associate
violence with nausea and it limited his ability to engage in violence.
What we are doing
is the exact opposite of this: we're having our children watch vivid
pictures of human suffering and death and they learn to associate it
with what? Their favorite soft drink and candy bar, or their girlfriend's
perfume.
After the Jonesboro
shootings, one of the high school teachers told me about her students'
reaction when she told them that someone had shot a bunch of their little
brothers, sisters, and cousins in the middle school. "They laughed,"
she told me with dismay, "they laughed." A similar reaction
happens all the time in movie theaters when there is bloody violence.
The young people laugh and cheer and keep right on eating popcorn and
drinking pop. We have raised a generation of barbarians who have learned
to associate violence with pleasure, like the Romans cheering and snacking
as the Christians were slaughtered in the Coliseum.
The result is a
phenomenon which functions much like like AIDS and is called AVIDSAcquired
Violence Immune Deficiency. AIDS has never killed anybody. It destroys
your immune system and then other diseases that shouldn't kill you become
fatal. Television violence by itself doesn't kill anybody. It destroys
your violence immune system and conditions you to derive pleasure from
violence. To kill another human being you've got to get through two
filters. The first filter is the forebrain; a thousand things can convince
the forebrain to kill: racism, politics, religion, anger, greed, hatred.
But once you're at close range with another human being and it's time
for you to pull that trigger, you slam head on into midbrain resistance.
And that's when this Acquired Violence Immune Deficiency takes over
in order to result in death.
Operant Conditioning
The third method
the military uses is operant conditioning, a very powerful procedure
of stimulus response-stimulus response. A benign example is the use
of flight simulators to train pilots. An airline pilot in training sits
in front of a flight simulator for endless, mind-numbing hours; when
a particular stimulus warning light goes on, he is taught to react in
a certain way. When another warning light goes on, a different reaction
is necessary. Stimulus- response, stimulus-response, stimulus-response.
One day the pilot is actually flying a jumbo jet, the plane is going
down, and 300 people are screaming behind him. He's wetting his seat
cushion and he's scared out of his wits, but he does the right thing.
Why? Because he's been conditioned to respond in a particular way to
this crisis situation.
When people are
frightened or angry they will do what they have been conditioned to
do. We do it with children in fire drills. When the fire alarm is set
off, the children learn to file out of the school in orderly fashion.
One day there's a real fire and they're frightened out of their little
wits, but they do exactly what they've been conditioned to do and it
saves their lives.
The military and
law enforcement community have made killing a conditioned response.
This has substantially raised the firing rate on the modern battlefield.
Whereas target training in World War II used bullseye targets, now soldiers
learn to fire at realistic, man-shaped silhouettes that pop up in their
field of view. That's the conditioned stimulus. The trainees only have
a split second to engage the target. The conditioned response is to
shoot the target and then it drops. Stimulus-response, stimulus-response,
stimulus- responsesoldiers or police officers experience hundreds
of repetitions of this. Later, when they're out on the battlefield or
a police officer is walking a beat and somebody pops up with a gun,
reflexively they will shoot and shoot to kill. We know that 75 to 80
percent of the shooting on the modern battlefield is the result of this
kind if stimulus-response training.
Now if you're a
little troubled by that, how much more should we be troubled by the
fact that every time a child plays an interactive point-and- shoot video
game, they're learning the exact same conditioned reflex and motor skills.
I was an expert
witness in a murder case in South Carolina trying to offer mitigation
for a kid who was facing the death penalty. We tried to explain to the
jury that interactive video games had conditioned this kid to shoot
a gun to kill. He had put hundreds of dollars into video games learning
to point and shoot, point and shoot. One day he and a buddy of his decided
it would be fun to rob the local, country crossroads quickie mart. They
walked in and he pointed a snub-nosed .38 pistol at the clerk's head.
The clerk turned to look at him, and the defendant shot reflexively
from a range of about six feet. The bullet hit the clerk right between
the eyes, which is a pretty remarkable shot with that weapon at that
range, and killed this father of two children. Afterwards, we asked
the boy what happened and why he did it? It clearly was not part of
their plan to kill the guyit was being videotaped from six different
directions. He said, "I don't know, it was a mistake, it wasn't
supposed to happen."
In the military
and law enforcement worlds, the right option often is not to shoot.
