Posted: 19 February 2010 at 2:34pm | IP Logged | 8
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I am all for free speech but what I am not for, is encouraging and promoting violence. I'm not for encouraging or promoting violence either. And thus, I trust, in the past you have posted examples of and been equally offended by some of the violence-inspiring signage that was displayed at anti-Bush anti-war rallies. And you have been equally disgusted by the hateful signage displayed and the actual violence that has broken out at the recent G8 and WTO summits. But you on the right burying your head in the sand all you want , if the fox promoted anti govt rhetoric continues, bad things will continue to happen. I can assure you my head isn't buried nor are my glasses rose-coloured. Neither do I look at the world through a distorted mirror. Which leads me to ask: Just what are the bad things to which you refer? Was the bad thing Mr. Stack flying his airplane into the IRS building in Austin? I don't recall reading anything about Mr. Stack's television viewing habits in his lengthy manifesto, and Lord knows he took time to painstakingly detail everything else. Are you not jumping to a conclusion that he is automatically a Fox News-watching anti-tax disgruntled right-wing nut? The man thought the IRS personally destroyed him, wrote tax code directed at HIM. That's a bit different from feeling the government is dipping its hand a little too deeply into your pocket. Consider what else we know about this man: Stack played in a band, so we know he liked music. Perhaps he listened to hard rock or heavy metal. Perhaps he's yet one more heavy metal suicide. (That tenuous conclusion is based on as equally scant evidence as yours.) In any case, Mr. Stack didn't need Fox News to gin up his hatred; the IRS did a good enough job on its own. And I'm certain I'd have seen a clip on YouTube if Glenn Beck had recommended an appropriate way to get the government's attention was to fly your plane into one of their buildings. Was the bad thing Professor Amy Bishop shooting three of her colleagues? In everything that's been reported about Ms. Bishop, I see nothing to suggest she was a loyal Fox News viewer, and the denial of tenure does not seem to be a high priority for the Tea Party Movement. There's been much hay made out of her fixation on President Obama, but I don't think we should take that to mean all, many or even a significant some of President Obama's supporters are a half-bubble off level. Again, Fox News does not appear to have been whispering in her ear at night "kill kill kill." Was the bad thing 9/11? Certainly that was anti-government related. Did Bin Laden's addiction to Fox News prompt his declaration of war on America? I really have no evidence one way or another, so I can't rule out the possibility... Hold on. George Bush was President then. That was obviously back when Fox News was pro-government. Oh, I've got one! Melinda Duckett, that woman who committed suicide because of her interview with that mean television anchor Nancy Grace, that's an example of Fox News -- No, no wait. Nancy Grace is on CNN Headline News. Sorry, never mind. There really appears to be a rather unhealthy fixation by some people on Fox News as the cause of all the ills of society, or at very least the major contributor. I realize affixing blame and finding scapegoats is a long American tradition (be they Fat Cat Bankers, Reds, heavy metal music, violent Hollywood movies, etc.), but you've got to pause and think: Was the world free of "bad things" prior to Fox News going on the air in 1996? And have the number of "bad things" really increased since Fox News began broadcasting? Is there anything else going on in society that might push people to the breaking point and the commission of bad things (like, say, a bad economy)? There are equally tenuous fixations we can draw for cause and effect. One of my favourites: John Hinkley Jr. and Mark David Chapman were both found with copies of The Catcher in the Rye on their person after they gunned down Ronald Reagan and John Lennon, respectively. So, should J.D. Salinger have been tried for murder, for writing hate literature that inspired otherwise decent young men to horrific violence? Good heavens, Jodi, only Mein Kampf and Mao's Little Red Book have resulted in the deaths of more people than Salinger's murder manual! The man's the monster! I'm certain Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan, James Earl Ray and Arthur Bremer all read his little brown hate book too. We must end the madness! Ban that book quick before more lives are lost! On a more serious and sobering note, let's step back and look at some basic facts. The United States has a population of 300 million people. It's been suggested that roughly 10 percent of the population has mental health issues. That would be 30 million sick in the head people, which is a real comforting thought. Let's say for sake of argument that 1 in 10,000 people is a stark raving violent loon, waiting for a moment to snap. That would be 30,000 people -- the population of a small town -- walking the streets, one spilled cup of coffee, one stray hand gesture, one divorce filing, one tax notice, one whatever away from snapping, doing harm to themselves and perhaps others. If one of these 30,000 people snapped each day, every day, we would have a little over 82 consecutive years of violence, day in and day out. Roughly an average human lifespan. And that's just the fragile few from this country, that doesn't factor this out on a global scale. (I won't run that number. I want you to be able to sleep at night.) You can switch the lights out at Fox News, and the bad things will continue to happen. But perhaps, just perhaps, Fox News and the Tea Party Movement just might be societal pressure valves that helps people channel their anger and frustration and feelings of helplessness into constructive change.
Edited by Matthew McCallum on 19 February 2010 at 3:16pm
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