This is crazy I made this post 9 years ago now look at the bullshit we in..This movie warned us what would happen🤦🏾♂️ #contagion #covid #theywarnedus https://www.instagram.com/p/CYwjV2RFH4D/?utm_medium=tumblr

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This is crazy I made this post 9 years ago now look at the bullshit we in..This movie warned us what would happen🤦🏾♂️ #contagion #covid #theywarnedus https://www.instagram.com/p/CYwjV2RFH4D/?utm_medium=tumblr

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But ... I'm Still Good, Right?
Getting Off on Redemptive Violence
Remember in Total Recall (1990) Richter chasing Quaid up a crowded escalator in the subway station? Four of Richter's henchmen wait at the top, guns drawn, then start pelting some poor schlep in front of Quaid (the indomitable Arnold Schwarzenegger).
Is the guy dead from those first few hits? No time to think about d'at, girly-man! Instead, pelted-guy becomes human shield cuz ... he can't possibly mind at this point, right? A few blood-splattering pelts later, human shield becomes human catapult launched at Richter (Michael Ironside), allowing for another happy escape.
Why the hell did I revel in this gluttony of carnage almost 30 years ago?
For a dominator culture such as ours, there always has to be a "bad guy" and violence is always the way to be rid of them, however temporarily awesome (ahem), I mean distasteful, it may turn out. Theologian Walter Wink first coined the term "redemptive violence" for this imperial-culture phenomenon stemming from the Babylonian creation myth Enuma Elish. Check out Wink's analysis here. Long story short, violence is inherently divine and must be enacted to create order from chaos. Oh and you, mortal, are here to serve the gods and their earthly representatives since--made from violent origin--you're violent, too, and need to be controlled. According to Wink, the basic tenets of this myth went viral into the religions of Syria, Phoenicia, Egypt, Greece, Rome, Germany, Ireland, India, and China since 1250 BCE.
To Wink, redemptive violence is the dominant religion of our society, more so than Christianity or secularism. At first it was a story we came to believe--violence as necessary/natural--but now it's pumped into all cultural pedagogy as mass anesthetizing.
Wink came to this by observing, of all things, his own kids watching cartoons: "Children identify with the good guy so that they can think of themselves as good. This enables them to project out onto the bad guy their own repressed anger, violence, rebelliousness, or lust ... viewers are then able to reassert control over their own inner tendencies, repress them, and re-establish a sense of goodness without coming to any insight about their own inner evil. The villain’s punishment provides catharsis ... in a guilt-free orgy of aggression. Salvation is found through identification with the hero."
Think about the end of Recall, where Quaid and Melina (the lovely Rachel Ticotin) release an orgy of bullets on Richter's soldiers. They even "change positions" as Quaid fakes using the hologram to kill two while she uses it and two others kill themselves. How Kama of them! And when Richter is amputated horrifically yet oh-so-satisfyingly by the elevator platform?
You think Quaid reflected on how he used a guy for a human shield, let alone any possibility of PTSD from holding Richter's ragged, bloody stumps? Total Recall (1990) remains one of the most violent movies ever made.
Wink isn't saying all media and movies promote this worldview. Both Marvel and D.C. recently wrestled with redemptive violence as a major theme--in Captain America: Civil War and Batman v. Superman--however decently/imperfectly. The problem is, Wink argues, our collective society never outgrows this childish, non-reflective, simplistic notion of "good guys" and "bad guys."
As kids become young adults, the catharsis just gets transferred from cartoons to thousands of deaths witnessed in violent programming and games; having watched thousands of acts legitimized rape in online porn, etc. In more extreme cases, they veer toward militias and religious, political, or racial extremism; sports obsession; and, of course, more mass shootings.
Again Wink: "Once children have been indoctrinated into the expectations of a dominator society, they may never outgrow the need to locate all evil outside themselves. Even as adults they tend to scapegoat others for all that is wrong in the world."
I'm not sayin' I'm all grown up. Arnold's Conan the Barbarian remains great mythology I'll probably watch again (despite the black bad-guy trope). But once Raf and I run Recall and T2 through the P.O.C. lens in our podcasts, I'm deleting most of Ah-nold's movies from my digital library.
It's not funny to me anymore to watch Spanish-speaking soldiers stumbling into his bullets in Commando or bufooned Arabs in True Lies, and not seeing any enviable black male character in any of his films. They're either traitors, "bad guys," or are "good," but all die in Arnold films ... every time. I don't need reminders of how far P.O.C. representation has come (however grudgingly) since the Reagan-Bush years.
The truth is we are the teenagers our parents warned us about. We are the teenagers that stay up into the early hours of the morning and sleep to the late hours of the day. We are the teenagers who make the worst decisions, we know we shouldn't have made in the moment, but do them anyway, And we regret them for weeks,months, years and lifetimes to come. And we do regret. We do regret. We are the teenagers who dress in all black when we walk down the street, while everyone crosses the road to get away from us. We fall in love with the wrong people, who seemed right for us at the time. But were they ever wrong for us. We cry over the people who do us wrong, and we accidentally overlook the ones who do us right. We stress over our homework, accidentally talk about our friends behind their backs, as they do the same to us. We seem to have more zits on our face, then money in our pockets, dreams that last miles but no way of getting to them, We over eat and feel bloated and cry when we see the number on the scale. We are forced to make decisions about our future when we have no idea where we are going. Yes we are the teenagers our parents warned us about, but in some weird twisted way, we are the teenagers we always aspired to be. -J