TV-Repost

Upstate  New York’s Catskill Mountain Range is a bucolic place near and dear to my heart.  It’s where storybook character Rip Van Winkle enjoyed his legendary slumber, and  its scenery hasn’t changed much since he was born of Washington Irving’s fertile imagination. Yet, like Van Winkle, if  I’d fallen asleep for 20 years when first arriving in that verdant heaven, I,  too, would have noticed some profound changes upon awakening.

About  two decades ago, many rural Catskill teens – sons of farmers and hunters and  fishermen – suddenly started donning baggy pants and reflecting “gangsta'”  counter-culture despite living nowhere near any large urban center. The  following generation of teens experienced today’s recent cultural evolution and  often sport multiple tattoos and body piercings despite living nowhere near  NYC’s grungy East Village. Yet I’m wrong in a sense: those places were actually  very close – a television set away.

My  old hinterland haunt was once place where, if you wiggled the rabbit-ear antenna  just right, you could pull in one or two TV stations. And what could you see?  Perhaps reruns of The Brady Bunch, perhaps the news. But about a  quarter century ago came VCRs and video stores; then cable  and satellite TV; and, finally, the Internet. The serpent had entered  Eden.

In  the wake of the Sandy Hook tragedy, much fire has been directed at gun advocates  in general and the National Rifle Association in particular. In response, the  organization has implicated Hollywood and popular culture in general for  mainstreaming mindless violence. Yet even many Second Amendment advocates part  company with the NRA on this point. After all, blaming entertainment for crime  smacks of blaming guns. Yet there’s quite a profound difference: guns don’t  transmit values. But how we use guns – and knives, fists and words – on screen  certainly does.

This  message is often a tough sell, however, as it’s very natural to defend one’s  entertainment. We grow up with certain shows, movies, characters and music and  often become emotionally attached to them; in fact, we may identify with them so  closely that an attack upon them can be taken personally. It’s the same  phenomenon that causes an avid sports fan to defend his favorite team as if it’s  his favored son. And it is then we may hear that old refrain, “It isn’t the  entertainment; it’s the values learned at home” (they’re actually one and the  same since entertainment enters the home with, in the least, the parents’ tacit  approval).

Yet  it appears few really believe that refrain. Sure, depending on our ideology, we  may disagree on what entertainment is destructive, but that it can  be destructive is something on which consensus exists. Just consider, for  instance, that when James Cameron’s film Avatar was released, there was  much talk in the conservative blogosphere about its containing environmentalist,  anti-corporate and anti-American propaganda. At the other end of the spectrum,  liberals wanted the old show Amos ‘n Andy taken off the air because it  contained what they considered harmful stereotypes. Or think of how critics  worried that Mel Gibson’s Passion of the Christ would stoke anti-Jewish  sentiment or that Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ would  inspire anti-Christian feelings, and how the Catholic League complained that The Da Vinci Code was anti-Catholic. Now, I’m not commenting on these  claims’ validity. My only point is that when our own sacred cows are being  slaughtered, few of us will say, “Well, yeah, the work attacks my cause, but I  don’t care because it’s the values taught at home that really  matter.”

The  truth? Entertainment is powerful. This is why Adolf Hitler had his propaganda  filmmaker, Leni Riefenstahl, and why all modern regimes have at times created  their own propaganda films. It’s why the ancient Greeks saw fit to censor the  arts and American localities traditionally had obscenity laws. And it is why,  while “The pen is mightier than the sword” and a picture mightier still, being  worth a “thousand words,” we have to wonder how many words moving footage  coupled with sound would be. How mighty art thou, Tinseltown? Well, we worry  that a child witnessing one parent continually abuse the other will learn to be  violent, as children learn by example. Yet often forgotten is that while a  person can model behavior seven feet away from the television, he can also model  it seven feet away through the television.

