WALSH: The Only
Thing Preventing Us From Descending Into Civil War
ByMatt Walsh
@MattWalshBlog
We’re told that “division” and “partisanship” and
“bigotry” are destroying America. “Hate" is the cancer in our cultural
bloodstream, they say. We must fight against hate speech and hate crimes and
hate in every other form. There is so much hate, allegedly. Some people are
even worried that another civil war might be on the horizon.
I think we flatter ourselves. There will be no civil war.
We’re far too lazy for such an onerous pursuit. It’s easier to snipe at each
other in the comments section or shoot off insults on social media. We much
prefer a tweet war to an actual war because tweet wars don’t interrupt a
Netflix binge.
During the real Civil War, men marched over mountains in
bare feet in the winter. They lived on salt pork and black coffee made from
acorns. They charged headlong into cannon fire. They used whiskey as an
anesthetic while they had their limbs amputated. They had convictions, and they
died for them.
We do not have that kind of conviction. We have enough
conviction to participate in a hashtag campaign, or to hurl a snarky gif at our
cowering adversaries, but civil war? We need not worry our silly heads about
that. We spend literally billions of dollars on iPhone upgrades, porn, video
games, tickets to superhero films, and accessories for our pets. How many
people would be willing to jeopardize a life of such insane, stifling luxury
for the sake of fighting a gruesome battle out in the street? Not many. Not
nearly enough to get even a halfway respectable war together.
I don’t say this with disappointment, by the way. I say
it because it leads me to an important point: hatred is not destroying our
society. Hatred could destroy a society, and has destroyed many in the past,
but our case is different. The cancer in our blood is indifference. Our moral
and intellectual apathy is the thing that will prevent our country from
breaking apart or exploding into civil war, but it’s also the thing that will
drag our nation, as one whole piece, into ruin and decay.
We have misdiagnosed all the symptoms. The occasional
bursts of rioting and violence in the streets, whether committed by Antifa or
BLM or white nationalists (the one time that happened), are the result of a
deep-seated nihilism, not bigotry. The same can be said for most of the recent
mass shootings. The same can be said for the monsters who live streamed the
kidnapping and torture of a disabled man, or the teenagers who laughed as a man
drowned right in front of them, or the people who watch and cheer as
suicides are broadcast online. The rising suicide rate
itself, along with the drug abuse epidemic and our reported "mental health
crisis," all speak to this same problem. Throw in our obsessive
TV-watching, our addiction to smart phones and the internet, and the rabid
materialism that causes herds of Black Friday shoppers to trample each other in
pursuit of heavily discounted electronic equipment. The collapse of the family,
the decline in religion, all of this comes back to the same thing: emptiness,
indifference, apathy.
Here's the dirty little secret about the nature of the
disputes in this country: most of the combatants screaming and fighting don't
actually care. I saw a thread on Facebook this morning where five or six people
were lobbing invective at each other over the issue of Trump's Jerusalem
policy. As I read through the exchange, I got the distinct impression that
nobody involved in the discussion actually knew anything about the topic, or
cared. I could imagine one typing his fury-filled comment as he waited in line at
Starbucks, another passionately arguing his case while watching a YouTube video
of cats chasing laser pointers. People fight with each other online because
it's something to do, it's a form of entertainment, no more serious or
significant than the cat video playing on the other tab.
We are not really a hateful people. We are certainly
callous, but our callousness stems from the same hollowness and indifference
that informs every aspect of modern American life. Hollow, callous, indifferent
people do not fight civil wars. Rather, they float softly into oblivion. That
will be our fate, at least if we stay on our current trajectory. The country
will not break apart. We will remain stuck together. But our unity won't be due
to any kind of common principle or shared understanding. It is more like a kind
of paralysis. Or, you might say, rigor mortis.
No comments:
Post a Comment