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Home » Trends

The Culture Of Fear

Written by on December 12, 2007 – 10:27 pm27 Comments | 258 Read this

Why Are We Scared?

Why Are We Scared?

Why are we so scared?

I grew up with the tra­di­tional French dae­mons: fas­cism and glob­al­iza­tion. They were easy enough tar­gets, and fight­ing against them included chant­ing social­ist songs in demon­stra­tions, keep­ing an eye on the Front National — the French Nazi party — and watch­ing old French movies to thwart Hollywood’s plans to take on the world. The ene­mies were white suprema­cists, rec­og­niz­able thanks to their shaved head, mil­i­tary boots and cans of kro­nen­bourg in their (right) hand. Or fat Amer­i­can idiots who thought France was some remote coun­try­side with­out elec­tric­ity but pro­duc­ing great vines.

It was that easy. The rest of the world was a rel­a­tively peace­ful place (which we didn’t care about much any­way) and France was still great and pow­er­ful (in our dreams).

And one day, it became more com­pli­cated. Sud­denly, we were scared of hav­ing sex. What hav­ing sex? Even (French) kisses were out of a ques­tion, thanks to a new dis­ease that was going to kill us all. AIDS. Homo­sex­ual died, drug addicts died, and appar­ently we would too if we weren’t care­ful. Or so said the nurses and doc­tors who would come at school and teach us all that we needed to know about the virus. At the age of ten, we knew — in the­ory — what a three­some was, and if a blow job would put us at risk. So much for French romanticism…

Soon after, the infected blood scan­dal burst out and so did people’s trust in the gov­ern­ment and in hos­pi­tals. And then, the Creutzfeldt-Jakob dis­ease (Mad Cow Dis­ease) was dis­cov­ered and most start to ques­tion the food indus­try. Oh, and we also noticed trans­genic food was get­ting quite wide­spread, and while some would burn generic modified’s field crop, we would squint to read the labels, hop­ing to eat healthy and stay alive. No sex, no food. That was get­ting quite fun.

As if inspect­ing your lovers and your food alto­gether wasn’t enough, pol­i­tics were get­ting a bit scary too. The fas­cists. Them, again. Sud­denly, they weren’t just young skin­heads any­more, but respectable peo­ple, work­ers, immi­grants even, who feared unem­ploy­ment and oth­ers immigrant’s. Inse­cu­rity became the main world, a quick ban­dage on a vari­ety of symp­toms: sec­ond generation’s immi­grants iden­tity cri­sis (and some­times plain stu­pid­ity)? Inse­cu­rity. A bus dri­ver bul­lied? Inse­cu­rity. Unem­ploy­ment rate rais­ing? Inse­cu­rity. Peo­ple being sick after eat­ing in a local — eth­nic, that goes with­out say­ing — restau­rant? Inse­cu­rity. Oh, excuse me. Food insecurity.

Liv­ing is get­ting quite dan­ger­ous. A new dis­ease seems to be dis­cov­ered every day, and of course, pre­ven­tion meth­ods fol­low: bunch of spon­sored pills to swal­low and a healthy lifestyle (Sub­way, eat fresh?). For “home inse­cu­rity”, a new set of alarm and a big fuck­ing gun (where legal, of course — we wouldn’t want you to break the law, but think of your wife and your kids…). For “work inse­cu­rity”, there’s only one way amigo, work work and no com­plain, no union and walk straight, think straight. And while we’re at it, don’t com­mute to work (you want to get stab or what?): buy a huge SUV and drive.

And then we found a new rea­son to be scared. Ter­ror­ism and ter­ror­ists. Bombs in sub­ways and planes crash­ing into build­ings. Fear is fed 24/7 on TV, on radio, through press con­fer­ences and edi­to­ri­als. They want to kill us all, they want to destroy our civ­i­liza­tion, they are our ene­mies. Words, facts, news and data are care­fully edited and twisted to make us fear the world and the unknown. “Tomor­row, light snow, some sun­shine in the evening and severe risk of ter­ror­ist attack — please don’t wan­der out­side after dark”.

Mean­while, we vote for the guy who has a quick fix. “I’ll bomb them all! I’ll send these immi­grants back home and you will get your job back! And you won’t be poor since we won’t tol­er­ate it any­way!”.

Oh that helps. But we are so busy being scared that we don’t think any­more. Lately, we have been accept­ing almost every­thing blindly.

You know what? I’m tired. I’m tired of being scared, and I’m tired of be taught new things to be scared of. You don’t scare me.

