The Picayune Item

Columns

January 4, 2013

Peace, good will under fire

MERIDIAN, Miss. — “When Herod realized that he had been outwitted by the Magi, he was furious, and he gave orders to kill all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity who were two years old and under, in accordance with the time he had learned from the Magi.” (Matt. 2:16)

The precious children massacred in Newtown led our preacher to remind us that the Christmas story had a dark side too.

We like to celebrate and commercialize the bright side. We ignore but still commercialize the dark side.

Huh?

Many businesses target and profit from the dark side just as they do the bright side.

The ever-more-violent video game business is booming. Sales of military style weapons hyped in video games are brisk. News and social media fixation on Newtown and related divisive issues boost advertising profits. Even the business side of politics is finding bonuses, using the issue fallout from Newtown to mobilize and build war chests for looming fights.

 Precious children and precious life were valueless to the Newtown shooter.

And to the Aurora, Tucson, and Carson City shooters. Since 2006 the FBI recorded more than 100 mass murder shootings. That’s in addition to the growing numbers of drive-by, domestic, and armed robbery shootings.

The underpinnings of our moral fabric — the commandments “thou shalt not kill” and “love thy neighbor” and the admonition “love your enemies” — are crumbling.

What to do?

Many try to avoid the growing dark side by moving to safe locations. The massacre in Newtown slams that idea. Newtown is one of those places most would flee to.

So, how do we repair our moral fabric?

English philosopher Edmund Burke said, “all that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.”

He didn’t say what good men should do, but he joined Machiavelli and Calvin in saying people by nature are weak (sinful) and must have a higher authority that imposes order.

That’s difficult in a free society.

It would require a state-based, nationwide crackdown on business and activities that nurture the dark side … manufacture, distribution, and/or minimally restricted sales of violent video games, child and violent pornography, and high-capacity semi-automatic weapons; despicable behavior on the Internet; the illegal drug culture; and hate-based organizations, talk shows, blogs, web sites; etc.

It would require preachers, teachers, counselors, and opinion leaders to reach out and harmoniously promote, teach, and model peace, goodwill, and morality.

It would require all the rest of us, particularly parents, to lend them unwavering support.

Are there enough good men and women to make such happen?

The light of Christmas survived Herod. It gives us hope. It will sustain many this holiday season.

May it illuminate many darkened hearts and minds during the coming New Year.

(Crawford (crawfolk@gmail.com) is a syndicated columnist from Meridian.)

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