Al-Jazeerah History  
	 
	
	
	Archives  
	 
	
	
	Mission & Name   
	 
	
	
	
	Conflict Terminology   
	 
	
	Editorials  
	 
	
	
	
	
	Gaza Holocaust   
	 
	
	Gulf War   
	 
	
	Isdood  
	 
	
	Islam   
	 
	
	News   
	 
	
	
	News Photos 
	  
	 
	
	
	Opinion 
	
	
	Editorials  
	 
	
	
	
	US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)   
	 
	
	www.aljazeerah.info
	  
      
       
      
        
        
     | 
     | 
    
     
      Roots of Arizona's Violence: Assassination of 
	  Gabrielle Giffords  
	By Stephen Lendman 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 16, 2011 
	   As expected, America's major media won't explain it. Nation 
	magazine editor Katrina vanden Heuvel ducked the issue, saying it's "a time 
	for grief, not grievance." Blaming a "crazed act of a clearly unstable man," 
	she called it "an assassination of democracy....shut(ting) down speech to 
	slay those seeking its exercise," then added "we still don't know whether 
	(violent rhetoric) was responsible for last weekend's horror."    A 
	Wall Street Journal "Murder in Tucson" editorial deflected blame from hard 
	right extremists, and rejected political reasons for the attack, saying: 
	  "....Loughner is a mentally disturbed man who targeted Congresswoman 
	Gabrielle Giffords and anyone near here....because she was prominent and 
	they were tragically accessible....Whatever confused political motives he 
	expressed seem merely to be part of the maelstrom of his mental sickness." 
	  In other words, blame a "deranged" gunman, not society, its extremist 
	politicians, demagogic media hosts and pundits, and America's longstanding 
	culture of violence. More on it below.   New York Times writers Marc 
	Lacey and David Herszenhorn noted "political repercussions," concern for 
	personal security, denunciation of threats and acts of violence against 
	public officials, and overall outrage. Ignored was growing anger from 
	festering economic conditions and the proliferation of violence across 
	America, never reported when ordinary people are affected.    A Times 
	"Blood and Invective in Arizona" editorial noted accused gunman Jared 
	Loughner's mental illness and "Internet ravings about government mind 
	control," saying also that "scores of politicians" receive violent threats 
	without explaining reasons for public anger or that society top down is 
	responsible.   Unexplained as well is how radically, in recent 
	decades, America shifted right, accentuated by extremist talk show hosts 
	like Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Back, Sean Hannity, and many lesser known ones 
	except to their faithful. Also politicians, including conservative 
	Democrats, Republicans, and Tea Party favorites like defeated Senate 
	candidate Sharron Angle, referring to congressional "domestic enemies and 
	homegrown enemies," needing "Second Amendment remedies" as a "cure" for "The 
	Harry Reid Problems."   Key as well is the nation's 
	political/media-led war against Muslims, Latino immigrants, people of color, 
	whistleblowers, progressives, dissent, and anyone considered unAmerican. 
	Most of all is America's violent culture, a topic a previous article 
	addressed, accessed through the following link:   
	
