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Why Politics Makes Us Kill

The surprising roots of homicide.

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  • Posted By: eleanor.miller @ 11/13/2009 7:17:38 PM

    It's ironic that the Ft. Hood massacre happened to soon after Roth's book was published. His theories seem to fit perfectly with Hassan's alleged motives: http://blogs.journalism.cuny.edu/interactive2010/2009/11/13/what-really-makes-people-kill/

  • Posted By: Mr. JD @ 11/05/2009 4:21:20 PM

    Doesn't make a whole lot of sense; we are among the most empowered populaces in the world. Yes, that includes "minorities" - most other developed countries have their lower classes and related issues as well. It's plausible that our perception of our empowerment might be lower than most, particularly due to higher expectations, but I'm not inclined to see this as a major factor.

    If you're so worried about it, maybe we should can the "class warfare" politics. They have become popular ways to get elected these days. Outrage buys votes, but does it help the voters?

  • Posted By: Iconoblaster @ 11/05/2009 1:34:26 PM

    The political environment obviously affects the social, emotional, economic and ethical environment people experience in their daily lives, and so must have some effect on homicide rates, generally, but the causes of murder are as varied as the people who commit this crime. Greed, anger, lust, fear, insanity, revenge, ambition, jealousy, or any number of other emotions may play a role in motivating a given individual to kill... its pretty hard to draw a straight line between any broad social condition and all these varied reasons that might move one person to destroy another. Perhaps conditions under which "life is cheap" (like epidemic plauge, lawlessness, extreme poverty or war) lead people, generally, to kill with less provocation than otherwise, but I'd bet the specific reasons for any given killing would be the same.

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