At Long Last - Derm's Blog for Wednesday August 20th!
Just when I thought it was
safe to go outside again, along comes a national controversy so rife with
grotesque implications that I’m hard pressed to keep up this facade of sanity
any longer. Hold all my calls.
If you know me, you know that
I’m paranoid by nature. Rose-tinted glasses can find no purchase on my tiny
head. I’m allergic to Chill Pills. I’ve been “having a bad day” for almost
three years now, and tomorrow ain’t looking so hot either. I’m not well and I
spend too much time alone, driven to self-imposed isolation by fever dreams of
madmen on the loose and mass graveyards crying out for more customers.
As you may have gathered, my
view of the world is dim at best. When I put the “Humanity” disc in my View-Master, I see a
hopelessly misshapen, fundamentally flawed band of lunatic castaways, piloting
Mother Earth in to the cosmic commode and serving champagne on the flight. As
for that famous “benefit of the doubt”, I’m beginning to doubt if I’ll ever
dole it out again. My faith in humankind is ever on the wane and shows no signs
of waxing. I don’t trust us. Not you, not you, and definitely not that crowd in
the
Simply put, I think we’re
screwed. In my 26 years of (gravely unscientific) research, I’ve determined
that terminal self-destruction is the modus operandi of the human race. If
there’s one thing we excel at, it’s killing. This is not melodrama or
bleeding-heart liberalism; this is fact. For every step we take forward as a unit,
we end someone else’s steps forever with a well placed incendiary round, or a smattering
of napalm for pizzaz. The kicker is, we tell ourselves that we had to do it, that killing is a part of
life, or that in some cases it is good
and right, a fulfillment of some
hastily erected sense of earthly duty or of God’s grand design. We have a
bottomless reservoir of justifications which serve to perpetuate this endless
cycle of violence. Rarely do we even attempt to understand our too-requited
love for bloodshed and savagery. Thus, when I picture the world in my mind’s
eye, I am moved to recall the timeless words of one Wayne
Campbell: “Well, it certainly does suck”.
Party on,
I know what you’re thinking. You
think I’m crazy, accentuating the negative to the exclusion of any positive. (You’re
not alone – that’s what my father thinks). Perhaps you think that my screeds
are indicative of my own repressed tendencies, furtive gropes exchanged between
my own self-loathing and a crippling fear of my fellow man. You might think
that I pursue my grim obsessions to an unhealthy degree, resulting in an almost
psycho-sexual desire to baptize myself in the tepid rivers of blood that flow forever
behind my closed eyelids. Admit it, folks: you think I’m nuts.
Well, relax, all you Freuds
of the world-wide-armchair. Apparently I’m small potatoes when it comes to
mental infirmity. If you think I’m crazy,
hang on to your party hats. In the words of Bachman-Turner-Overdrive,
“B-b-b-b-baby, you just ain’t seen nothing yet”. Let me introduce you to a guy
who makes me look like the Rock of Ages when it comes to emotional stability.
Meet David Thweatt. Mr.
Thweatt is the Supreme Allied Commander of the
The explanations for this
policy (which, incidentally, has been endorsed by the Governor of Texas) are
twofold. On the one hand, says Mr. Thweatt, his school of 115 students is situated
25 miles from the nearest Sheriff’s office, severely extending response time in
the event of a violent incident. Secondly, the agrarian community of Harrold
Wow. There are so many
problems bubbling under the surface of this story that I don’t even know where
to start. But wait, Mr. Thweatt isn’t done theorizing yet. Get a load of this
doozy: “We’ve had a very disturbing trend of school shootings in the
So, the federal government’s attempt to legislate guns out of
classrooms somehow sent a signal to a handful of isolated youths in far-flung
locations that it was time to descend on their respective schools and start
shooting? Not only does that make no sense, it is very unclear how it relates
to Mr. Thweatt’s fear of marauding highway madmen (whom he actually, I swear to
God, refers to as “bad guys”). I think we can all agree that school shootings
are, by and large, committed by students
who have a particular emotional attachment to the school itself, as the site of
their mistreatment at the hands of their peers or whatever the case may be. So
to speculate that the mere existence of a highway nearby places the school in
grave danger of completely random gun violence makes very little sense and
speaks to a paranoia and a fetishism for guns that can only be indicative of a
very ill national mind. Not to mention the fact that, given that unstable and
violent people do exist, what better way to attract them to Nowheresville
You folks are smart, so I
don’t think I need to go through all of the practical problems presented by
teachers carrying concealed guns in classrooms (friendly fire incidents, kids
getting a hold of Mrs. Cleary’s vintage Luger, etc.). What is perhaps more
troubling about this precedent is what it says about our national obsession
with guns and our refusal to admit that increasing the presence of guns almost
always goes hand in hand with increasing the incidence of gun violence, no
matter who’s wearing the guns under their blazers.
