Post by Admin on Oct 22, 2021 21:24:08 GMT
“We’re teaching our kids not how to remember, but how to kill”. Lt. Col. Dave Grossman's classic work 'On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society' is a compelling analysis of the traumatic effects of warfare and killing on wider culture, and the role that the media plays in propagating a false and highly toxic view of humans and violence.
As he acutely notes, "The media in our modern information society have done much to perpetuate the myth of easy killing and have thereby become part of society’s unspoken conspiracy of deception that glorifies killing and war. There are exceptions, but for the most part we are given James Bond, Luke Skywalker, Rambo, and Indiana Jones blithely and remorselessly killing men by the hundreds.” Essential reading.
Militarizing Minds: The Media and the Military, by Lt. Col. Dave Grossman
Posted on2 Days Ago by Golgonooza
“We’re teaching our kids not how to remember, but how to kill”
thehumandivine.org/2021/10/20/militarizing-minds-the-media-and-the-military-by-lt-col-dave-grossman/
Why should we study killing? One might just as readily ask, Why study sex? The two questions have much in common. Every society has a blind spot, an area into which it has great difficulty looking. Today that blind spot is killing. A century ago it was sex.
Sex is a natural and essential part of life. A society that has no sex has no society in one generation. Today our society has begun the slow, painful process of escaping from the pathological dichotomy of simultaneous sexual repression and obsession. But we may have begun our escape from one denial only to fall into a new and possibly even more dangerous one. A new repression, revolving around killing and death, precisely parallels the pattern established by the previous sexual repression.
Part of the reason for our lack of knowledge in this area is that combat is, like sex, laden with a baggage of expectations and myths. In the same way that we did not understand what was occurring in the bedroom, we have not understood what was occurring on the battlefield. Our ignorance of the destructive act matched that of the procreative act.
As he acutely notes, "The media in our modern information society have done much to perpetuate the myth of easy killing and have thereby become part of society’s unspoken conspiracy of deception that glorifies killing and war. There are exceptions, but for the most part we are given James Bond, Luke Skywalker, Rambo, and Indiana Jones blithely and remorselessly killing men by the hundreds.” Essential reading.
Militarizing Minds: The Media and the Military, by Lt. Col. Dave Grossman
Posted on2 Days Ago by Golgonooza
“We’re teaching our kids not how to remember, but how to kill”
thehumandivine.org/2021/10/20/militarizing-minds-the-media-and-the-military-by-lt-col-dave-grossman/
Why should we study killing? One might just as readily ask, Why study sex? The two questions have much in common. Every society has a blind spot, an area into which it has great difficulty looking. Today that blind spot is killing. A century ago it was sex.
Sex is a natural and essential part of life. A society that has no sex has no society in one generation. Today our society has begun the slow, painful process of escaping from the pathological dichotomy of simultaneous sexual repression and obsession. But we may have begun our escape from one denial only to fall into a new and possibly even more dangerous one. A new repression, revolving around killing and death, precisely parallels the pattern established by the previous sexual repression.
Part of the reason for our lack of knowledge in this area is that combat is, like sex, laden with a baggage of expectations and myths. In the same way that we did not understand what was occurring in the bedroom, we have not understood what was occurring on the battlefield. Our ignorance of the destructive act matched that of the procreative act.