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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : The
Brutal Society
The Columbine High School massacre: American Pastoral ...
American Berserk
By David North
27 April 1999
Columbine High School appeared to be, at least in the view
of its administrators and the county school board, such a lovely
place for young people to grow up and learn. In its official profile,
the institution boasted of its "excellent facilities"
and "long history of excellence in all areas." Nothing
seemed to be lacking--Honors and Advanced Placement classes, foreign
language instruction in Spanish, French and German, and an artistic
program that included ceramics, sculpture, acting, choir and no
less than five bands and one ensemble. There were even "Cross-categorical
programs for students with significantly limited intellectual
capacity." And, of course, there was no shortage of athletics.
"Stretch for Excellence" was the motto adopted by
the school. And its mission statement--over which, one must assume,
various well-meaning people labored--promised that Columbine High
School "will teach, learn, and model life skills and attitudes
that prepare us to: work effectively with people; show courtesy
to others; prepare for change; think critically; act responsibly;
and respect our surroundings."
Columbine, with its six guidance counselors, accountability
committee, dozens of peer mediators and techniques for "conflict
resolution," and an ethos of "collaborative partnership"
with parents, viewed itself as a "twenty-first century high
school." The surrounding neighborhoods were prosperous, with
housing from the low to high six-figures, numerous shopping malls
and high-tech workplaces. But on April 20, 1999, Eric Harris and
Dylan Klebold walked into Columbine High School armed with assault
rifles and pipe bombs. By the time their bloody rampage was over,
they had killed twelve students, one teacher, and themselves.
There have been, during the past two years, other school shootings
that have resulted in the death of students. But as terrible as
the earlier incidents at Pearl, West Paducah, Jonesboro and Springfield,
the carnage at Columbine was of a qualitatively different scope
and scale.
Harris and Klebold manufactured dozens of pipe bombs, stashed
explosives in the school kitchen, studied the layout and traffic
pattern to insure the largest number of victims, and chose Hitler's
birthday as the date for the attack, in the course of nearly a
year of preparation. Their intention was to kill as many students
as possible and blow up the entire school with a propane bomb.
Had they had the opportunity, Harris and Klebold would have continued
their rampage beyond the school. According to the diary that one
of the youth left behind, they hoped to hijack an airplane and
crash it into the center of New York City. Only an unexpected
encounter with a school guard and the failure of the bomb to explode
thwarted their plan. Harris and Klebold then fled to the school
library where they proceeded to select their victims before killing
themselves.
What Harris and Klebold did on Tuesday was horrible, brutal
and criminal. But these words are only descriptions of their acts,
not explanations.
As usual, the media has nothing to offer by way of analysis.
It is extraordinarily adept at milking the grief of the parents
and community for every possible rating dollar. But those who
wish to understand the underlying causes of this tragedy will
find nothing of value on the network news.
After a few perfunctory tears for the victims, the media is
looking for someone to blame. The parents, judging from the remarks
of state officials, are being singled out as the most likely target
for public vengeance. Perhaps they do bear some level of responsibility,
but singling out for exemplary punishment these grief-stricken
mothers and fathers--whose own lives have been utterly shattered
by what their sons did last week--seems not only cruel, but deceitful
and hypocritical.
After all, the parents of Klebold and Harris were not the only
ones who failed to recognize and act on signs of the coming disaster.
Columbine High School administrators apparently ignored repeated
warnings they received about the boys' potential for violence.
This is not an individual failing, but one common to all the
major institutions of American society: governments, political
parties, corporations, the media, schools, churches, and trade
unions. All are essentially oblivious to the mounting social tensions,
until they erupt into homicidal violence at a post office, a high
school, a McDonald's restaurant, a commuter railroad train, or
inside the US Capitol.
Then these outbreaks are invariably treated, not as a social
phenomenon, but as a police problem, to be handled by installing
metal detectors, more police, more surveillance cameras, and enlisting
the population as collaborators to inform on those with a supposed
propensity to violence.
There's endless talk about "parents taking responsibility
for their children," and of "children taking responsibility
for themselves." But there is nothing said about the responsibility
which American society has for a tragedy like that which occurred
at Columbine.
It is almost grotesque to treat the Columbine HS massacre as
merely the product of the breakdown of parental authority and
supervision. Neither parents nor high school guidance counselors
are equipped to deal with the societal dysfunction that found
such devastating expression in the rampage of Klebold and Harris.
Consider, for a moment, the social outlook of these two youth.
They were admirers of Adolf Hitler, fascinated by fascism's racism,
its cult of sadistic violence and death, and its general contempt
for humanity. And yet, there was nothing particularly Germanic
about the views of Harris and Klebold. In a statement that he
posted on his web site, Harris wrote: "I am the law, if you
don't like it you die. If I don't like you or I don't like what
you want me to do, you die."
