Bokanovsky
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2012
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Why is there such a morbid fascination with the CT school shooting? It's like everyone is getting a collective hardon from this tragedy. You can see the network bosses rubbing their hands anticipating record ratings from all the in-depth reports, interviews with endless panels of experts and live coverage of every minute detail of the police investigation, with Anderson Cooper or some other "media personality" a$$hole feigning concern and outrage and speaking in somber tones (when you know that in reality he couldn't give two sh*ts about those dead kids). The corpses aren't even cold yet and politicians in Washington are already rushing to exploit the shooting to promote gun control or some other political agenda. Social science professors at Ivy League schools and liberal arts colleges are getting wet at the prospect of finally getting that coveted book deal to write some stupid tripe about the "American gun culture". And, of course, countless conversations at workplaces across the country, shares and likes on facebook, tweets, re-tweets, etc, etc.
I could maybe understand it if it was the first time something like this had ever happened. But mass shootings are hardly a rare occurrence these days. So why does every new shooting generate more and more public interest? It seems like we have turned human suffering into a source of entertainment and amusement. And under the facade of sympathy and moral indignation of the average "concerned citizen" lies the morbid curiosity of the highway accident gawker.
I could maybe understand it if it was the first time something like this had ever happened. But mass shootings are hardly a rare occurrence these days. So why does every new shooting generate more and more public interest? It seems like we have turned human suffering into a source of entertainment and amusement. And under the facade of sympathy and moral indignation of the average "concerned citizen" lies the morbid curiosity of the highway accident gawker.