Context matters.
Seung-Hui Cho’s violent and disturbing play, Richard McBeef, tells a disjointed story of a broken family and the murder of a 13-year-old boy. The writing is childish and unimaginative; the scene is surreal. How does this differ from movies like Saw or Reservoir Dogs? Context.
Many aspiring authors invent horrific scenes. Some progress to successful writing and directing careers. Most linger in obscurity. A minute number go on to commit violent acts. For those few, writing is less an act of creativity than an expression of anguish and rage. Knowing the difference before the fact is sometimes impossible. It’s a question that mental health professionals have wrestled with for decades.
Perhaps one of the distinguishing marks of writing-as-a-cry-for-help is the context in which it occurs. By all accounts, Cho was an isolated individual who behaved in a bizarre fashion. From an early age, he was described as uncommunicative and brooding, and his stalking behavior speaks of a young man who was baffled by the rules of normal social discourse.
So why didn’t someone stop him?
Sadly, they tried. In fact, several individuals correctly read the signs and tried to intervene. Professor Nikki Giovanni reportedly insisted that she would resign rather than continue to expose herself and her students to Cho’s threatening behavior. Giovanni’s department head, Lucinda Roy, was so troubled by Cho that she reached out to him, offering individual lessons and reporting his behavior to campus police. Another of Cho’s professors, Lisa Norris, is said to have approached her Dean regarding Cho’s behavior. Norris also reached out to Cho, referring him to the university counseling center.
Others did the right thing, too. After Cho was arrested for stalking, campus police took him to a psychiatric facility rather than the county jail, which might have been easier. Later, a judge recognized the signs of mental illness and ordered Cho to participate in outpatient treatment. Both the police and the judge could have let him slip through the cracks entirely.
These are cynical times for some people. In the American Psychological Association’s Monitor on Psychology, author Mary Pipher laments that, “we no longer live in a culture where we know most of the people we encounter.” The article was titled, “America: A toxic lifestyle?”
But many of the individuals who crossed paths with Cho responded appropriately – even compassionately – to a very troubled young man. If a finger of blame can be pointed in any direction, it is at the paradoxical notion of the collective “we.”
It is the collectivist’s willingness to trade individual liberty for the illusion of safety that has created gun-free zones that are so very attractive to killers like Cho. And, ironically, the same government that intrudes too far into our lives has withered in one of the few areas where one can make a strong case for government intervention in the lives of individuals: responding to the severely mentally ill.
According to a 2004 study by New York University’s Michael Almog, mental health care is difficult to obtain for “a population that is disproportionately and increasingly male, younger and of non-white race-ethnicity…. Psychiatric inpatients are overwhelmingly discharged to ‘the community’ and with a diminishing probability of discharge to a long-term psychiatric care facility.” The parallels to Cho’s life are eerie.
In the 1960’s, our country began dismantling the state mental hospital system, along with the infrastructure that allowed for the assessment and care of the severely mentally ill. Most noticeable among this group are young men, similar in age to Cho, who are experiencing their first severe psychotic disturbance.
In 1963, President Kennedy signed the Community Mental Health Centers Construction Act. It promised new outpatient mental health centers meant to replace state hospitals. State hospitals subsequently discharged their patients, but few of the new centers actually materialized. Even if the 2000 centers recommended by the National Institute for Mental Health had been built, decades of harsh experience have shown us that they are not equipped to handle severe mental illness. One of the biggest problems is that these patients simply don’t show up for treatment.
One of the reasons the state hospital system was dismantled was the promise of new medical knowledge. Another causal factor came from civil rights activists who regarded institutionalization as cruel and inhumane. Some activists seemed to regard mental illness as a right that should not be tampered with. “We” were willing to trade the safety of patients and the public for a utopian vision of boundless civil liberty. Now, the most severely mentally ill – those who were meant to benefit from deinstitutionalization – frequently end up homeless or in prison. They are too often the victims or the perpetrators of crime.
Clearly, “we” are confused about violence and civil rights. We force the responsibility of self-care on those who cannot manage it, while denying ourselves personal liberty and the means of self defense. But while collective confusion helped set the tone for the events at Virginia Tech, the wisdom of the individual nearly triumphed.
It was individuals – not an illusory collective – who acted heroically around Cho, even if they were unable to stop him. And it is individuals who will have the power and the responsibility to recognize and respond to the next troubled soul. Isolation, powerlessness, hostility, and pain: these are the context in which fantasies of violence can sometimes become reality. They are also the indication that it is time to follow the example of those who did what they could to prevent the tragedy at Virginia Tech.
References Almog, M. (2004). Managing United States mental healthcare policy: Changing patterns and trends in New York city acute psychiatry use, 1983-2000. Dissertation Abstracts International Section A: Humanities and Social Sciences, 64(7-A), 2640.
DeAngelis, T. (2007). America: a toxic lifestyle? Monitor on Psychology, 38(4), 50-52.
Moynihan, D. P. (July 12, 1999). Deinstitutionalization of the Mentally Ill. 106th Congress. Downloaded April 23, 2007 from: http://www.psychlaws.org/GeneralResources/article22.htm.
Torrey, E.F. & Zdandowicz, J.D. (1999). Deinstitutionalization hasn’t worked. The Washington Post, July 9, 1999. Downloaded April 23, 2007 from: http://www.psychlaws.org/GeneralResources/article17.htm
By Shawn Smith
(c) 2007
The Independence Institute
13952 Denver West Parkway, Suite 400
Golden, CO 80401
303-279-6536
www.independenceinstitute.org
INDEPENDENCE INSTITUTE is a non-profit, non-partisan Colorado think tank. It is governed by a statewide board of trustees and holds a 501(c)(3) tax exemption from the IRS. Its public policy research focuses on economic growth, education reform, local government effectiveness, and Constitutional rights.
