Springfield News-Sun

U.S. experienci­ng ‘psychic numbing’ to gun violence

- Charles M. Blow Charles M. Blow writes for the New York Times

In 2020, there were more than 45,000 gun deaths in the United States — the highest number on record, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But there was no major push for gun safety legislatio­n. Why?

Last year, there were nearly 700 mass shootings in America — the highest number ever recorded by the Gun Violence Archive — and again, there was no major push for gun legislatio­n. Why?

Dr. Paul Slovic, a psychology professor at the University of Oregon who has explored popular indifferen­ce to genocide and other mass atrocities, may well have the answers. His work has led him to the disturbing truths of “psychic numbing” and the “false feeling of hopelessne­ss.”

This week, I reached out to Slovic to help better understand why we haven’t yet acted to curb gun violence and why, even when our society has grown numb to the death toll, tragedies like those in Buffalo, New York, and Uvalde, Texas, can still break through.

One of the first things he underscore­d about the gun control debate is that a political dynamic is operating alongside the basic human psychology. “There are some people who are so aggrieved in our society that they don’t care” about the violence, he said. “They want their guns to protect themselves.”

But, he explained, when there are mass shootings like the one in Uvalde, it “wakes us up, and we’re charged up and we want to do something.

“If we see something that we can do, then we’ll do it. But, if we feel ineffectiv­e, then after a while we turn it off because it’s painful to keep watching these stories. Attention is a scarce resource.”

Psychic numbing even creeps into our politics. With the Jan. 6 committee’s public hearings beginning, I asked Slovic if the public has become numb to the revelation­s about the insurrecti­on and former President Donald Trump’s part in it. He said they have.

In a way, the abundance of evidence may actually work against the power of that evidence. Trump has broken so many traditions, rules and laws that the incessancy of it eventually becomes unremarkab­le and acceptable.

From COVID to the insurrecti­on to mass shootings, psychic numbing and helplessne­ss are working against accountabi­lity and change.

I asked Slovic if anything — such as publishing pictures of the slaughtere­d children, as some have proposed — could overcome the numbing and break us out of this cycle of inaction. He said that while he is personally a proponent of making those images public, he understand­s that the opponents of change would attack the disclosure­s as emotional propaganda and the height of political cynicism. As an instrument of change, the pictures might move a few votes, but as a political tool, they could backfire.

Some proponents of showing images of the slaughtere­d think they could spark an “Emmett Till moment.” In 1955, Till’s mother insisted on an open coffin, so that the world could see what had been done to her son, but it’s important to remember what that viewing did and didn’t do. It didn’t cause a massive wave of shame among the oppressors. Till’s killers went on trial after the funeral, and both were found not guilty.

What seeing Till’s disfigured face did, however, was stiffen the spines and resolve of the oppressed and motivate them to fight even harder for relief.

Anything, at this point, to break through the numbness.

 ?? ??

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