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Milwaukee
C.D.W.
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About the
Magazine
Editor-in-Chief:
Kenneth Brosky
Managing Editor:
Stephanie Nolasco
Associate Editor:
Janelle Kennedy
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On Monday, March 12th of 2007 I faced my own mortality. For the
first time in my 25 years of life, I could see death out of the
corner of my eye. It’s always been there in some for or another, be
it some tragic unforeseeable accident or unseen disease or
cataclysmic disaster, but on this particular night I became aware of
its presence, of just how close it could truly be.
The man walked into our local Starbucks dressed in heavy clothes,
wearing a cloth over his face and a hood and a pair of dark
sunglasses to complete the macabre ensemble. I ask myself sometimes
if perhaps seeing his eyes would alleviate myself of some of the
nightmares, if perhaps I could have sensed that there truly was a
human being behind all those clothes because in my mind’s eye,
looking back at it, all I see is an outfit, a faceless being with no
emotion and nothing for me to sympathize with.
He pointed his semi-automatic gun at me when I told him I had the
keys to the cash register. I told him I could open the drawers and
he pointed the gun at my stomach and when I think about it I can
still feel the coldness along the left side of my abdomen, the icy
expectation of pain that could have come at any minute. I opened the
drawers calmly, spoke to the man in an even voice, explaining my
every action and fought the numbness running through my body.
He told me to lay on the ground and so I did. I put my hands over my
head, fearing he might turn back and shoot me and somehow
thinking—amused even at the time of the event—that my hands might
stop a bullet from piercing my skull.
And now her I sit, contemplating the event, running it over and over
in my mind. At night, it’s all I can think about. Did this robber
know how I would feel after having a gun pointed at my stomach? It’s
the feeling that must be running through the minds of the dozens of
individuals in our neighborhood who have been robbed just in this
past few weeks alone. These nagging images that won’t go away,
images of this amalgamated monster made up of denims and cottons and
of course a pair of cheap sunglasses.
And as I work through this, I can’t help but wonder if this faceless
victimizer can truly comprehend the consequences of his actions or
his potential actions. Could he kill someone? Is it possible? We
live in a society where violence on television and in movies is
often rewarded, where the bad guys have no family and no friends and
no good qualities and no mental illnesses and are simply “bad.”
That wimpy lawyer in “Jurassic Park” who got eaten on the john by a
T-rex? Probably had a family. The psycho family in “The Devil’s
Rejects” killed a lot of people, people who begged and screamed and
yet even movie critics were rooting for the bad guys to “win.”
The Good Guys die valiantly, looking death in the eye bravely, but
again there is no mention of the family that must bury him, the
friends who must mourn him. If he survives by killing the Bad Guy,
there is no grief counseling, no therapist to help the Good Guy cope
with the fact that he has taken another human life, no matter how
justifiable, as if it’s all in a day’s work and there are no nagging
thoughts or nagging images to keep him up at night.
James Bond can kill with ease. After taking down a villain, the
movie ends, because that’s the entertaining part. No one wants to
see Bond take down a bad guy halfway through and then spend the
second half of the movie in grief counseling, right? So how does
that affect us, seeing these images again and again, watching
violent act after violent act without an understanding of the
consequences?
Every action carries consequences, and violent acts are no exception
no matter how small or insignificant they may be.
Or justified.
Sincerely,
Kenneth Brosky
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