Not long ago I was in a lively discussion with a colleague about the underpinnings of a rash of shootings in State, along with the impact of television and movies in combination with epigenetics and cellular memory, and so on. We reminded each other of a quote that was attributed to Howard Bloom but that seems to have gotten lost in the passage of time:
“One
generation’s metaphors become another generation’s realities. A generation
without violence needs violent metaphors to exercise the animals in the
brain—the instinctual equipment that is languishing unused in the cerebral
storehouse. So, in the 1970s and 1980s, bands like AC/DC wrote songs like
‘shoot to kill.’ These songs entertained a generation to which real bloodshed
is mere fantasy. But the next generation imprints on the metaphors and turns
them into realities. So, in the 90s we have mass shootings by kids who take the
previous generation’s fantasies as blueprints for action.” This truly does
follow a brain axiom: by watching a person becomes changed.
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