Real fear isn’t uploaded: Why social media screams are fake



When I woke up on Nov. 6, I knew I would see a lot of disappointed and angry people posting online. Still, the sheer volume of unhinged and hysterical videos surprised even me. Coming, as I do, from the Bosnia of the 1990s — an actual war-torn country where people, in fact, had reason to fear political outcomes — it is difficult to understand these posts as the activity of serious people. It is impossible to avoid secondhand embarrassment for those engaging in it.

Did you know that when people are actually scared, they don’t post videos of themselves screaming and threatening “the other side” for public consumption?

These contrived pieces of performance art are not products of fear. They are vile propaganda.

I was 17 during the first multiparty election in Bosnia. The media was already spreading fear prior to the election, and it became evident early on that the three nationalist ethnic parties were the favorites. I wasn’t eligible to vote at the time, but even if I had been, none of the three ethnic parties would have had a home for me, the child of a mixed marriage.

I don’t remember who won, but I do remember that when I woke up, there was neither a celebration nor an angry mob. Instead, there was a sudden shift. No one from the outside would have noticed it. People went to work. They went grocery shopping. The kids went to school. But there was an unbearable quiet. When fear settles over a town, it becomes quiet.

People don’t talk about fear. The conversations become shorter; the jokes are fewer. People become emotionally disengaged.

I remember there was no talk of anyone leaving because of the omnipresence of fear. They might mention in passing about going on a “short trip” to visit family, but most simply left, and most simply knew what was going on when this was mentioned. This is when I yielded to fear.

The weirdest thing I learned about fear is that it makes you act normal, maybe too normal. This kind of fear is not what people feel when their lives are in imminent danger and the threat is easy to recognize. Our bodies and our instincts are designed to deal with that kind of fear. But in the situation I describe, the very system designed to protect you from threats becomes a threat. Instinctively I knew I had to signal to the system that I was not a threat to those operating it. Opinions became too expensive and insults to myself or those I loved nonexistent.

In short, I became invisible, but that was easy. The harder part was that I couldn’t show my fear. Acting fearful is a threat in itself. I learned to measure my speech and my gestures. My answers were short and vague, and I was the smallest person in every room. Every interaction was exhausting.

The social media performance actresses need to learn something important: Anger is not fear. Disappointment is not fear. Openly threatening people is not what people do when they are in the grip of fear. In other words, they are not coping with fear. They are coping with the reality that they did not get their way. There’s a world of difference.

Disappointment is easy to understand, too, and people who have been indulged by a system that permits them to believe reality is something they can escape — that a man can be a woman; that we can live peacefully in a world without borders; that other people will work so that you can eat; that silence is the same thing as violence — these people are going to lack fully developed skills of communication and self-awareness. When confronted, as they always are, with reality, they will act out their frustration in ways that are not constructive.

Unmet emotional needs will also cause some people to seek validation from those who are screaming the loudest. But if you are setting up a camera to record yourself screaming and crying and then taking the time to edit and upload it, then you are not afraid. You are ignorant and self-indulgent.

Memes like those I am seeing on the bluest parts of my social media feeds include numbers for suicide prevention hotlines, women shaving their heads and vowing celibacy, and people pretending to seek escape routes from the country to which frightened people have been escaping to defy tyranny for centuries. These contrived pieces of performance art are not products of fear. They are ridiculous tantrums designed to provoke strong emotions and galvanize people for political purposes. They are vile propaganda.

Real fear, as I have experienced, is isolating and anonymous. In this digital age and in this largely (thank God) still free country, almost nothing is hidden or anonymous.

I am not impressed with the attempts to gaslight me into believing I am facing danger again.

Editor’s note: This article appeared originally at Chronicles: A Magazine of Culture.

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Crowder: Documentary features children being asked when they realized they are white



Comedian Dave Landau filled in for Steven Crowder on Wednesday and discussed the short film put out by Rage Against the Machine called Killing In Thy Name. The documentary features old interviews and live footage of Rage Against The Machine, as well as footage captured by a camera crew that follows a teacher as he "educates" his young students on America's history of oppression.

In this clip, Dave and the Louder with Crowder crew reviewed the documentary and offered their thoughts about why documentary would ask children when they realized they are white, among other things. Watch the clip for more.

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Bozell & Graham: The Hollywood Left hates Alabama

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey signed a bill on May 14 protecting unborn babies from the slaughter of abortion. The vote wasn't close in the state legislature: 74-3 in the House, 25-6 in the Senate.

One more state has come to its senses.

There's a wave of pro-life bills being passed in the Southern states. First came the "heartbeat" bills stopping abortions after a baby's heartbeat can be detected (around six weeks). Then came Alabama. Its bill stops all abortions except for cases where the life of the mother is in danger or the unborn baby has a "lethal anomaly," and threatens abortion doctors with up to 99 years in jail. The left will naturally try to get Democrat-appointed federal judges to repeal it.

But in the meantime, the Hollywood left is furious. Barbra Streisand lamented: "The retrograde Alabama criminalizes abortion even in the case of rape and incest. Voted for overwhelmingly by GOP men. Handmaid's Tale from the GOP."

Lady Gaga called it an "outrage" and "all the more heinous" that it doesn't allow exceptions for those who are raped "or are experiencing incest non-consensual or not." Gaga is inclusive enough to show compassion toward those practicing consensual incest.

Alyssa Milano was also livid at the 22 men who voted against the rape and incest exception. "NOT ONE UTERUS," she tweeted. That the governor who signed the bill and the female state representative who sponsored the bill are women is irrelevant.

There was also "not one uterus" among the seven men who legalized nationwide abortion in Roe v. Wade in 1973.

Sarah Silverman was counting differently, tweeting, "27 white males just decided what Alabama women can and can't do with their own bodies and lives. (Males cause 100% of unwanted pregnancies)."

The "comedians" thought their rage would be funny. They were wrong. On TBS, Samantha Bee announced the regulators of abortion "wouldn't recognize a vulva if it bit them in the face." Former "Daily Show" co-creator Lizz Winstead claimed, "I love the people of Alabama and want to punch their politicians in the c--k."

Comedian and former "Daily Show" producer Jena Friedman snapped on Twitter that "in Alabama, life begins at rape." Friedman also tweeted, "The best way to stop abortion is to just kill women before they get pregnant! -- Alabama legislature 2020." This is the same woman who warned women during Stephen Colbert's election-night freak-out in 2016, "Get your abortions now!"

Hollywood's male feminists also pitched in. Actor Bradley Whitford insisted, "Misogyny is the reptilian brain stem of right wing ideology."

Jameela Jamil of the NBC afterlife sitcom "The Good Place" called the new Georgia law "blatantly demonstrative of a hatred of women" and then added, "I had an abortion when I was young, and it was the best decision I have ever made. Both for me, and for the baby I didn't want."

It's amazing that women who abort babies can always rationalize that they are such immensely horrible people that the babies would be better off dead. Jamil implied foster care is worse than abortion: "So many children will end up in foster homes. So many lives ruined. So very cruel."

It's amazing that these "progressives" believe their compassion is limitless, and yet they express every Orwellian adjective known to man about violently ending a life before it starts. Saving the babies is "restrictive," not "protective." It's "brutal," not stopping brutality. It's "cruel," and even "barbaric." And ripping babies limb from limb is ... the antonym?

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