This is like John McCain’s
foreign policy in miniature. When Mr. McCain sees instability in the world, it often
seems that his first instinct is to drop bombs on it. When Mr. Thweatt sees
irrational specters of crazed gunmen descending on his sleepy community of 300
citizens, his first instinct is to
pass out guns to the men and women charged with educating the youth of his
district. There is a war going on in this man’s mind, and it speaks to the
brain damage we have sustained as a nation due to our inability to deal with
the root causes (psychological or emotional) of irrational violent acts. Rather
than weed guns out of our national zeitgeist, luminaries like Mr. Thweatt want
to arm everyone who could ever possibly be under threat of violence (which
means…everyone).
Thweatt and men like him are
overgrown children, bumbling excuses for adults flexing their muscles and
parading their toys before a pitiable group of kids who (unfortunately for
them) look to them to learn. I don’t doubt that Mr. Thweatt is host to some
genuine degree of concern for the students of Harrold, but the idea that their
well-being is in his hands is deeply troubling.
I wouldn’t be surprised if
this half-wit amateur social theorist is the type who would suggest, like our
politicians so often do, that video games and heavy metal music are partially
to blame for the kind of violence we saw in Columbine. Yes, video games, music,
Hollywood movies – but surely not the fact that kids look up to an adult
culture that is positively obsessed with guns and views them as a panacea for
the problem of violence.
Imagine the mental and
emotional climate created by a school wherein the kids know that their teachers
are packing heat. Forget the idea of how much easier this would make it for a
child to act out in dramatically violent ways, forget the obvious problems
posed by a teacher’s over-zealous, hail of gunfire response to a perceived
threat that isn’t really there…just think about the way you would feel in a
class being conducted by somebody with a gun. Class, open your textbooks to
“Dystopian Nightmare”!
But in
And there you have it my
friends: David Thweatt, a man who takes the time-tested combination of latent
paranoid schizophrenia and a troubling love of firearms to new heights of
lunatic grandeur. Perhaps only a person as troubled as me can truly understand
his mindset. I know his paranoia. I know his fear. I know him. Hell, this guy is like Bizarro Derm. His mental landscape
is so similar to mine, he reminds me so much of me, I’m almost worried that the
next time eats bad shellfish, I’ll get sick. He’s like my twin, save for the
fact that we are separated by a vast ideological chasm when it comes to the
problem of gun violence. And the fact that, however deeply disturbed I might be,
I’m still lucid enough to know that the solution to gun violence must be something a tad more enlightened
than more guns.
[1] Were this an audio presentation, a well-placed rimshot would have here served to indicate that I am making an irreverent “joke”, employing the technique of “reverse semantic hyperbole” as outlined by Sir Bryce Stockley in his book Rapier?!? I Hardly Know the Guy!: Selected Dialectics on Humour in the Middle Ages. For more on Humor Theory, be sure to check out Grace Welty’s erudite work What the F$@K Are You Laughing At, A$$hole?
- August 20, 2008








have you tried SAMe supplements?
As you know, I totally agree with everything you say, minus the caveats. So, this case is no different, you are right as usual and I have always thought that less guns = more safety. (and this is a little off the topic you are addressing but...)However, after the Bush Badministration gave itself the power to declare me or any American an enemy combatant without cause and which allows them to throw me somewhere no one will ever find me or defend me, I have considered how having a gun for myself might help keep me from that situation, if only temporarily.
P.S. whatever you do, don't take Wellbutrin
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By philip11101August 20, 2008 - 3:08pmIs that Al B. Sure on Kuby's show? I think he's over there now
The Jaco Pastorius Experience
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By the jaco pastor...August 21, 2008 - 7:39am