In The Stream, Jennifer
Hartline writes that our concern about gun laws overlooks the deeper issues and
societal changes:
·
What is creating such violent, heartless,
furious young people? Are we ready yet to turn the microscope on ourselves and
our culture at large? We need a ruthless and candid evaluation of our society
and our values.
·
Why do so many young teens seem to lack even the
smallest measure of charity? Why are so many children full of despair? Why are
so many children physically harming themselves or taking their own lives? Why
has the rate of suicide among children doubled since 2000?
There are many indicators that something has gone wrong. In
many ways, our youth are giving up. The German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche
had written:
·
"If one has a 'why' to live for, one can
bear almost any 'how'!"
Do the youth have a “why” to live for? Well, they do have
their dreams of a successful career and the money to do those things that make
them happy. But what happens when that dream dies? Do they have anything on
which to fall back? Do they have supportive families? A church family?
Do they have a higher “why” and purpose for their life, a
transcendent vision of the good that can carry them through, something to lift
them out of their pain? Many times, they do not. Why not? They have been persistently
taught that such resources do not exist:
·
Evolution has taught them that they are just an
animal, not created in the likeness of God, the product of an accident in a
purposeless universe. Consequently, others are also just animals who can be
treated as animals.
·
Materialization has taught us that we are no
more than sophisticated bio-chemical machines, which can be discarded when they
no longer serve society.
·
Hyper-sexualization training and pornography has
taught them that they are sexual objects, and that pleasure is their right and
choice is its servant. Whatever they choose is “right” for them, concern about
others be damned.
·
Moral relativism has taught them that there is
no objective right and wrong. It’s just a matter of your own arbitrary choices.
Their task then is merely to clarify their own evolving values and purposes.
From this perspective, the school shooters have merely been an exemplary
product of their education. One young lady just wrote, “I never listen to
anyone who uses the word ‘should’ in a sentence.” “Shoulds” represent to her
limitations to her freedom personhood.
·
Multiculturalism has taught them that we cannot
judge other cultures, because they are all valid. Then any lifestyle, no matter
how destructive or violent, is also equally valid. After all, if there is no
objective standard of judgment, we cannot coherently judge.
·
The drug culture, including psycho-pharmacological
drugs, have numbed their minds and feelings, their very humanity.
However, society refuses to scrutinize these unquestionable underlying
beliefs. Consequently, the only “why” to live for is pleasure and the discharge
of emotions, whatever form they may take. Therefore, Hartline concludes:
·
If we don’t turn the same passionate scrutiny on
our society and our choices that we’re turning on our gun laws, then we really
are just arguing about window treatments while the house goes up in flames.
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