But you never, never put your quarter in that video machine with the
intention of not shooting. There's always some stimulus that sets you
off. And when he's excited, and his heart rate went up, and the vasoconstriction
set in, and his forebrain closed down, this young man did exactly what
he was conditioned to do: he reflexively pulled the trigger, shooting
and shooting accurately, just like all those times he played video games.
This process is extraordinarily powerful and frightening. The result
is ever more homemade pseudo-sociopaths who kill reflexively and show
no remorse. Our kids are learning to kill and learning to like it and
then we have the audacity to say, "Oh my goodness, what's wrong?"
One of the children
allegedly involved in Jonesboro shootings (and they are just children)
had a fair amount of experience shooting real guns. The other kid was
a non-shooter and, to the best of our knowledge, had almost no experience
shooting. Those two kids between them fired 27 shots from a range of
over 100 yards, and they hit 15 people. That's pretty remarkable shooting.
We run into these situations a lot: kids who have never picked up a
gun in their lives pick up a real gun and are incredibly accurate and
efficient with that gun. Why? The video games.
Role Models
In the military
you are immediately confronted with a role model: your drill sergeant.
He personifies violence and aggression. Along with military heroes,
these kind of violent role models have always been used to influence
young, impressionable minds.
Today the media
are providing our children with role models, and this can be seen not
just in the lawless sociopaths in movies and in TV shows, but it can
also be seen in the media inspired, copycat aspects of the Jonesboro
murders, which is a twist to these juvenile crimes that the TV networks
would much rather not talk about.
Research in the
1970's demonstrated the effect of "cluster suicides," in which
the local TV reporting of teen suicides was directly responsible for
causing numerous copycat suicides of young, impressionable teenagers.
Somewhere in every population there are potentially suicidal kids who
will say to themselves, "Well, I'll show all those people who have
been mean to me. I know how to get my picture on TV, too." Because
of this research, television stations today generally do not cover suicides.
But when the pictures of teenage killers appear on TV, the effect is
exactly the same: Somewhere there is a potentially violent little boy
who says to himself, "Well, I'll show all those people who have
been mean to me. I know how to get my picture on TV too."
Thus we get the
effect of copycat, cluster murders that work their way across America
like a virus spread by the six o'clock local news. No matter what someone
has done, if you put their picture on TV, you have made them a celebrity
and someone, somewhere, will emulate them.
The copycat lineage
of the Jonesboro shootings can first be picked up at Pearl, Mississippi,
less than six months before the Jonesboro shootings. In Pearl, a 16-year-old
boy was accused of killing his mother and then going to his school and
shooting nine students, two of whom died, including his ex- girlfriend.
Two months later this virus spread to Paducah, Kentucky, where a 14-year-old
boy was arrested for killing three students and wounding five others.
A very important
step in the spread of this copycat crime virus occurred in Stamps, Arkansas,
15 days after Pearl and just a little over 90 days before Jonesboro.
In Stamps, a 14-year-old boy who was angry at his school mates, hid
in the woods and fired at children as they came out of school. Sound
familiar? Only two children were injured in this crime, and so most
of the world didn't hear about it, but it got great regional coverage
on TV, and two little boys in Jonesboro, Arkansas couldn't have helped
but hear about it.
And then there was
Springfield, Oregon, and so many others. Who is next? Is this a reasonable
price to pay for the TV network's "right" to turn juvenile
defendants into celebrities and role models by playing up their pictures
on TV?
It is vital that
our society be informed about these crimes, but when the visual images
of the young killers are put in the media, they have just become role
models. The average preschooler in America watches 27 hours a week of
television. The average kid gets more one-on communication from the
TV than from all parents and teachers combined. The ultimate achievement
for our children is to get their picture on TV. The solution is simple
and it comes straight out of the suicidology literature: the media has
every right and responsibility to tell the story, but they have no right
to glorify the killers by presenting their visual images on TV.
Unlearning
Violence
So what is the road
home from the dark and lonely place which we have traveled? One route
infringes on civil liberties. The city of New York has made some remarkable
progress in recent years in bringing down crime rates, but they may
very well have done it at the expense of a lot of civil liberties. And
people who are fearful say that's a price that they are willing to take.
