Sunday, August 5, 2012

Support your fellow Americans in Oak Creek, Wisconsin...

A call to stop politicizing incidents like today's mass shooting, before the victims are even properly memorialized.

I’m sitting here, as first reports of yet another mass shooting surface, and waiting for the inevitable.

The inevitable blaming of the shooter’s parents. His doctors. His political party. His church. His place of work. His mental illness or lack thereof.

The inevitable victim blaming. Blaming the shooting on their religion, and other on Sikhs. Blaming it on Christians, on Muslims, on Jews. Blaming of Indians, Indian-Americans, whites, Republicans, and Democrats.

Blaming the incident on gun laws, gun manufacturers, and the availability of weapons.

It’s only a matter of time before a cable news talking head, an anonymous person on a web forum, a Youtuber, a commenter on a newspaper’s website, begins with the blaming.

Blaming anyone, or anything, for this latest tragic, heartbreaking mass shooting.

Except the shooter himself.

No one made the decision to pick up the weapon and tear into these innocent people at their place of worship, except the gunman. No one forced his hand, as far as we now, and no one made the decision on his behalf. No one deserves blame more than this disturbed individual.

And yet, over the course of the next day or two, you and I will be subjected to speculation and heresy at every channel flip, and every Facebook refresh. The 24 hour cable news networks will strive to fill every second of programming with this most recent shooting, whether the garbage their spewing is true or not. And politicians, no matter their party, will be happy to help them do so, using this event to spur their own personal political agendas… which, mostly likely, is to get elected again.

We may not be able to stop CNN, MSNBC, or Fox News. We can’t silence their vitriol-spurting, bickering politicians. But we can stop them from allowing US to think that every single tragedy is a chance to espouse one’s political beliefs.

Don’t be the newspaper commenter, or Facebook poster, or blogger, who parrots what you’re being told by these networks, your local Senator, or your favorite talk radio host. Think for yourself. Look within, and stand by your fellow Americans both in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, and in Aurora, Colorado.

The shooting in Wisconsin is not a political event. It is a real tragedy wherein people lost their lives.

This shooting has hit me particularly hard. I think it’s the image of these women, courtesy the Milwaukee Journal Sentinal.
To them, this shooting is not a chance to get ratings, to try to push gun control, or to get one’s name out there. Their friends and family were inside the temple, and they will suffer the ramifications from this event the rest of their lives.

I may not have the same name for God as the people who worship at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin, but I plan on praying for the victims and their families nonetheless. I urge you to join me. If you don’t pray, perhaps you can volunteer for something in their name. Donate money, perhaps blood is needed. Maybe the temple would even appreciate letters of support from their fellow Americans. (Here's the contact info for the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin.)

Anything but writing another hate-filled, polarizing comment, no matter who it’s directed at, on Facebook or your favorite TV network’s website.