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|    soc.culture.france    |    More than just arrogance and bland food    |    5,647 messages    |
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|    Message 4,835 of 5,647    |
|    Thomas Keske to All    |
|    Cartoon Violence (1/2)    |
|    04 Feb 06 14:25:51    |
      From: TKeske@Comcast.net               CARTOON VIOLENCE              Should we be surprised that a seemingly trivial thing       like a cartoon should have all of Europe buzzing,       or prompting a statement by the President of the United States,       as is happening now, over cartoons that caricatured       the prophet Mohammed?              Long ago, if you had similarly lampooned Christianity,       it would have brought a similar reaction- instant       threat of death.              It is not entirely different today. Portrayals of Jesus       as a gay man have been known to produce violent threats       and death threats.              Somehow, though, after centuries of religious conflict,       the Western world came to balance respect of religion       with respect of free expression.              Questionable humor is getting more plentiful, such as       right-wing writer Anne Coulter, "joking" that a Supreme       Court Justice should have "rat poison in his creme brulee",       so that conservatives could nominate more of their own.              The questionable humor ought to raise a question about       the nature of humor itself. There is an old Chinese saying       that I coined-               "When a man says, 'I am only joking', he is not joking".              Patriotism is not the only refuge of scoundrels.       Religion is a refuge. Humor is a refuge.              Religion gives hatred the mask that       "This represents moral values, not hate".              Humor gives hatred the mask that "I do not really mean it".              Humor and aggression are inextricably interleaved. Much       of what we find amusing seems to be misfortune,       humiliation, and insult to others.              When you see someone like Ann Coulter, it is a wakeup-call.       She lies. In her heart, she means exactly what she says.       As part of the context for that, look at someone like       right-wing columnist, and former Watergate felon,       Chuck Colson. He openly opined on his own website,       in his own words, that use of open force against the       Supreme Court might be necessary. He was not pretending       to be "joking". He said that he "trembled at the gravity"       of what he was saying.              That is open fascism, speaking. Why did the media,       totally ignore this, in a good friend of the Bush family?              It is all reason to take a second look, and be a bit       more alarmed, when left-leaning Justice Souter       is mugged, or a left-leaning New York Times columnist       gets murdered.              Even the Nazis gave a hint of their secret intentions,       in their sadistic version of "humor".              The family-values Fox channel seems to be pushing       the envelope ever-more, now with disgusting shows       where we can laugh at incompetent celebrity ice-skating,       with an ad showing a woman having her face hit       the ice, and a large gash resulting. Are we heading back       to the days of the Roman Coliseum, or public executions,       as a form of entertainment?              The Boston Globe considered the Mohammed cartoon       flap important enough to merit an editorial, which       condemned the cartoon as something offensive, that       should not have been printed.              That is probably a reasonable viewpoint, as a bottom       line, but it seems somehow not to do justice to a       great range of mixed feelings. How much do you want       to reward groups who are too fanatically trigger-happy       in rage over what would otherwise be a relatively minor       slight, or possibly even a fully-justified criticism?              When cartoonist Lynn Johnston, author of "For Better or Worse"       had a short series dealing sensitively with a gay teen, she       received nothing less than death threats over it, as well.              Should the people who threatened her be humored       (pardon the pun) in their belief that this subject matter       should never be touched? Should they be respected in       their murderous passions? Should we allow them to force       everyone else to censor themselves?              Then, there is the matter of the double-standards.       After "Brokeback Mountain", gays were openly insulted,       repeatedly in cartoons. This provoked not even a       "Letter to the Editor" to be published, much less an       editorial apology.              In the far-left "Boondocks", we were informed that       "Brokeback" was now black street slang to mean       "questionable masculinity".              Do you remember the civil-rights era images of black       men, feeling so compromised in their sense of manhood,       in a racist society, that they felt it necessary to hold up       signs saying simply, "I am a man"?              At one time, blackness was associated with images       of Amos-and-Andy, shoe-shuffling buffoonery, and       complete lack of masculinity.              If you published a similar "cartoon" today, implying       that black men were naturally lacking in masculinity,       it would probably cause a firestorm.              But hey, this is only gays- almost by definition something       less than men, giving the world a natural birthright       to laugh openly in their faces.              Is that an obnoxious birthright that should be       robbed by threat of death? Ha, Ha. Just kidding.              In Prickly City, we were told that John Wayne       must be rolling over in his grave.              In Mallard Fillmore, we were told that Brokeback       Mountain was enough even to "gross out" a       liberal. The very idea of a "gay community" deserving       to be called a "community", at all, is portrayed as something       laughable, like having a "community of people who spray       milk out their noses".              Not much concern for "community relations".              We have been deeply insulted, also. Why the       double standard at the Globe, that one case gets       prominent mention, the other, not at all?              Is it the constant, infernal deference to religion       and its presumed preciousness, or is it simply       the fact that there is a minority of Muslims       who are not true to their own religion's teachings       of peace, and always ready for violence,       while the same is not expected of gays?              Brokeback was a movie portraying two men living a       tortured existence, in fear for their lives, eventually       leading to a grisly murder, of the kind that is all       too familiar to the gay community.              In the mind of the average heterosexual male, none of       that context seemed to register. The only thing       worth mentioning was how completely disgusting,       to think of the kissing.              Reactions on a par with a high-school sex ed class,       where the boys cannot take anything seriously,       sitting there snickering and giggling at every other       word.              Our society is too much like high school       - Columbine High School- a story of bullying,       favored pets, name-calling and ridicule, sometimes       getting physical, divisions into cliques that got treated       very differently by each other and by authority.              It is easy to think that kids just take unimportant       things too seriously, but maybe adults do, too.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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