	http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2007/09/culture-of-violence.html   
	Key parts relating to domestic violence are covered below. It began by 
	explaining that from inception, America glorified wars and violence in the 
	name of peace. It's waged them every year in its history at home and/or 
	abroad against one or more adversaries.    It has by far the highest 
	homicide rate of all western nations and a passion for owning guns. Violent 
	films are some of the most popular, and similar video games crowd out 
	simpler, more innocent street play of generations earlier.   
	Prescription and illicit drugs use is out-of-control as well as tobacco, 
	alcohol and other type substance abuses.  Moreover, US society is called 
	a "rape culture," data showing:   -- one-fourth of adult women are 
	victimized by forcible rape sometime in their lives, often by someone they 
	know, including family members;   -- one-third of them are victims of 
	sexual abuse by a husband or boyfriend;   -- 30% of people say they 
	know a woman who's been physically abused by her husband or boyfriend in the 
	past year;   -- one in four women report being sexually molested in 
	childhood, usually repeatedly over extended periods by a family member or 
	other close relative;    -- American women overall experience extreme 
	levels of violence; an astonishing 75% of them are victims of some form in 
	their lifetimes;   --domestic violence is their leading cause of 
	injury and second leading cause of death;   -- statistically, homes, 
	with men in them, are their most dangerous place as millions of women 
	experience battering by husbands, male partners or fathers;    -- for 
	most women with children, there's no escape for lack of means and because 
	male assailants pursue them, causing greater harm;   -- adding further 
	injury, societal help is often lacking because women are afforded second 
	class status, privileges and redress when they're abused, so many suffer in 
	silence fearing coming forward may cause more harm than help;   -- 
	their children are also abused; millions suffer serious neglect, physical 
	mistreatment and/or sexual abuse; many only get relief through escape to 
	dangerous streets where they end up alone, more vulnerable and in greater 
	danger away than at home, where there, too, families act more like strangers 
	or predators, forcing young kids to flee in the first place.   
	Throughout America, irrespective of class, income, race, religion or 
	ethnicity, these conditions are more commonplace than rare. Moreover, peace, 
	tranquility and safety are illusions when crowded out by foreign wars and 
	domestic violence at home, in communities, neighborhoods, schools, through 
	the media, in core families, and by federal, state and local governments 
	waging war on ordinary people.    It begs the question: what kind of 
	country glorifies mass killing, assaults and abuse; that calls pacifist 
	nonviolence sissy and unpatriotic, yet claims peace loving, "indispensable 
	state" credentials, and manipulates false notions of exceptionalism and 
	moral superiority to force our ways on others globally. It's no third world 
	dictatorship. It's America where human rights, civil liberties, democratic 
	values, common dignity, and personal safety are more illusion than fact. 
	  American Society Breeds Violence    Imperial 
	America aside, popular culture breeds domestic violence. Television features 
	it, studies showing nearly every home has at least one TV set, and 54% of 
	children have their own in their bedrooms. They spend 28 hours a week on 
	average watching, double the time spent in school, so they learn more about 
	life through the media than from parents, teachers or friends.    
	Before age 18, the average American child watches 200,000 acts of violence, 
	including 16,000 murders, and studies show homicide rates doubled 10 - 15 
	years after television was introduced.   Moreover, potential adverse 
	effects from excessive media exposure include:    -- increased violent 
	behavior;    -- impaired school performance;    -- increased 
	sexual activity and use of tobacco, alcohol and illicit drugs; and    
	-- decreased family communication among other negative influences, unrelated 
	directly to violence.     Studies show that two-thirds of children's 
	programming have violence, three-fourths committed goes unpunished, and most 
	victims aren't shown experiencing pain. Moreover, nearly half the TV 
	violence children see is in cartoons, usually portrayed humorously with 
	victims hardly ever having long-term consequences.    In addition, big 
	screen films are similar, exposing children like adults. So is online 
	material, including pedophile cyber-seduction on unsuspecting children, 
	leading to sexual assaults.   Studies also show how violent video 
	games (VVGs) like Doom, Wolfenstein 3D and Mortal Kombat may increase 