Jon Caldara is the President of the Independence Institute.
Nothing written here is to be construed as necessarily representing the views of the Independence Institute or as an attempt to influence any election or legislative action.
PERMISSION TO REPRINT this paper in whole or in part is hereby granted provided full credit is given to the Independence Institute.
April 28, 2007 at 10:02
April 26, 2007
From Dr. Ignatius Piazza
Founder and Director
http://www.frontsight.com
info@frontsight.com
1.800.987.7719
Please Forward to Your Local Newspapers, Radio
Stations, and Television News Stations
LAS VEGAS NEVADA: Front Sight Firearms Training Institute
Members Are Following Front Sight’s Lead in Recognizing
the Heroes of the Virginia Tech Massacre.
In Addition to the Liviu Librescu Scholarship Awarded By
Dr. Ignatius Piazza and Front Sight Firearms Training
Institute to the Students Professor Librescu Saved During
the Virginia Tech Massacre, Front Sight Lifetime Member
John Wehner Purchases a Lifetime Legacy Membership and
Awards it to Virginia Tech Student Zach Petkewicz for His
Actions in Saving the Lives of His Classmates.
In a letter to Front Sight, John Wehner states, “An
amazing student at Virginia Tech held off the shooter who
killed all those kids. Zach Petkewicz is his name. It seems
he barricaded a door. Please find him and give him a
Lifetime Legacy Membership on me! I’ll even pay for his
first trip to Front Sight–air fare and hotel. God Bless
Him. He has wits about him. Training plus wits equals
greater success when things like this happen. If citizens in
our society have the proper training, the odds will improve
for the good guys in these horrible situations.”
Zach proves once again that courage is not the absence of
fear but rather to willingness to act and do the right thing
even when you are afraid.
See Zach’s interview as he answers a reporter’s
questions regarding what went through his mind when
the shooting started.
http://edition.cnn.com/2007/US/04/17/vtech.closecall/index.html
If you know Zach Petkewicz, please have him contact Front
Sight as his Lifetime Legacy Membership is waiting for him.
For more information on the Professor Librescu Scholarship:
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA: When the shooting attack reached his
classroom, 76 year old Liviu Librescu, a Holocaust survivor
and Israeli engineering and math lecturer at Virginia Tech,
blocked the doorway with his body and commanded his
students to flee. Professor Librescu’s heroic actions
allowed his students to escape through open windows saving
their lives at the expense of his own.
Dr. Ignatius Piazza, Founder and Director of Front Sight
Firearms Training Institute near Las Vegas, NV, is honoring
Professor Librescu’s valiant stand to protect his students
by awarding each of them a Front Sight Firearms Training
Institute “Legacy” Lifetime Membership so they may receive
world-class self defense firearms training and forever have
the education and ability to protect themselves, their
loved ones and their peers.
A Front Sight Firearms Training Institute “Legacy” Lifetime
Membership is valued at $8,900 and will be awarded to each
student Professor Librescu saved in his classroom by
willingly giving his life for theirs.
The benefits of the Legacy Membership
( http://www.frontsight.com/legacy-membership.asp )
include a lifetime of training in Empty Hand Defense,
Edged Weapons, and Front Sight’s most popular Defensive
Handgun, Tactical Shotgun, and Practical Rifle courses.
Each Legacy Membership also includes four certificates that
members can provide to family and friends to attend their
first course at Front Sight.
When asked why Front Sight is willing to provide tens of
thousands of dollars in free lifetime training memberships
to Professor Librescu’s students, Dr. Piazza responded,
“Professor Librescu’s actions under fire are inspiring. He
gave his life to save his students. I want the Librescu
family to know that such valor does not go unrecognized or
unrewarded. Front Sight will now look after Professor
Librescu’s students by providing them with a lifetime of
training that far exceeds law enforcement and military
standards without any boot camp mentality or drill
instructor attitudes. With Front Sight’s training,
Professor Librescu may rest in peace, knowing his
students will have the mindset and ability to protect
themselves, their loved ones, and their peers for the rest
of their lives. They will never have to run in fear again.
His legacy as a professor and protector will live on with
each of his students.”
Those students who were saved by Professor Librescu’s
heroism and would like to accept a Front Sight Firearms
Training Institute Legacy Lifetime Membership, may simply
mail a letter signed by the administrator of the Virginia
Tech Engineering Department verifying they were present in
Professor Librescu’s class the day he saved their lives and
Dr. Piazza will personally arrange delivery of their Legacy
Lifetime Membership.
Piazza adds, “Just as Professor Librescu’s experience as a
Holocaust survivor burned into his character the importance
of standing tall against aggression and hate, his students
will forever carry the understanding that such irrational
violence can happen at any time and any place. Front
Sight’s training will give them the ability to stop such
madness at a moment’s notice.”
For more information contact:
Dr. Ignatius Piazza
Founder and Director
http://www.frontsight.com
info@frontsight.com
1.800.987.7719
LikeLike
April 28, 2007 at 10:04
[…] Pulp Nonfiction: Why Pulp Nonfiction: Why “We” Didn’t Stop the Virginia Tech Killings « Conservative L… […]
LikeLike
October 1, 2009 at 12:20
Zach Petkewicz is a hero and guardian angel of Lithuanian origin. Petkewicz’s real family name is Petkevicius. I am so happy he is around to celebrate the 1000th anniversary of the name of the country Lithuania.
LikeLike
October 1, 2009 at 12:22
Okay…
LikeLike