From Where I Stand:
A Teenager's Voice from Inside the Culture of Death
On April 20, 1999, there was yet another gruesome
shooting in Littleton, Colorado.
Kids killing kids.
And again,the entire
nation in its uproar is trying to figure out why.
I am eighteen years old.
I live in a small town near Madison,Wisconsin. A
small town just like the ones where these horrifying shootings always seem
to take place. Every time those stories come on the television, I can't
help but notice how easily it could be my small town next. And I want to
know why this is happening just as badly as any parent or police chief or
anchorman.
The thing is, I am right in the middle of it. I am in the same age group as
all of these high school kids. So I may have some insight for the world
that has been otherwise unattainable since these shootings started some
years ago.
The night of the Littleton shooting, as I was flipping through the various
news channels that were covering the story in Littleton, Colorado, I heard
something that struck a chord in me. An anchorman was interviewing the
mother of a victim in the Jonesboro shooting. His question was: "If you
look at America in the 1950's, you will find that this kind of thing never
happened; whereas if you look at America today, this kind of thing is
becoming more and more frequent. Why do you think this is happening?"
The woman, of course, could not answer the question. In fact,she didn't
really even try. But I did. I thought about it for along time that night.
And again the next morning, when my favorite morning radio talk show asked
its listeners why they thought this has been happening. Many people said
it's the parents of the kids. Many people suggested television and video
games. Many people even turned to popular musicians,looking to put the
blame somewhere. But I will tell you what I think it is.
What I, a regular
teenager riding on the coattails of Generation X, blame it on. It is not
the parents or the movies or the rock stars. It is AMERICA. It is this
culture of death,
this culture in which liberals and feminists and activists are so anxious
to let anything be "OK" that the once tightened,knotted rope of society is
unraveling right beneath us.
Don't you see? There can be no order without discipline. All of those
things people think are causing children to run into a school and shoot
their teachers and peers and even kids they don't know-the movies, the
video games, the parents, the rap artists-they are only REFLECTIONS of our
society.
Society breaks down, from one big metaphoric "family" into
50 metaphoric "families" and so on and so on, until you have the actual
FAMILY, the one with the parents and the kids and the dog. It is not one
thing or two things; it is the attitude of an entire "familiar" nation
being reflected back at us in the kids.
Just as that anchorman suggested, something was different
about the 1950's. WE WERE CONSERVATIVE. We had
boundaries; we had a definite knowledge of right and wrong
throughout the entire nation. We didn't have feminists pushing women so
hard to go get a job that a woman who didn't have a job was somehow "bad,"
thereby leaving kids at home with inadequate parental guidance and often
times with parents who were truly unhappy. We didn't have liberals fighting
so avidly to legalize everything that it was at the point of completely
blurring the line between good and bad. We didn't have a nationwide media
surge dedicated to sex and violence so intense that if you weren't playing
killing video games at age 14, then you were trying to choose between
contraceptives beforehand or abortion afterwards.
We didn't have disputes
over whether or not we should help someone who is dying die sooner-over
whether or not we should ASSIST them in committing SUICIDE. And we
certainly didn't have a President who was in favor of NATO bombing and
killing children in Serbia come on the television to grieve the loss for
the families of children killed in America.
We live in a loosely tied society, a culture dedicated to death. If you
don't want the kid, kill it. If you don't want to live out the rest of your
God-given days, kill yourself. Or better yet, have someone else come help
you do it. I guess, no matter how horrible or gruesome or gut-wrenching it
may be, it was just a matter of time before someone got that
"killing-as-a-means-to-an-end" idea stuck in their head for the part
between birth and death as well. Everything that happens in families and
cities and states and countries is the mirror image of the big picture.
We are falling apart as a society. Am I, some random normal
teenager in Farmertown, U.S.A., the only one who sees that?
It's sad and it's hard to believe, but what's worse is that it's scary.
I think it's time for our--America's--Mom and Dad to ground
us--to say, "If you don't shape up by the time I count to three..."
And then really count to three. Because we are running wild
and pretty soon we're going to be too far from home to ever
get back. There was once a great saying by a famous man
that has rung true throughout the history of mankind-in every family and in
every society and in every social group and in every religion-it was a
frighteningly true statement that cannot be disputed. I am reminded of it
now, in the wake of yet another indescribably tormenting result of a nation
gone haywire... "By their fruits you shall know them."
~ Author Unknown ~
Received in my mail.
In honor of the wounded,
lost and families of Littleton Colorado
April 20, 1999
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