Another route to
traverse would be to "just turn it off," that is, if you dont
like what is on television all you have to do is use the "off"
button. Yet, every single one of the parents of the 15 shooting victims
in Jonesboro could have protected their children from TV violence, and
it wouldn't have done a bit of good. Because somewhere there were two
little boys whose parents didn't "Just turn it off."
On the night of
the Jonesboro shootings, clergy and counselors were working in small
groups in the hospital waiting room, comforting the groups of relatives
and friends of the 15 shooting victims. Then they noticed one woman
who had been sitting alone silently.
A counselor went
up to the woman and discovered that she was the mother of one of the
girls who had been killed. She had no friends, no husband, no family
with her as she sat in the hospital, alone and stunned by her loss.
"I just came to find out how to get my little girl's body back,"
she said. But the body had been taken to Little Rock, 100 miles away,
for an autopsy. Told this, in her dazed mind her very next concern was,
"I just don't know how we're going to pay for the funeral. I don't
know how we can afford it."
That little girl
was truly all she had in all the world. Come to Jonesboro, my friend,
hunt up this mother, and tell her how she should "Just turn it
off."
Another route to
take to reduce violence is gun control. I don't want to downplay that
option, but I want you to understand the cycle that America is trapped
in when we want to talk about gun control. Americans are very much invested
in a mentality that doesn't trust the government and believes that every
individual should be responsible for taking care of himself and his
own family. And that's one of our great strengths, but it's also one
of our great weaknesses. When the media fosters fear and perpetuates
a milieu of violence, Americans say, "I need the tools to be able
to deal with that violence." So they arm themselves. And the more
guns there are out there, the more violence there is. And the more violence
there is, the greater the desire for guns.
We're trapped in
this spiral of self-dependence and lack of trust. Real progress will
never be made until we reduce this level of fear. As an historian I
tell you it will take decades and maybe even a century before we wean
Americans off their guns. And the first step is going to be to reduce
this level of fear and this level of violent crime. Until we do that,
Americans would sooner die than give up their guns.
Fighting Back
We need to make
progress in the fight against child abuse, racism, and poverty, and
in rebuilding our families. No one is denying that the breakdown of
the family is a factor. But nations without our divorce rates also are
having increases in violence. And research demonstrates that one major
source of harm associated with single-parent families occurs when the
TV becomes both the nanny and the second parent.
Work is needed in
all these areas, but there's a new fronttaking on the producers
of media violence. Simply put, we ought to work toward legislation which
outlaws violent video games for children. There is no constitutional
right for a child to play an interactive video game that teaches them
weapons handling skills or that simulates destruction of creatures which
are part of God's handiwork.
The day may also
be coming when we should be able to seat juries in America who are willing
to sock it to the networks in the only place they really understandtheir
wallets. We are very close to being able to do to the networks what
is being done to the tobacco industry. As Time magazine said in their
cover story on the Jonesboro shootings: "As for media violence,
the debate there is fast approaching the same point that discussions
about the health impact of tobacco reached some time agoit's over.
Few researchers bother any longer to dispute that bloodshed on TV and
in the movies has an effect on kids who witness it" (April 6, 1998).
Most of all, the
American people need to be informed about what is happening. "You
shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free," Jesus said.
Now the truth about which people need to be educated is the message
I'd like to give you from Jonesboro: Violence kills; violence is not
a game, it's not fun, it's not something that we do for entertainment.
Every parent in
America desperately needs to be warned of the impact of TV and other
violent media on children, as we would warn them of some rampant carcinogen.
The problem is that our key means of public education in America is
the national TV networks using the public airwaves we have licensed
to them. And they are stonewalling.
In the days after
the Jonesboro shootings, I was interviewed on Canadian national TV,
the BBC, and many US and international radio shows and newspapers. But
the American television networks simply would not touch this aspect
of the story. Never in my experience as a historian and a psychologist
have I seen any institution in America so clearly responsible for so
very many deaths, and so clearly abusing their publicly licensed authority
and power to cover up their guilt.
Time after time
idealistic young network producers contacted me from one of the networks,
fascinated by the irony that an expert in the field of violence and
aggression was living right here in Jonesboro and was at the school
almost from the beginning. But unlike all the other media, these network
news stories always died a sudden, silent death when the network's powers-that-be
said, "Yeah, we need this story like we need a hole in the head."
