And the kids shrug and roll their eyes and cause
us older and wiser types to roll over in our future
graves with their lack of knowledge of the great
World Wars and the Greatest Generation, those
great cold causes decades past. We wring our
hands wondering why all the new teachers
aren’t teaching what should be taught about war.
Times have changed, people love to spout. Yes,
they have, and the callousing is complete. Gone
are the good old days when the daily allowance
of violence consumption was a trickle, maybe
a distancing black and white photo occasionally,
blurred and bloodless, of floating bodies on a shore,
a few shots of near skeletal remains when the word
damn was only just heard in a film in 1939, while
now you can watch black men’s lives being taken
by forty rounds, replayed to your broken heart’s
desire from citizen footage uploaded in real time
to Youtube or Facebook. But these young people
know war. But what they’re too young still to
even voice, though they’ve been shoved down
the cannons for fodder, is that they’ve known
the longest war now, and not only “over there,”
but “over here.” Even when you fought Hitler’s
insanity and the invisible Russian communists
around every corner, you never had a fellow
high schooler shoot you down in the cafeteria,
never had to worry about another middle school
student bringing a loaded gun in their backpack,
never had a man off the street walk in and kill
you and your fellow grade schoolers when you
can’t even spell the word gun or dead. Never
had to deal with that terrorism on top of other
terrorists claiming some last minute desperation
fame affiliation on Twitter or Facebook before
shooting up a club or bombing a marathon,
tracing their anger loosely down the tree limbs
back to a date that is the pre-history of most
of these kids. So we want to call them sheltered
and entitled, want to lash out at their need for
safe-speech zones and a respect for their triggers.
How about a PTSD-free culture for this so-called
Lost Generation we conceived and grew from
the wounded ADHD womb up? After all, lost
is often just another word for the abandoned.
The post Larry Thacker | Those kids appeared first on The MOON magazine.