These sentiments, expressed with a little more polish, sum
up the approach of the American government to the rest of the
world. "Do what we want or we'll destroy you." As we
reread the lines of Harris, in the aftermath of the Columbine
massacre, we recognize the brutality of a potential killer. But
what, then, are we to see in the words written last Friday by
the highly paid and celebrated columnist of the New York
Times, Thomas Friedman?:
"While there are many obvious downsides to war-from-15,000
feet, it does have one great strength--its sustainability. NATO
can carry on this sort of air war for a long, long time. The Serbs
need to remember that....
"But if NATO's only strength is that it can bomb forever,
then it has to get every ounce out of that. Let's at least have
a real air war.... It should be lights out in Belgrade: every
power grid, water pipe, road and war-related factory has to be
targeted.
"Like it or not, we are at war with the Serbian nation
(they certainly think so), and the stakes have to be very clear:
Every week you ravage Kosovo is another decade we will set your
country back by pulverizing you. You want 1950? We can do 1950.
You want 1389? We can do 1389 too."
Harris and Klebold did not have to study Mein Kampf
to find special "inspiration" for their actions. The
editorials and columns that appear in American newspapers, not
to mention the vicious outpourings on talk radio, would do just
as well. And here we come to the crucial paradox that finds expression
in their assault on Columbine High. It is likely that Harris and
Klebold viewed themselves as rebels against society. In this they
were quite mistaken. Certainly, the venue of their action was
unconventional. But the deed itself represented an extreme application
of the selfish and inhumane attitudes that are commonplace in
American society today.
First, their violent outburst was not conceived of as a response
to social injustice. Rather, Harris and Klebold took revenge against
what they perceived as personal slights. They did not act on behalf
of others, but for themselves. Further, they attacked not a symbol
of oppression, but defenseless children and a well-meaning teacher.
And finally, even if one were to accept that these two boys had
been harassed at school, the scale of their violence was out of
all proportion to the injury they had suffered. Their aim was
not to right a wrong, but to create as much pain and suffering
as possible.
What Harris and Klebold did was monstrous. But does it help
to portray them as monsters? They were, let us not forget, only
teenagers. Youth is supposedly a time of hope and idealism. How,
then, was it possible that so much hate could be accumulated by
these youth in so short a time? And not only hate, but utter despair
as well. In their own minds, they had many reasons to kill, but
none to live.
They plotted this deed, but were they its only authors? They
are, in the final analysis, the products of a particular time
and place. However terrible its consequences, the mad rampage
of Harris and Klebold has deep social roots. Of course, the political
leaders and the media elite do not care to delve too deeply into
the social pathology of this dreadful crime. It would require
that they hold a mirror up to themselves.
Since the Littleton killings, the media is full of commentary
from psychologists, ministers, priests, police and experts of
all sorts, gravely enumerating the "warning signs" which
may alert parents to the possibility that their teenage son or
daughter may be a potential mass murderer: Is your child depressed,
discouraged, anxious, over-stressed, uncommunicative, disinterested,
addicted to computer games, subject to mood swings, getting consistently
bad grades, worrying too much about maintaining consistently high
grades, etc.? At least 75 percent of all American children express
one if not more of these characteristics.
In reality, the concentration on individual warning signs will
be of little help in preventing further tragedies. Attention should
be focused, rather, on the social warning signs, that is, the
indications and indices of social and political dysfunction which
create the climate that produces events like the Columbine HS
massacre. Vital indicators of impending disaster might include:
growing polarization between wealth and poverty; atomization of
working people and the suppression of their class identity; the
glorification of militarism and war; the absence of serious social
commentary and political debate; the debased state of popular
culture; the worship of the stock exchange; the unrestrained celebration
of individual success and personal wealth; the denigration of
the ideals of social progress and equality.
What is happening to America's kids? This is a question posed
by Philip Roth in his provocative novel American Pastoral,
which tells the story of a family ruined by a teenage daughter's
dreadful and unexpected act of violence. "Something is driving
them crazy. Something has set them against everything. Something
is leading them into disaster."
What is that something? Look honestly at this society--its
political leaders, its religious spokesmen, its corporate CEOs,
its military machine, its celebrities, its "popular"
culture, and, above all, the entire economic system upon which
the whole vast superstructure of violence, suffering and hypocrisy
is based. It is there that the answer is to be found.
See Also:
Society, politics and the school shooting
in Littleton
[23 April 1999]
15 dead in Colorado school shooting
A nation at war ... with itself
[21 April 1999]
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