OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
These Are Desperately Uncivil Times. We Are
Disgracing America.
May 25,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/25/opinion/roxane-gay-uvalde-school-shooting.html
Roxane Gay
By Roxane
Gay
Dr. Gay, a
contributing Opinion writer, is the author of the memoir “Hunger” and the
forthcoming “How to Be Heard.”
There is a
cultural obsession nowadays with civility, with the idea that if everyone is
mannered enough, any impasse or difference of opinion can be bridged. But these
are desperately uncivil times. And there is nothing more uncivilized than the
political establishment’s inurement to the constancy of mass shootings in the
United States: 60 deaths in Las Vegas, 49 deaths in Orlando, 26 deaths at Sandy
Hook, 13 deaths in Columbine, 10 deaths in Buffalo. Adults, schoolchildren,
concertgoers, nightclub revelers, grocery shoppers, teachers.
The scale
of death in Uvalde, Texas, is unfathomable. At least 19 children and two
teachers are dead. These staggering numbers will not change one single thing.
Time and
again we are told, both implicitly and explicitly, that all we can do is endure
this constancy of violence. All we can do is hope these bullets don’t hit our
children or us. Or our families. Or our friends and neighbors. And if we dare
to protest, if we dare to express our rage, if we dare to say enough, we are
lectured about the importance of civility. We are told to stay calm and vote as
an outlet for our anger.
Incivility
runs through the history of this country, founded on stolen land, built with
the labor of stolen lives. The document that governs our lives effectively
denied more than half of the population the right to vote. It counted only
three-fifths of the enslaved population when determining representation. If you
want to talk about incivility, let us be clear about how deep those roots
reach.
The United
States has become ungovernable not because of political differences or protest
or a lack of civility but because this is a country unwilling to protect and
care for its citizens — its women, its racial minorities and especially its
children.
When
politicians talk about civility and public discourse, what they’re really
saying is that they would prefer for people to remain silent in the face of
injustice. They want marginalized people to accept that the conditions of
oppression are unalterable facts of life. They want to luxuriate in the power
they hold, where they never have to compromise, never have to confront their
consciences or lack thereof, never have to face the consequences of their
inaction.
Gun
violence is one of the problems with which they need not concern themselves
because they believe these calamities will never affect them or their families.
Instead, these politicians talk about protecting our Second Amendment rights —
and they have reimagined the Second Amendment as something that will
accommodate whatever the gun lobby wants, rather than what the Constitution
actually says. With a conservative majority on the Supreme Court, the continued
reinvention of the Second Amendment will likely flourish, unchecked.
When asked
for solutions, Republicans talk about arming teachers and training them to
defend their classrooms. We hear about how good guys with guns will valiantly
stop mass shootings, even though there have been good guys with guns at several
mass shootings and they have not prevented these tragedies.
These
politicians offer platitudes and prayers and Bible verses. But they do not care
to do what must be done to stop the next gun massacre or the average of 321
people shot a day in the United States — including 42 murders and 65 suicides.
It is critical that we state this truth clearly and repeatedly and loudly. That
we don’t let them hide behind empty rhetoric. That they know we see through
their lies. They must know that we know who they truly are.
They called
for civility again and again, as they did during protests after Black people
were shot or killed by the police in Ferguson and Kenosha and Minneapolis and
Louisville. They called for civility when a draft of a Supreme Court decision
that would overturn Roe v. Wade leaked this month. The draft decision tells
people of childbearing age that they have no bodily autonomy. It is barbaric.
In the wake
of the leak, there were lawful, peaceful protests outside some of the justices’
homes. Journalists and politicians proceeded to fall all over themselves to
condemn these protests as incivility — as if the protests were the problem. The
Washington Post editorial board wrote that justices have a right to private
lives, that public protests should never breach certain boundaries.
They call
for civility, but the definition of civility is malleable and ever-changing.
Civility is whatever enables them to wield power without question or challenge.
In March of
last year, Senator Christopher Murphy of Connecticut reintroduced the
Background Check Expansion Act. The bill is common-sense legislation mandating
federal background checks for all firearm purchases, including private sales
and transfers. Nothing has happened with this bill. The vast majority of voters
support background checks, but Republicans in Congress are preventing the bare
minimum of gun legislation.
Their
obstruction is vile malfeasance. These are not people who value life, no matter
what they say. They value power and control. This too we must state clearly and
loudly and repeatedly.
There have
been at least 213 mass shootings in the first 145 days of 2022. The politicians
on both sides of the aisle who have enabled this convey no real sense of
understanding or caring about the incivility of children practicing
active-shooter drills and wearing bulletproof backpacks to school. They care
nothing, it seems, about children being instructed to throw things at a gunman
who might enter their classroom. They care about nothing but their own
political interests.
On Tuesday
morning, at least 19 children’s parents woke them up and helped them brush
their teeth, fed them breakfast, made sure they had their little backpacks
packed. They held their children’s small hands as they walked or drove them to
school. Those children were alive when their parents waved to them and handed
them their lunches and kissed their cheeks. Their lives were precious, and they
mattered.
The
greatest of American disgraces is knowing that no amount of rage or protest or
devastation or loss will change anything about this country’s relationship to
guns or life. Nothing will change about a craven political system where policy
is sold to the highest bidder. Language is inadequate for expressing this lack
of civility.
Parents,
did you talk to your kids about the school shooting in Texas?
We plan to
publish a selection of responses in a follow-up article this week.
What, if
anything, did you say to your kids? How old are they, and how did that affect
how you approached the conversation?
Roxane Gay
(@RGay) is a contributing Opinion writer for The New York Times. She is the
author of the books “Ayiti,” “An Untamed State,” “Bad Feminist,” “Difficult
Women” and “Hunger,” among others. She writes a newsletter, The Audacity, and
she hosts the podcast “The Roxane Gay Agenda.” @RGay


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