http://www.thenation.com/article/171861/after-newtown-beware-fear-driven-pol
icymaking
 
Newtown and the Perils of Fear-Driven Lawmaking
 
 <http://www.thenation.com/authors/melissa-harris-perry> Melissa
Harris-Perry 
The Nation: in the January 7-14,
<http://www.thenation.com/issue/january-7-14-2013> 2013 Edition
 
I was a panelist on an MSNBC show during the noon hour of December 14. When
the show began, we had information about a school shooting in Connecticut.
We believed there were three people hospitalized with non-life-threatening
injuries and a gunman who had committed suicide. Scary stuff, but probably a
story that would occupy our attention for the proverbial fifteen minutes.
But by the end of the hour, we'd heard reports that at least eighteen
children under the age of 10 had been murdered in cold blood as they huddled
in their classrooms. 

 <http://www.thenation.com/authors/melissa-harris-perry> Melissa
Harris-Perry


Melissa  <http://www.thenation.com/authors/melissa-harris-perry>
Harris-Perry

Melissa Harris-Perry is professor of political science at Tulane University,
where she is founding director of the...

It was a brutal hour, and one I'll never forget. We had come to one of those
moments by which we measure the end of an era: before the misery, grief and
terror of this event, and after. Even as the initial reports came in, those
of us on the set called for action. We didn't quite know what had happened,
but we knew it was awful. Something must be done!


As the details of Adam Lanza's murderous spree became clearer, many more
Americans took up that call. In the first seventy-two hours after the
massacre, 150,000 people signed a petition on the White House website
calling for legislation limiting gun access. No previous topic on the site
had ever received so much support. Something must be done!

During his remarks in Newtown on that Sunday evening, President Obama also
spoke of the need to act. "In the coming weeks," he said, "I will use
whatever power this office holds to engage my fellow citizens, from law
enforcement to mental health professionals to parents and educators, in an
effort aimed at preventing more tragedies like this." Though he declined to
offer any policy specifics, it was clear the president also felt: something
must be done!

This is because the Newtown murders were not just tragic; they were an act
of terrorism. The slain first-graders and their teachers were not targeted
because of their national identity, as were the victims of the 9/11 attacks.
They were not murdered because of their race, as was the case in the decades
of unchecked American lynchings. They were not killed because of their
religious beliefs, like the Sikh victims of a mass shooting in Wisconsin
just a few months back. In fact, their undisputed innocence and relative
privilege are part of what makes their deaths so horrifying-so terrorizing.
It is also what makes me nervous about the calls for action that are on
everyone's lips, including mine.

After 9/11, we were caught in a state of national post-traumatic stress. We
not only mourned having lost so many; we were terrified at the loss of our
sense of security. On September 10, 2001, we knew we lived in a dangerous
world. But we were Americans, and some things just don't happen here. until
they do. On December 13, 2012, we knew we lived in a country where thousands
of people are murdered by guns-30,000 in 2011 alone-but we thought young
children attending schools in prosperous, peaceful communities were immune.
Some things just don't happen there. Until they do.

And this is the aspect of the tragedy that makes it so terrifying. It
undermines our belief that there is a safe place to be, to live, to send our
kids to school. It is a bloody beacon of our inherent vulnerability. Nothing
is harder to bear than that collective realization, so we feel we must act.

While I agree with the need for action, I also urge us to reflect before we
act. Remember what we did after 9/11? We let government officials with their
own agendas shape our ill-defined enemies into specific targets, some of
which had no connection to the attacks. In our terror, far too many
surrendered civil liberties by supporting the Patriot Act, ran our national
economy aground by cheering the war in Afghanistan, and damaged our status
in the world by pushing "pre-emptive" aggression in Iraq.

If we're not careful, we could end up repeating these mistakes of
trauma-laden, terror-driven policy-making.

Yes, we need common-sense gun legislation. No, we do not need a national
registry of those with mental illnesses. Privacy and medical confidentiality
must be protected, but that is unlikely to happen in an environment where
the public becomes convinced there's a strong correlation between mental
illness and gun violence, even if that link is tenuous or false. Yes, we
need to address the pervasive violence in our communities. No, we do not
need to limit or censor rap music, video games or violent films. We can
certainly stop supporting violence with our consumer dollars, but the
impulse toward censorship tends to have more deleterious effects than
positive ones. I'm not suggesting we do nothing. I'm suggesting that we
recognize our current state of emotional trauma and act with caution, lest
we worsen the very problems we hope to ameliorate.

No modern thinker has contributed as much to our understanding of the
inscrutable realities of evil and terror as Hannah Arendt. Writing as a
German Jew in the aftermath of the Holocaust, Arendt had a unique proximity
to existential vulnerability. Yet her observation of the Adolf Eichmann
trial produced not a polemic on the need to hold a small group of men
responsible for their crimes, but rather an insight into the "banality of
evil."

"I was struck by a manifest shallowness in the doer which made it impossible
to trace the incontestable evil of his deeds to any deeper level of roots or
motives," she later wrote in The New Yorker. "The deeds were monstrous, but
the doer.was quite ordinary, commonplace, and neither monstrous nor
demonic."

This is the insight we must cling to. Evil can emerge from routine actions,
especially when they're motivated by fear and enacted in a haze of terror.
Those young lives were cut short by guns that we allow to circulate legally.
But nothing we do will bring the children back or ease our vulnerability.
Yes, we must act. But we must act deliberately, or we risk compounding the
evil we hope to eradicate.


About the Author

Melissa Harris-Perry is professor of political science at Tulane University,
where she is founding director of the...

Also by the Author

Low-Income
<http://www.thenation.com/blog/171696/low-income-americans-are-facing-real-c
liff> Americans Are Facing the Real Cliff(Congress
<http://www.thenation.com/section/congress> , Public Policy
<http://www.thenation.com/section/public-policy> , Poverty
<http://www.thenation.com/section/poverty> )

If Congress can't reach a deal by New Year's, 2.1 million people will be
kicked off unemployment benefits.

Melissa  <http://www.thenation.com/authors/melissa-harris-perry>
Harris-Perry
Walmart
<http://www.thenation.com/blog/171458/walmart-paved-way-poverty-wages> Paved
the Way for Poverty Wages(Gap
<http://www.thenation.com/section/gap-between-wealth-and-poverty> Between
Wealth and Poverty, Corporations
<http://www.thenation.com/section/corporations> , Wages and
<http://www.thenation.com/section/wages-and-hours> Hours)

Walmart's bottom-line business model has made the Walton family billions,
while pushing employees onto public assistance.

 
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