© Gemmapiccin
Each day around this nation, and indeed the world, one can find endless stories of horrific animal cruelty--torture and murder so vile it defies imagination--conceived of and carried out by kids as young as 3 years old.There appears to be a proliferation of fresh-faced psychopaths, spawning faster than the poisonous spores of a Frankenstenian experiment gone awry. Why and how does such evil take root?
The problem is pervasive and multifaceted, but the most obvious cause for such blatant disregard for life is a lack of compassion and empathy passed on from parent to child. Generations of individuals perpetuating cruelty toward non-humans based on a multitude of flawed and erroneous notions, including the following:
Religious bias -- The mainstream and exceedingly rancorous belief that animals were put here to [ab]use, objectify, murder and consume based on twisted religious doctrines that purportedly give mankind "permission" to do so predicated on his so-called "superiority."
Tradition -- The mindless argument that because generation upon generation has perpetuated acts of barbarism, these acts are somehow justified, and therefore should be unquestioningly accepted and permanently sanctified.
Culture -- As with tradition, cultural biases institutionalize brutality towards non-humans to the point of rabid glorification. Whether it be the Spanish with their bullfighting and the torture and murder of animals for religious festivals; the Faroese who make an annual holiday out of the mass butchery of cetaceans, encouraging their children to participate in the frenzied stabbings of whales they systematically strand; or the Canadian seal slaughter in which hundreds of thousands of helpless babies' skulls are crushed or which are skinned alive or shot; every culture has its atrocities. The logic behind such ingrained savagery is as expendable as the animals themselves.
Pseudo-scientific propaganda -- the deceptive, fraudulent belief that humans require animal testing and experimentation for our benefit, yet, an ounce of common sense will lead one to the very real conclusion that the only legitimate "testing" begins in earnest, the first day these drugs and medical devices are released to the public.
Hundreds of thousands of humans die or are irreparably damaged by animal-tested, FDA-approved drugs/medical devices/procedures every single year--statistics that the public is never allowed to access.Inferiority -- a general acceptance that non-humans are "lesser" beings and thus deserve whatever demonic behavior we decide to impose upon them. Another unfounded bias propped up by the ubiquitous dominion/superiority theory, which even secularists conveniently use as an excuse to abuse and murder non-human animals.
Ignorance -- the fact is, few studies have ever been done that place emphasis on the intrinsic value of non-humans, themselves.
The overwhelming majority of studies conducted using animals as subjects are based solely on how they can be exploited for man's benefit. Given this reality, how can human beings state with unequivocal certainty that animals do not function on a level equal to--yet different from--ours? Should animals continue to be forced to suffer myriad indignities due to man's own selfish, speciesist ineptitude at being unable or unwilling to decipher their intellectual capacities, emotional and psychological depth, complexities and needs?
These glaring societal prejudices easily become facts in the minds of children when they remain unchallenged by parents, teachers, clergy, government officials and peers.
The same deep-seated, nefarious habits of "culture" and "tradition" consistently take preference over compassion, common decency and basic logic. Our society condones and perpetuates these backward attitudes as kids move through the educational system and are further continuously indoctrinated by an uninformed, violence-mongering, callous media.A five-year-old has the ability to subconsciously process this perverted belief system, and thus accepts the actions of the majority as the truth if s/he is not taught otherwise. When there is no healthy, altruistic, non-violent model of societal behavior for kids to draw upon, then the consequences should be obvious--a child who eventually acts out what s/he has been taught--VIOLENCE. Yet, in our society, this connection is totally overlooked. Why? Because the sickest parts of ourselves as human beings go completely unrecognized by us.
Parents and other authority figures have taught the child how to successfully compartmentalize violence based on his/her own "level of consequence." S/he immediately understands, by observation, that certain living beings can be victimized and murdered without repercussions, while others are off limits. This facilitates confusion in a society that continues to descend into widespread psychopathy, where there is increasing evidence that those lines--between good and evil--have not only been erased, but reversed.
We are a species constantly convincing ourselves that whatever we do to those who are powerless against us is justified, and that justification becomes the license to conduct ourselves in the most monstrous ways possible.
Instead of learning our lessons from the tragic events of multiple mass shootings and other graphic displays of perverse behavior our kids are engaged in, we are unable to draw a connection between our own sickness and theirs.
