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A reply to letters on The campaign to keep Paris Hilton
in jail: nothing healthy about it
By David Walsh
12 June 2007
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The World Socialist Web Site has received a large number
of responses to the article posted
June 9 on the efforts to return heiress Paris Hilton to jail in
Los Angeles.
We argued there was nothing socially healthy or progressive
about such a campaign. Some supported our views, many did not.
In part, of course, legitimate anger toward the vast social
inequality in America, including the different treatment inevitably
meted out to the rich and famous, motivated certain
of the letter writers. This is understandable in a country where
official decisions and policy are determined almost solely by
what will benefit the very wealthy.
Moreover, there is assuredly nothing admirable about Hiltons
public conduct. That she became the object of fascination in the
first place, without a discernible talent except for attracting
notoriety, is a symptom of a crisis-ridden and deeply confused
culture.
Hilton is an especially easy target. An emotionally distorted
or perhaps disturbed personality, she is, however, by no means
exceptional. The world of the very rich, very spoiled and very
bored contains no shortage of such individuals, most of whom are
kept out of the spotlight.
Nonetheless, those demanding that Hilton be jailed, or worse,
need to stop and think more carefully about their arguments.
First of all, who are their allies? The reactionary pundits:
Nancy Grace of CNN, Bill OReilly of Fox and the rest of
that vile crowd. These self-appointed moral guardians have been
thundering nightly about the special treatment Hilton
has received to divert attention from the real criminality in
American life. Fox News, the New York Post and the entire
Murdoch empire have gone to town on the Hilton issuethe
same people who brought you the Bush administration and the war
in Iraq.
Moreover, few of the angriest letter writers cared to address
the fact that due to massive overcrowding, large numbers of non-violent
offenders in Los Angeles County are sent home before their sentences
are complete, many of them having served less than 10 percent
of their sentence (some of them far less). Over a four-year period,
150,000 non-violent offenders were released early in the county,
according to a Los Angeles Times article last year.
A number of the letter writers did not let such facts stand
in their way, and manifested precisely the type of confused rage
to which the original article pointed.
Right-wing correspondents, true to form, revealed the usual
intellectual level of their ilk, complete with the inevitable
obscenities. You are a communist moron. Now you know why
communism is in the toilet, wrote one. You are a f******g
idiot, commented another.
The American media works very hard at whipping up a certain
social element into this type of ugly backwardness, and not without
success.
But the mean-spirited anger came in a radical form
too. Hilton, asserted one irate letter writer, is a fascist
brat of the ruling elite.... I want the bitch to die in prison.
The writer continued, Your comments enrage me beyond words.
Another dismissed the facts of the case, writing, No
one cares about that. People want to relish
her punishment, and rightly so. The correspondent
continued, You can play Mr. P.C. all you wantbut
let others enjoy what they consider her come-uppance.
This attitude of our contemporary Madame Defarges (the embodiment
of vengeance in Dickens A Tale of Two Cities, Defarge
sits knitting by the guillotine as heads roll) has nothing in
common with socialismor even democratic liberal opinion,
for that matter. Politics merely based on rage often has quite
reactionary consequences. The socialist project for transforming
society is not rooted in dreams of revenge. Indeed, socialism
arises far more from compassion than from hatred.
Frankly, there is no indication on the basis of their outraged
and verbally violent letters that some of the correspondents have
much interest in a rational or egalitarian response to the present
social crisis, or that they would act any differently from those
currently in power. They certainly have no apparent interest in
seriously considering the issues or the underlying processes.
Involved in the Hilton case is the foulness of the entire culture.
Its easy enough to score points against her, but more difficult
to look at the broader picture. Everyone plays a part in this
wretched sort of episode: the demonized celebrity (Michael Jackson,
Barry Bonds, Britney Spears, Lindsay Lohan, Hilton, and on and
on), the indignant talking heads, the tabloids and the paparazzi,
the crowd that allows itself to be stirred up.
The political and media establishment encourage these public
acts of human sacrifice for definite reasons: to discourage critical
thought, to accustom the public to scandal-mongering and witch-hunting
as legitimate means of settling scores, to brutalize
the population and make it indifferent to suffering and lifes
complexities, and to provide a harmless outlet for popular outrage.
Paris Hilton is not guilty of war crimes, or running a sweatshop.
Why has she been chosen to be demonized? She is expendable. She
can be sacrificed to appease popular discontent without
any serious cost to those running America. The anger at Hilton
is so far out of proportion to her importance or her sins that
one cant help but think that the element of envy plays a
role. And that is sad too. Why should anyone envy such a life,
apparently spent in vacuous activities among vacuous people? She
might rather be an object of pity.
There is nothing generous or humane about celebrating Hiltons
come-uppance. The US has massive social problems,
unsolvable under capitalism. The system is internally rotten.
Millions are suffering on a daily basis.
Let us ask our angry critics: If Paris Hilton were to serve
her entire sentence, what wrongs would be redressed? How would
the world be a better place?
Those who gain a sense of satisfaction from Hiltons incarceration,
once the excitation of the incident has passed, will more than
likely sink again into apathy and cynicism. The socialist movement
is driven by different impulses.
See Also:
Letters on the Paris Hilton case
[12 June 2007]
The campaign to keep Paris Hilton in
jail: nothing healthy about it
[9 June 2007]
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