Related arti­cles:

  1. Reverse Cul­ture Shock in Isla Cozumel
  2. Stuck In A Moment
  3. Pur­chas­ing Power Blues In France
  4. Adren­a­line Rush In Monteverde
  5. G’Day, Syd­ney

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27 Comments »

  • The Pilgrim says:

    Some­one did say, “The only thing to fear is fear itself!”

    The Pilgrim’s last blog post..I am back ?..

  • diesel says:

    Wait. France has elec­tric­ity now?

  • Zhu says:

    Keshi: I like to think I’m free too… ;-)

    Johnada: I — unfor­tu­nately — know Veg­emite. And it’s quite scary.

    As for the rest… I’m not sure about global warm­ing myself, that’s why I didn’t include here in my exam­ples. Even though peo­ple talk a lot, I don’t think it scares us much (maybe we should be scared??). But ter­ror­ists, immi­grants… immi­grants ter­ror­ists? That’s scary. And that’s too bad.

    Marie: thanks for visiting!

    I think it’s us. I don’t think the world is scarier now… I mean, I think of the peo­ple who grew up between WW1 and WW2 — that was bad. We are still fairly safe and spoiled I think.

    Ghosty: prob­a­bly the best thing to do, you’re right. I try to only worry about things I can control…

    Jay Cam: veni vidi vinci!

    Gled­wood: you for­got to men­tion there are only 5 chan­nels in France… unless you have cable! :lol:

    France is weird some­times, I know.

    North­BayPhoto: that’s exactly that: putting things into per­spec­tive. I’m aware that ter­ror­ism exists and I don’t deny it. But why less free­dom for cit­i­zens? There’s some­thing I don’t get here…

    Max: thank you so much! Obri­gada! I’m glad you liked this “from the bot­tom of my heart” post ;-)

    Yeah, France didn’t exactly embrace glob­al­iza­tion… France doesn’t like change much, espe­cially if change means that other coun­tries can be #1 too. This is some­thing I strongly resent… I mean, glob­al­iza­tion is a good thing and doesn’t have to equal to “USA hegemony”.

    I’m glad you don’t like to be fed fear too ;-)

    Shan­tanu: I know!! I stopped going through the US (but not going TO the US ;-) ) mostly because of the poli­cies. Sick of stand­ing bare feet wait­ing to be yelled at by some officer.

    The Pil­grim: very nice quote! I like it. Describes what I feel perfectly.

    Diesel: used to. Before the US bombed the elec­tric­ity com­pany. :mrgreen:

  • kyh says:

    We are being con­stantly fed with our worst fears because the rul­ing elites and the media know well that the lay­men are eas­ily manip­u­lated, esp among those illit­er­ate and une­d­u­cated lots, and this case is worst in the tur­bu­lent areas of Mid­dle East and South Asia. Peo­ple just believe every­thing that’s being fed to them by the news, with­out any doubt at all.

    In Malaysia, we’re being fed by the local media and the gov­ern­ment that the West (esp Amer­ica) and Israel are evil. We’re being told that Israel per­se­cutes Pales­tin­ian refugees by dri­ven them out and killing them. We’re told that Jews are try­ing to rule the world with the help of Amer­ica. We blame Jews for the 1997 Asian eco­nomic crisis.

    What a sad reality…

    kyh’s last blog post..Draw dis . Paint dat

  • Beaverboosh says:

    Zhu dar­ling,

    Don’t be scared!
    The uni­verse is between 12 and 16 bil­lion years old.
    The planet is only 4.5 bil­lion years old.
    Man is, at stretch, only 7 mil­lion years old.
    Civil­i­sa­tion is only ~10,000 years old.
    Mod­ern civil­i­sa­tion is only ~2,000 years old.
    Democ­racy, in its cur­rent form, is under ~250 years old.
    Most of the sci­ence and tech­nol­ogy in your life is under 100 years old.
    Most peo­ple on the planet are under ~75 years old.
    Most peo­ple on your blog are under ~40 years old.

    We are uni­ver­sal tod­dlers in the uni­ver­sal nurs­ery and have much grow­ing to do and lots to learn!

    Don’t let the tod­dler bul­lies scare you. It is the only thing they know how to do. It is their cop­ing strat­egy for deal­ing with the uncer­tain and not being able to get along with other tod­dlers in the nurs­ery. It’s not going to spoil our day, is it!

    Your metaphor­i­cal dia­per wear­ing pal,
    Beaverboosh

    Beaverboosh’s last blog post..You’ll Be Bored

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