We scratch our collective, clueless heads, and while it becomes fodder for discussion immediately after disturbing events occur, unfortunately the REAL problem is never addressed. Instead, the media fuels the exact same insanity when it panders to the most disturbed, hostile segments of our society. One that promotes hunting programs for preschoolers--gun-toting toddlers void of the capability to fully comprehend suffering and death; preteens in 4-H programs, taught that non-humans are nothing more than meat to be sold to the highest bidder, where greed continuously takes precedence over empathy or ethics and sentient beings are objectified as "products." And school systems that have hit rock bottom by introducing a new obscenity, so-called "survival" classes, teaching impressionable minds that it's acceptable for both teachers and students to partake in the torture and killing of fully complex beings --TOGETHER. Legitimizing even further, the invisibility of non-humans, as unlimited in their individuality and capacity for suffering as any human.
As if this despicable behavior isn't generating enough moral ambiguity, it is the very individuals whom younger kids often admire and want to emulate--their teachers--who are guiding them toward reprehensible, psychopathic, murderous behavior.
Programs that promote cruelty and cheapen life have absolutely NO business within a school curriculum or anywhere else for that matter. If society is to survive and advance, it is imperative that humane-education programs become part of every child's schooling. We must work toward completely ridding society and the educational system of programs and behavior designed to desensitize kids to the suffering of non-humans. Unless and until this happens, we will continue churning out monsters devoid of all feeling -- and hastening our own destruction in the process.
Reader Comments
I grew up in the woods in central Arkansas.
As soon as I was able to hunt, I hunted. I wanted to do little else.
I so wanted to be like my Dad, who brought back wondrous things from field and stream, exotic foods beyond the little we had to eat from the grocers.
My rationalization was to be the finest "marksman" I could be. That meant, using my fishing gear first, my BB gun next and .22 rifle next and then my .410 shotgun, I could contribute to the exotic fare we all enjoyed, as did my Grandfather and his people before that.
I realized much later in life that all I wanted to become, at that time, was an accomplished marksman.
I could have done that with some targets and bullets and, well...you see.
I was devastating to the bird population around our area. Everything provided target challenge for me, rationalizing with John Audubon that, with having a bird in hand, I would have the chance to study nature up close.
Beyond that, photographs serve the same function...something that Audubon had not.
Then I went on to be a fairly decent bird carver.
The turning point is what needs to be discovered and presented.
Painful awareness is not pleasant and not always presented timely.
It will inestimably hold us back from collective ascension if allowed to flourish.
Plant seeds of conscience now, wherever and whenever the opprtunity arises.
I have repented for those sins in later years; but, how can one take it back?
More importantly - How can one not have that knowing that it causes pain...and not reconsider?
This article would be considerably better if the author and the website it appeared at weren't so completely ensnared by psychopathy themselves.
There are relatively few people who even begin to accurately recognize the dimensions and the various routines of the prison in which their minds and the minds of others are so effectively encased.
One can toot one's horn all day, every day, but this does not effectively amount to anything.
Yes, there are EXTREME forms of psychopathy, but then so, too, are there many other forms.
ned, out
@brenda:
I personally doubt whether children throwing rocks at seagulls at the beach is all that vicious. Now, if they had the hard throwing, accurate arms of an Aaron Rodgers or a Roger Clemens, that would have been vicious.
Additionally: If this so bothered you, you could have walked over and yelled at them. Had they thrown rocks at you, then that too, would have been vicious.
I guess.
ned
@lilvoce:
I appreciated your comment (it was thoughtfully written), but you still might want to learn a little bit more (a lil' bit) about the distribution of pain centers.
As they are presently located.
Thanks.
ned
Ned -
I don't get your point, yet... but, I appreciate the response.
Maybe rephrase?
I like your style at any rate.
Thanks.
As the author of "society is creating psychopathic kids," who just happened to be searching some of the websites which picked up my article, I'd like to thank you Brenda, for your kind praise. I would also like to commend you on your sensitivity regarding the cruelty displayed on the beach. You were witnessing, first hand, the kind of behavior I spoke of when I stated that parents pass on their psychopathy to their kids by their lack of empathy and compassion, in situations exactly like the ones you mention.
The comments of nedlud are typical of people I refer to as "kill-blind". They are so indoctrinated into violence that when they witness it they do not recognize it as being problematic. There are no red flags alerting them that this type of behavior is wrong. Nedlud's speciesist tone in dismissing the incident -- just because they happened to be seagulls -- shows the standard contempt, arrogance and ignorance reflective of the majority of society, unfortunately. Thus the reason for writing the article in the first place.
To lilvoce: Thank you for sharing your story. I'm relieved to know you have evolved into someone who has learned from the past. Wise words, well penned.