By James Bowman on 12.10.07 @ 12:07AM
Popular culture gives young killers a strange sense of what it means to go out in style.
"Now I'll be famous," wrote 19-year-old Robert Hawkins the other
day before murdering eight people at the Westroads shopping mall in
Omaha and then killing himself. Now that, two days later, the
New York Times is reporting on those who are "searching for clues
to a young killer's motivations," you've got to wonder why anyone
would need more "clues" than that? "In the aftermath of the
shooting, the picture that began to emerge of Mr. Hawkins included
familiar images," wrote Jeff Zeleny and Eric Konigsberg for the
Times, " -- a young man facing depression, alienation,
abandonment, rejection -- but plenty of pieces that did not
entirely fit together. Several people who knew him described him as
an outgoing young man who would offer hugs to cheer others."
Fascinating! If only we can figure out the exact proportions of
depression, alienation, abandonment, rejection and hug-offering
that went into the Hawkins mix, we might be able to predict when
the next wacko youth is going to blow his top and start killing
people.
Yet isn't it strange that the Times reporters don't
even mention the motivation cited by the boy himself? What about
the desire to be famous? What about the belief that by killing a
bunch of his neighbors at random before killing himself he was
going to "go out in style"? Are these not worth a moment's
consideration? Don't they sound plausible "motivations" when we see
every day what people -- particularly young people -- are willing
to do for fame? Didn't the Virginia Tech shooter last April have a
similar motivation? What about the "YouTube killer" in Finland only
last month? "His internet postings," wrote a reporter for the London Sunday
Times, "suggest an unhappy adolescent who felt that an act of
supreme, nihilistic violence would free him from his misery and win
him the accolade of fame, at least among the devotees who followed
his ramblings online."
Most importantly, didn't both young men win, by the reporting of
the New York Times and other media, the fame they sought?
Do you suppose that that could have had anything to do
with the reluctance of the Times and other media to look
for a motivation which depended on the assumption that they
themselves would be willing accessories to and abettors of the
ambitions of the fame seekers? In the same way, when the Virginia
Tech killer sent a videotape of his ramblings to NBC News
last April, NBC hesitated for about half a minute before deciding
to broadcast it (or selections from it) while at the same time
engaging in a similar sort of disingenuous dissociation of its own
actions from the allegedly mysterious motivations of the deranged
but not deluded killer. He and the Omaha shooter both may have been
crazy -- the latter "had a history of mental health problems"
according to the
Washington Post -- but neither of them was wrong in
expecting to win by their actions the only kind of fame they could
understand. Not for the first time, I refer the reader to that
invaluable little book by Albert Borowitz, Terrorism for
Self-Glorification: The Herostratos Syndrome (Kent State
University Press, 2005).
Any attempt to understand the "motivations" of a criminal is
likely to mask an implicit apology for him, a half-submerged
argument that a share of the blame must be borne by those against
whom he has treasured up his grievances -- particularly if they can
be made conveniently anonymous under the cover of such vague
entities as "society" or "the system." If only the neglectful
parents or the jilting girlfriend or the hard-hearted boss, if
indeed society itself, had stroked and petted him and made much of
him instead of making him cross with them, then we may allow
ourselves to suppose he would never have done such awful things.
It's comforting to believe that there are reasons behind what would
otherwise be unforgivable acts because reasons make us feel in
control again. If evil can be explained it can also be prevented,
at least theoretically, and so we lose something of that
vertiginous sense of helplessness that makes it so uniquely
horrible.
But if the hunt for "motivations" is suspect, the hunt for
influences may be more productive. "Don't blame the movies I see,
the music I hear, the games I play or the books I read," wrote the
Finnish killer as part of his "massacre manifesto" on YouTube, and
there are far too many who seem eager to take him at his word.
"Blame" is not the right word here for the reasons mentioned above.
It would suggest some diminution of the blame that must be assigned
to the killer himself. But the influence on him, as on the Omaha
and Virginia Tech murderers. of movies, music and games cannot be
doubted. How else to explain the most recent killer's belief that
by perpetrating random slaughter he would "go out in style"? Where
might he have acquired such a curious notion of "style" apart from
the morally de-contextualized, aesthetically-conceived violence in
the movies of Quentin Tarantino and others? Our popular culture may
not have created the monsters of Columbine, Blacksburg, Tuusula,
Finland, and Omaha, but it certainly created their sense of
style.
topics:
Books, Movies