– 1 –
“I don’t even want to send my kid to school anymore. I’m
not joking.” – tweet,
@DrPsyBuffy
“It's been happening everywhere, I always kind of felt like
eventually it was going to happen here too.” – Paige
Curry, Santa Fe High School student.
So here we have it. America’s parents and schoolchildren are
a population as scared as any in a country where terrorism is routine.
School
shootings are stochastic terrorism, enabled by the easy availability of
semi-automatic weapons in the USA and the failure of socialization of men. The
events themselves are semi-random. What is not random at all is the easy
availability of firearms and the propaganda that exacerbates all manner of fear
in order to sell weapons. First, of course, firearms manufacturers want to sell
more firearms; they have contributed
millions to the NRA and “The
NRA does the bulk of lobbying for the industry.” Second, there was
the 1977 radical-right
takeover of the NRA. The new NRA leadership was and is racist
and misogynist.
They are fine with firearms as long as white men have them; everyone else, they
would rather … not.
But this campaign to distribute firearms as
widely as possible and the firearms industry’s endless advertising validating
use of lethal force, has empowered an unexpected group, unexpected because the
NRA leadership and weapon sellers did not realize it even existed in significant
numbers: racist and misogynist terrorists.
Our children and their teachers have been and
are being terrorized. But there might be worse to come.
– 2 –
In the afterword of Alt
America, entitled “Fascism and Our Future,” David
Neiwert, a journalistic expert on the modern US radical right, addresses the question
of whether Trump/Republican movement is fascist. His discussion is worthwhile,
and I recommend the whole book, but I want to draw your attention to the
following:
[…] fascists have, in the
past, always relied upon an independent, movement-driven paramilitary force
capable of intimidating their opponents with various types of thuggery. […]
Members of various white-supremacist organizations and bona fide paramilitary
organizations such as the Oath Keepers and the Three Percent movement are avid
Trump backers. Trump has never made known any desire to form an alliance with
or to make use of such groups. (p. 364.)
One cannot, however, assume this will last, or that other
members of this administration or state or local officials have no such desire;
indeed, it is likely that many do. Should that time come, as in past fascist
movements, the racist and misogynist terrorists who are now terrorizing our
schools will provide ready and well-armed participants. It will not be a
well-regulated militia; as with historical fascist paramilitaries, it will be
more of an armed rabble, but a terrifyingly well-armed rabble with excellent
modern communications technology.
It would take time to organize such a thing,
and there would be substantial opposition, especially from girls and women, who
are after all targets of a misogynist group, so I think – I hope – there is not
an immediate threat. (On the other hand, many white women might be persuaded that a paramilitary
force will protect them, so perhaps the opposition will be less than I expect.)
Still, if we do not begin to defuse this, by restricting the civilian availability
of battlefield weapons and perhaps addressing the social issues that fuel the
terrorism, it will be a continuing threat.
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