	aggressive thoughts, beliefs and behavior both in laboratory settings and 
	real life. They're worse than TV or films because they're interactive and 
	engrossing, getting players to identify with aggressors by acting like them 
	while playing. These games teach violence. Many young people play them often 
	and parents don't object. No wonder years later they exhibit the same 
	violent behavior as adults.   The American Psychological Association's 
	(APA) March 2010 Psychological Bulletin published an analysis of 136 papers, 
	representing 130,296 participants and studies from several countries. It 
	showed a consistent correlation between violent video game use and 
	aggressive behavior.   Music also teaches violence. The Parents Music 
	Resource Center reports teenagers hear an estimated 10,500 hours of rock 
	music between grades 7 and 12 alone or nearly as much time as they spend in 
	school. Entertainment Monitor reported three-fourths of popular CDs sold in 
	1995 included profanity or lyrics about drugs, violence and sex with some 
	popular rap artist music glorifying guns, rape and murder.   Against 
	this backdrop and centuries of belligerency, no wonder domestic violence and 
	attitudes toward it are out of control. A lone gunman is symptomatic of 
	ingrained values that proliferate violence daily in US communities and 
	homes, unnoticed unless someone prominent is affected.   Moreover, 
	America's history reflects harshness against dissidents, labor, minorities, 
	street protesters, rioters, ethnic or religious groups, and others, plus 
	commonplace one-on-one confrontations. The great majority go unnoticed or 
	cared about when committed by one person of color against another.    
	For centuries, monstrous violence against Native Americans nearly 
	exterminated them. Harshness against Black slaves included whippings, other 
	beatings, rapes, mutilations, forced family separations and even amputations 
	as punishment for runaways. Post-slavery,  Jim Crow and northern 
	segregation enforced White supremacy on Blacks. Today include Latino 
	immigrants, Muslims, and others disadvantaged as prime targets for 
	state-sponsored repression plus whatever they experience in regular 
	one-on-one incidents.   FBI and other Data   In 2009, the FBI 
	reported 13,636 murders, itemized as follows:   -- 6,452 by handguns 
	(nearly half);   -- 348 with rifles;   -- 418 from shotguns; 
	  -- 1,929 by unknown firearms;   -- 1,825 with knives or similar 
	instruments;   -- 1,864 by other weapons; and   -- 801 with 
	hands, fists or feet, etc.   The Brady Campaign.org campaign against 
	gun violence gives much higher figures, including 30,000 annual gun related 
	deaths and 70,000 injuries, including 3,000 children and teens. For Black 
	men aged 15 - 34, firearm homicide is the leading cause of death. For 
	Hispanic men aged 15 - 24, it's the second leading cause.    Moreover, 
	America is the only industrialized country that "has not responsibly 
	addressed the problem of gun violence," causing, on average, eight times 
	more fatalities than in other developed nations. For children under age 15, 
	it's 12 times higher.   America has few federal gun laws, and even 
	those are pockmarked with loopholes. Among states, Arizona is the most lax, 
	making gun purchases almost as simple as buying toothpaste. As a result, 
	anyone can obtain them, even Jared Loughner. Despite his known extremism, 
	instability, and perhaps derangement, he easily got a Glock 19, a dangerous 
	semi-automatic handgun bought legally from Sportsman's Warehouse in Tucson 
	on November 30. Using a 30-round magazine with an extra bullet in the gun's 
	chamber, he fired the entire clip before subdued.   Data from the 
	Department of Justice and other sources show:   -- 960,000 violent 
	acts against a current or former spouse, boyfriend or girlfriend, and up to 
	three million women physically abused by their husband, male partner or 
	boyfriend annually;   -- in 2001, more than half a million American 
	women (588,490) victimized by nonfatal violence committed by an intimate 
	partner;   -- intimate violence is mainly a crime against women, 
	accounting for 85% of these incidences;   -- women are up to eight 
	times more likely than men to be victimized by an intimate partner;   
	-- in 2001, 20% of violent crimes against women were by intimate partners; 
	  -- up to 324,000 women experience intimate partner violence during 
	pregnancy;   -- women of all races are about equally vulnerable to 
	intimate partner violence;   -- women are up to 14 times more likely 
	than men to report suffering severe physical assaults from an intimate 
	partner;   -- 20% of female high school students report being 
	physically and/or sexually abused by a dating partner, and 40% of 14 - 17 
	year old girls report knowing someone their age struck or beaten by a 
	boyfriend;   -- in a national survey of 6,000 American families, 50% 