Many times since
the shooting I have been asked, "Why weren't you on TV talking
about the stuff in your book?" And every time my answer had to
be, "The TV networks are burying this story. They know they are
guilty and they want to delay the inevitable retribution as long as
they can."
The folks here in
Jonesboro, Arkansas noticed something interesting about the network
TV crews that swarmed in like the second of a series of biblical plagues:
The networks have blood on their hands, and they know it, yet they dare
not admit it.
As an author and
expert on killing, I believe I have spoken on the subject at every Rotary,
Kiwanis, and Lions Club in a 50-mile radius of Jonesboro. So when the
plague of satellite dishes descended upon us like huge locusts, many
people here were aware of the scientific data linking TV violence and
violent crime.
The networks will
stick their lenses anywhere and courageously expose anything. Like flies
crawling on open wounds, nothing is too private or too shameful for
their probing lensesexcept themselves, and their share of guilt
in the terrible, tragic crime that happened here. A CBS executive told
me his plan. He knows all about the linkage between media and violence.
Here's how his own, in-house people have advised him to protect his
child from the poison his industry is bringing to America's children:
he's not going to expose his child to TV in any way, shape, or form
until she's old enough to learn how to read. And then he'll select very
carefully what she sees. Now that's a very effective plan. He and his
wife plan to send her to a day care center that has no television and
then finally he plans to show her age appropriate videos. That's should
be the bare minimum with your children and grandchildren: show them
only age appropriate videos; and think hard about what is age appropriate.
The most benign
product you're going to get from the networks are 22 minute sitcoms
or cartoons providing instant gratification for all of life's problems,
interlaced with commercials telling you what a slug you are if you don't
ingest the right sugary substances and don't wear the right shoes.
The worst product
your child is going to get from the networks is represented by one TV
commentator who told me, "Well, we only have one real violent show
on our network, and that is 'NYPD,' and I'll admit that that is bad,
but it is only one night a week."
I wondered at the
time how she would feel if someone said, "Well, I only beat my
wife in front of the kids one night a week." The effect is the
same.
"You're not
supposed to know who I am!" said NYPD Blue star Kim Delaney, in
response to young children who recognized her from her role on that
show. According to USA Weekend, she was shocked that underage viewers
watch her show, which is rated TV-14 for gruesome crimes, raw language,
and explicit sex scenes. But they do watch, don't they?
Education about
media and violence does make a difference. I was on a radio call-in
show in San Antonio, Texas. A woman called in and said, "I would
never have had the courage to do this two years ago. But I was getting
the education that you're talking about now. And let me tell you what
happened. You tell me if I was right." And she was right.
She said, "My
thirteen-year-old boy spent the night with a neighbor boy. After that
night, he started having nightmares. I got him to admit to me what the
nightmares were about. While he was at the neighbor's house they watched
splatter movies all night long: people cutting people up with chain
saws and stuff like that."
"I called the
neighbors and told them 'Listen to me: you are sick people. I couldn't
feel any differently about you if you had given my son pornography or
if you would have given him alcohol. And I'm not going to have anything
further to do with you or your sonand neither is anybody else
in this neighborhood, if I have anything to do with ituntil you
stop what you're doing.'"
That's powerful
stuff. That's what you call censure, not censor. And all of us ought
to have appropriate knowledge and the moral courage to stand up and
censure the people around us who think that violence, especially in
television and interactive video games, is legitimate entertainment.
There are many things
that the Christian community can do to help our nation out of this situation.
Youth activities can provide an alternative to television, and churches
can lead the way in providing alternative locations for latch-key kids.
Fellowship groups can provide guidance and support to young parents
as they strive to raise their kids without the destructive influences
of the media. Mentoring programs can pair mature, educated, Godly women
with young mothers to help them through the preschool ages without having
to use the TV as a babysitter. And most of all, the churches can provide
the clarion call of decency and love and peace as an alternative to
death and destruction.
The Bible tells
us the "He that loves the world has not the love of the Father
in him." If we love the world so much than we cannot turn the TV
off and protect our children from the vile and destructive images that
flow from the it into our living room, then perhaps we need to reconsider
our relationship with Jesus Christ. "Finally, brethren, whatever
is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is right, whatever is pure,
whatever is of good repute, if there is any excellent and if anything
worthy of praise, let your mind dwell on these things." (Philippians
4:8.)
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