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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: The Shame Sham Like all societies before it, our society considers nothing more shameful than to be shameless. Thus, the Internetwhich binds our society together like cheese binds a colonis crammed with so much public shaming, it should be ashamed of itself. Sticking your fist into the electronic beehive, you will be bitten by a thousand types of public shaming: age-shaming v. youth-shaming, slut-shaming v. virgin-shaming, fat-shaming v. skinny-shaming, and poor-shaming v. wealth-shaming. You will find liberals shaming liberals in the ongoing intersectionality wars, resulting in gay-on-gay shaming and black-on-black shaming. Aint that a shame? Yes, it is. Its a shame indeed, but dont expect the public shamers to feel ashamed of their public shaming. Have they no shame? No, not for themselves. Like all moralists, they exist only to shame others. Public shaming is nothing new. It has long and ignoble history, from Roman crucifixions to the Spanish Inquisition to the shame societies of China (with its psychotic and murderous struggle sessions) and Japan (with its ritual of seppuku which, though self-directed, is often spurred by a suicidal sense of social shame). Every self-justifying social organismi.e., all of themputs its outliers and miscreants through some form of hairshirts, dunce caps, perp walks, and tarring and feathering, and they never seem to feel ashamed of indulging in such cruel and depressingly typical rituals, at least not while its happening. Societies only seem capable of coming to terms with their collective potential for cruelty when it is too late to do anything about it. Thus, Americans still shed tears about Emmett Till and the Scottsboro Boys while turning a blind eye to modern black flash mobs. Puritan New England remains infamous for its public stockades and witch trials and coldhearted shunning of anyone who dared deviate from the rigidly humorless social norm. This colonial culture of shaming was immortalized two centuries later in Nathaniel Hawthornes The Scarlet Letter, where accused adulteress Hester Prynne was forced to wear a red A on her dress as a lifelong emblem of shame. Those who foolishly believe that history is linear rather than cyclical seem to feel that weve progressed past such shaming rituals. After all, adultery is no longer a shunning offense; in some circles, its a matter of pride. And its true that Americas legal system no longer dunks witches in water or places offenders in the stocks for passersby to hurl rotten fruit at them. But it still exists in the form of judges sentencing petty offenders to public-humiliation rituals where they are forced to stand in public wearing sandwich boards declaring their crime. Outside the legal system, our reputedly progressive society has merely swapped out the scarlet A for a scarlet R, a scarlet S, and a scarlet Hsometimes all three at once. Modern social-justice warriors, those little mob-motivated creeps, justify their behavior with the excuse that at least this time around, theyre fighting for an irrefutably righteous cause. Sure. Thats what they all say. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: X-15 (#0)
Who says perfect diction is not cool?
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