	of men who frequently assaulted their wives also abused their children;   
	-- studies show up to 10 million children witness some form of domestic 
	violence annually; and   -- over half a million women report being 
	stalked annually by an intimate partner, while 80% stalked by former 
	husbands are physically assaulted and 30% sexually abused.   The FBI 
	divides violent crime into four categories:    -- "murder and 
	nonnegligent manslaughter;   -- forcible rape;   -- robbery; 
	and    -- aggravated assault."    It uses the International 
	Association of Chiefs of Police Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program's 
	definition of violent crime as involving force or threat of force. Annual 
	data show these crimes:   -- topped one million in 1975, and from the 
	mid-1980s ranged from around 1.5 - 1.9 million annually;   -- since 
	1975, annual violent crimes of murder and reported rape ranged from around 
	100,000 - 130,000;   -- every year over the past century, 10% or more 
	of all crimes committed were violent ones;    -- in 2009, an estimated 
	1,318,398 violent crimes occurred nationwide, according to the most recent 
	FBI figures; and   -- the domestic incidence of violent crimes overall 
	exceeds the combined total of all US foreign wars.   A Final Comment 
	  Generations of violence engrained it in US culture. It proliferates 
	daily in homes, communities, and by state-sponsored repression against 
	society's least advantaged, cared about or wanted. It made America the 
	world's prison capital - a repressive gulag with over 2.4 million 
	incarcerated, more than China with a population four times greater.   
	The Institute for Creative Development's director Dr. Charles Johnston, a 
	psychiatrist and futurist, calls violence a drug. In his Center for Media 
	Literacy article titled, "Addicted to Violence: Has the American Dream 
	Become a Nightmare," he said:   "At a psychological level, the drama 
	and titillation of these violent scenarios and our identification with their 
	heroes and heroines serve to create a sense of excitement, potency and 
	significance that is missing from most people's daily lives."   Other 
	effects are more neurological in nature. "Here, it is less violence per se - 
	behavior driven by anger or aggression - that hooks us to violent 
	programming than the generalized rush of adrenalin we feel in response to 
	violent situations presented to us."   Media violence is powerfully 
	addictive beyond  equivalent substance abuse. It also involves "social 
	circumstances that support the addictive response." For example, anger and 
	frustration initially drive riots or street violence. But as it becomes 
	"more chaotic and random," it's driven less by doubts of achieving the 
	American dream "than by knowing at some level that even winning would mean 
	little, that the dream itself had become empty. This ultimate despair 
	(becomes) a force for destruction."   Further, violence's addicting 
	power, both real and media driven, "increases exponentially during times of 
	transition" when something familiar no longer inspires and nothing new 
	emerges. "At these times, people are particularly" prone to violence to gain 
	"excitement, engagement, and influence, feelings lacking in their own lives. 
	And random violence....becomes particularly addictive in a new way" by 
	giving "voice to the feelings of fear and chaos so central to these 
	times...."   His two-part cure involves basic media literacy to 
	separate facts from fantasy to counter "people's susceptibility to (be 
	harmfully) manipulat(ed) by violence's hypnotic effects."   Secondly, 
	it requires working together to write a new narrative - a "much-needed next 
	chapter in our cultural history," including new policies and defining 
	metaphors, as well as "new ways of talking about what (most) matters" at all 
	levels - at home, in schools, in community meetings, at all government 
	levels, in business, between family and friends, and through the media.   
	Ultimately, the ability to reject pseudo-excitement, pseudo-meaning, and 
	pseudo-fulfillment depends on the extent of positive real life experiences. 
	They're absent for millions in a society experiencing growing poverty and 
	despair, exacerbated by its longstanding addiction to violence, proliferated 
	by America's infatuation with imperial wars, conquest, and repression. 
	Kicking that habit may be key to rehabilitating domestically.   
	Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
	lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. 
	Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to 
	cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio 
	News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time 
	and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy 
	listening. 
	 http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/ 
       
       
       | 
     | 
     
      
      
      
      
     |