Dear teachers,

A provocative article on race, religion with reference to the killings at
Las Vegas yesterday...

In my view, mad men like Paddock do not really belong to any race or
religion ... No religion advocates killing of innocent people...

Please read, think / reflect about it and share your thoughts ...

regards,
Guru

Last night, the United States experienced the deadliest mass shooting in
modern American history. At least 58 people are dead and over 500 more
wounded. No, that’s not a typo: More than 500 were injured in one, single
incident.

As tens of thousands enjoyed a music festival on the streets of Las Vegas,
64-year-old Stephen Paddock, of Mesquite, Nevada, was perched 32 floors
above them in his Mandalay Bay hotel room. Paddock had 19 rifles and
hundreds of rounds of ammo — supplies that are plentiful in a nation that
has more guns than people. A few minutes after 10 p.m., Paddock opened fire
on the unsuspecting crowd. They were sitting ducks.

No expensive wall along the Mexican border would’ve prevented this. No
Muslim ban stopping immigrants and refugees from a few randomly selected
countries from reaching our shores would’ve slowed this down.

Paddock, like the majority of mass shooters in this country, was a white
American. And that simple fact changes absolutely everything about the way
this horrible moment gets discussed in the media and the national
discourse: Whiteness, somehow, protects men from being labeled terrorists.

The privilege here is that the ultimate conclusion about shootings
committed by people from commonly nonwhite groups often leads to
determinations about the corrosive or destructive nature of the group
itself. When an individual claiming to be a Muslim commits a horrible act,
many on the right will tell us Islam itself is the problem. For centuries,
when an act of violence has been committed by an African-American, racist
tropes follow — and eventually, the criminalization and dehumanization of
an entire ethnic group.

<https://newsclick.in/sites/default/files/Shooting.jpg>
Privilege always stands in contrast to how others are treated, and it’s
true in this case, too: White men who resort to mass violence are
consistently characterized primarily as isolated “lone wolves” — in no way
connected to one another — while the most problematic aspects of being
white in America are given a pass that nobody else receives.

Stephen Paddock’s whiteness has already afforded him many outrageous
protections in the media.

While the blood was still congealing on the streets of Las Vegas, USA Today
declared in a headline
<https://twitter.com/USATODAY/status/914795368608600064> that Paddock was a
“lone wolf.” And yet an investigation into his motivations and background
had only just started. Police were only beginning to move to search his
home and computers. His travel history had not yet been evaluated. No one
had yet thoroughly scrutinized his family, friends, and social networks.

Stephen Paddock was declared a “lone wolf” before analysts even started
their day, not because an exhaustive investigation produced such a
conclusion, but because it is the only available conclusion for a white man
in America who commits a mass shooting.

“Lone wolf” is how Americans designate many white suspects in mass
shootings. James Holmes was called a “lone wolf” when he shot and killed 12
people at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado. And Dylann Roof, the white
supremacist who walked into a church in Charleston, South Carolina, and
shot and killed the pastor and eight other parishioners, was quickly
declared a “lone wolf.”

For people of color, and especially for Muslims, the treatment is often
different. Muslims often get labeled as “terrorists” before all the facts
have come out.

Just consider President Donald Trump. This morning, Trump tweeted
<https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/914810093874671617>, “My
warmest condolences and sympathies to the victims and families of the
terrible Las Vegas shooting. God bless you!” That’s fine, but Trump doesn’t
even seem angry. It’s peculiar that he didn’t call the shooter a “son of a
bitch,” like he did the NFL players who took a knee during the anthem. He
didn’t create an insulting nickname for Paddock, or make an immediate push
for a policy proposal.

Compare that to how Trump treats incidents where he believes the assailants
are Muslims. After a bomb exploded in the London subway, Trump tweeted that
the attackers were “loser terrorists” — before British authorities had even
named a suspect. He went on to immediately use the attack to push his
Muslim ban.

We must ask ourselves: Why do certain acts of violence absolutely incense
Trump and his base while others only elicit warm thoughts and prayers? This
is the deadliest mass shooting in American history! Where is the outrage?
Where are the policy proposals?

What we are witnessing is the blatant fact that white privilege protects
even Stephen Paddock, an alleged mass murderer, not just from being called
a terrorist, but from the anger, rage, hellfire, and fury that would surely
rain down if he were almost anyone other than a white man. His skin
protects him. It also prevents our nation from having an honest
conversation about why so many white men do what he did, and why this
nation seems absolutely determined to do next to nothing about it.

I spoke to two people this morning, one black and the other Muslim. Both of
them said that, when they heard about this awful shooting in Las Vegas,
they immediately began hoping that the shooter was not black or a Muslim.
Why? Because they knew that the blowback on all African-Americans or
Muslims would be fierce if the shooter hailed from one of those communities.

Something is deeply wrong when people feel a sense of relief that the
shooter is white because they know that means they won’t suffer as a
result. White people, on the other hand, had no such feeling this morning,
because 400 years of American history tells them that no such consequences
will exist for them today as a result of Stephen Paddock’s actions.

It is an exemplar of white privilege: not just being given a head start in
society, but also the freedom from certain consequences of individual and
group actions.


Guru
IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

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