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I came across this amazing story of a cop suing a school after HE
fired a gun in a classroom. I tracked down the article which appears in
Early to Rise edited by Michael
Masterson. Here is the story... to amuse or maybe educate you on why we get
it easy in Australia.
A Drug Enforcement Agency officer, attempting to demonstrate gun
safety to a class of grammar school children, shoots himself in the thigh.
The videotape makes its way to the Internet, where it appears as a "top
20 video" on a website called Dumb Cop. Claiming the release of
the video clip has damaged his career, he hires a lawyer ... who hires a
publicist. And suddenly, he's being interviewed on NBC about a suit
he's filing against the school system.
The NBC reporter who interviews him characterizes his career as "exemplary"
and admires him for playing down his injury in front of the children. "You
must have been in great pain," he says in a commiserating tone. "Was it
sheer pride that kept you going?"
In the U.S. today, it seems that there's nothing people won't do for
money and fame. Any act or accident, no matter how stupid or
disgraceful, has the potential to be transubstantiated into the new,
shameless American dream.
America's writers and journalists have always had a fascination with
miscreants, losers, and bad guys ... and some of them became widely known.
But until recently such characters were neither paid nor pampered by the
press that publicized them.
In the old days of American idolism, a Jesse James or Clyde Barrow might,
through a string of evil and illegal actions, become infamous. But he could
never hope to enjoy fame. He might benefit temporarily from the money he
stole, but he wouldn't expect additional riches for the rest of his
life from interview payments, public speaking fees, and publishing
royalties.
Until recently, we also always held our antiheroes in contempt. We loved
what we knew should be hated. Nowadays, that distinction is fading fast.
Making a sufficient fool of yourself on national television - either by
failing miserably as an apprentice for Donald Trump or by blurting out your
secrets for Jerry Springer - is a virtual guarantee of additional fame and
fortune ... including, if you've really been disgraceful, a movie deal.
Lawyers, journalists, publicists, and media executives have discovered what
their predecessors either didn't know or didn't want to find out: There
is no limit to America's fascination with the seamy side of our culture ...
and the fastest way to cash in on this fascination is to aim low.
In other words, if you are going to be bad and/or stupid, be really, really
bad and/or stupid and who knows ... you may end up on the morning news.
It's sad but it's very true. If you judged America by its most popular
television broadcasts (the morning news, afternoon game shows, and evening
reality programs), you'd surely conclude that integrity and common sense are
passe.
Luckily, we have a media that's bigger than network news. Thanks to cable
and the Internet, we have hundreds of news and entertainment options. Some
of these - not many, but some - are not afraid to call a spade a spade.
You don't need to be an expert in handgun safety to know that:
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Accidentally
discharging a weapon in a classroom full of children requires an amazing
combination of stupidity and ignorance.
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Anyone who does so
should never be allowed to carry a gun again.
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Any publicity that
such a person merits should be negative.
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Any money that
exchanges hands as a result of such an accident should be from the
responsible party (the cop) to the true victims (the children).
We can't do much
about television's love affair with ratings, our culture's fascination with
crassness, or the increasingly popular practice of legal action as a means
of acquiring wealth. And neither can you.
What can we do? We can surround ourselves with people who maintain pre-21st
century values and we can try to live by those values ourselves. We can work
hard and stay smart and do good and hope that - in the end - if we don't get
everything we want, at least we will get everything we deserve.
Editor:
Great article... pity that it isn't confined to America!! We
have Big Brother... and more.
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