And  what effect do our entertainment role models have? Much relevant research  exists, and the picture it paints isn’t  pretty. For instance, a definitive 1990s study published by The Journal of  the American Medical Association found that in every society in  which TV was introduced, there was an explosion in violent crime and murder  within 15 years. As an example, TV had been banned in South Africa for internal security reasons until 1975, at which  point the nation had a lower murder rate than other lands with similar  demographics. The country’s legalization of TV prompted psychiatrist Dr. Brandon  Centerwall to predict  “that white South African homicide rates would double within 10 to 15 years  after the introduction of television….” But he was wrong.

By  1987 they had more than doubled.

Then  the Guardian told us  in 2003 that, “…Bhutan, the fabled Himalayan Shangri-la, became the last  nation on earth to introduce television. Suddenly a culture, barely changed in  centuries, was bombarded by 46 cable channels. And all too soon came Bhutan’s  first crime wave – murder, fraud, drug offences.” The serpent had struck  again.

And  exactly how it strikes is interesting…and scary. Lt. Col. David Grossman, a  former West Point military psychologist and one of the world’s foremost experts  on what he calls “killology,” explains the process well. In his essay “Trained  to Kill,” he speaks of how the military learned that during WWII only 15 to 20  percent of riflemen would actually shoot at an exposed enemy soldier. Yet this  rate was increased to 55 percent during the Korean War and then 90 percent in  Vietnam. How? By applying psychological principles, says Grossman, identical to the  forces our children are exposed to through entertainment. They are (all  quotations are Grossman’s):

  • Brutalization  and desensitization: this occurs in boot camp where the training is designed “to  break down your existing mores and norms and to accept a new set of values that  embrace destruction, violence, and death as a way of life.” Entertainment can  perhaps be even more effective when doing this to children because the process  often starts when they’re too young to distinguish between fantasy and reality.  Grossman explains:
    • To  have a child of three, four, or five watch a “splatter” movie, learning to  relate to a character for the first 90 minutes and then in the last 30 minutes  watch helplessly as that new friend is hunted and brutally murdered is the moral  and psychological equivalent of introducing your child to a friend, letting  [him] play with that friend, and then butchering that friend in front of your  child’s eyes.
  • Classical  conditioning: the Japanese employed this during WWII. Soldiers would have to  watch and cheer as a few of their comrades bayoneted prisoners to death. All the  servicemen were then “treated to sake, the best meal they had had in months, and  to so-called comfort girls. The result? They learned to associate committing  violent acts with pleasure.” Likewise, today “[o]ur children watch vivid  pictures of human suffering and death, learning to associate it with their  favorite soft drink and candy bar, or their girlfriend’s perfume.”
  • Operant  conditioning: “When people are frightened or angry, they will do what they have  been conditioned to do…. [It’s] stimulus-response, stimulus-response.” Thus,  one of the ways the military increased riflemen’s willingness to shoot exposed  enemies was to switch from the bull’s-eye targets of WWII training to  “realistic, man-shaped silhouettes that pop into their field of view.” The  soldiers have only a split-second to engage this new “stimulus” with the  response of firing reflexively. As for kids, “every time a child plays an  interactive point-and-shoot video game, he is learning the exact same  conditioned reflex and motor skills.” This can help explain, says Grossman, why  robbers under stress will sometimes reflexively shoot victims even when it  wasn’t “part of the plan.”

If  the above seems at all simplistic, note that it’s a life’s work boiled-down to  500 words. Suffice it to say, however, that entertainment has an effect. And do  we really consider today’s entertainment benign? We’ve transitioned from a  pre-TV America where boys sometimes brought real guns to school for target  shooting to a TV-addicted America where boys bring toy guns to school and get  suspended. And, of course, the reasons for this societal sea change are complex.  But if we’re going to point to one factor, is it wiser to blame the AR-15 than  PG-13?

Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/2013/03/why_the_nra_is_right_about_hollywood.html#ixzz2O0YM2XuP Follow us: @AmericanThinker on Twitter | AmericanThinker on Facebook

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