Columbine: Whose Fault Is It?
by Marilyn Manson
A lot of people  forget or never realize that I started my band as a criticism of these  very issues of despair and hypocrisy. The name Marilyn Manson has never  celebrated the sad fact that America puts killers on the cover of Time  magazine, giving them as much notoriety as our favorite movie stars.  From Jesse James to Charles Manson, the media, since their inception,  have turned criminals into folk heroes. They just created two new ones  when they plastered those dipshits Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris'  pictures on the front of every newspaper. Don't be surprised if every  kid who gets pushed around has two new idols.
We applaud the  creation of a bomb whose sole purpose is to destroy all of mankind, and  we grow up watching our president's brains splattered all over Texas.  Times have not become more violent. They have just become more  televised. Does anyone think the Civil War was the least bit civil? If  television had existed, you could be sure they would have been there to  cover it, or maybe even participate in it, like their violent car chase  of Princess Di. Disgusting vultures looking for corpses, exploiting,  fucking, filming and serving it up for our hungry appetites in a  gluttonous display of endless human stupidity.
When it comes  down to who's to blame for the high school murders in Littleton,  Colorado, throw a rock and you'll hit someone who's guilty. We're the  people who sit back and tolerate children owning guns, and we're the  ones who tune in and watch the up-to-the-minute details of what they do  with them. I think it's terrible when anyone dies, especially if it is  someone you know and love. But what is more offensive is that when these  tragedies happen, most people don't really care any more than they  would about the season finale of Friends or The Real World.  I was dumbfounded as I watched the media snake right in, not missing a  teardrop, interviewing the parents of dead children, televising the  funerals. Then came the witch hunt.
Man's greatest fear is  chaos. It was unthinkable that these kids did not have a simple  black-and-white reason for their actions. And so a scapegoat was needed.  I remember hearing the initial reports from Littleton, that Harris and  Klebold were wearing makeup and were dressed like Marilyn Manson, whom  they obviously must worship, since they were dressed in black. Of  course, speculation snowballed into making me the poster boy for  everything that is bad in the world. These two idiots weren't wearing  makeup, and they weren't dressed like me or like goths. Since Middle  America has not heard of the music they did listen to (KMFDM and  Rammstein, among others), the media picked something they thought was  similar.
Responsible journalists have reported with less  publicity that Harris and Klebold were not Marilyn Manson fans -- that  they even disliked my music. Even if they were fans, that gives them no  excuse, nor does it mean that music is to blame. Did we look for James  Huberty's inspiration when he gunned down people at McDonald's? What did  Timothy McVeigh like to watch? What about David Koresh, Jim Jones? Do  you think entertainment inspired Kip Kinkel, or should we blame the fact  that his father bought him the guns he used in the Springfield, Oregon,  murders? What inspires Bill Clinton to blow people up in Kosovo? Was it  something that Monica Lewinsky said to him? Isn't killing just killing,  regardless if it's in Vietnam or Jonesboro, Arkansas? Why do we justify  one, just because it seems to be for the right reasons? Should there  ever be a right reason? If a kid is old enough to drive a car or buy a  gun, isn't he old enough to be held personally responsible for what he  does with his car or gun? Or if he's a teenager, should someone else be  blamed because he isn't as enlightened as an eighteen-year-old?
America  loves to find an icon to hang its guilt on. But, admittedly, I have  assumed the role of Antichrist; I am the Nineties voice of  individuality, and people tend to associate anyone who looks and behaves  differently with illegal or immoral activity. Deep down, most adults  hate people who go against the grain. It's comical that people are naive  enough to have forgotten Elvis, Jim Morrison and Ozzy so quickly. All  of them were subjected to the same age-old arguments, scrutiny and  prejudice. I wrote a song called "Lunchbox," and some journalists have  interpreted it as a song about guns. Ironically, the song is about being  picked on and fighting back with my Kiss lunch box, which I used as a  weapon on the playground. In 1979, metal lunch boxes were banned because  they were considered dangerous weapons in the hands of delinquents. I  also wrote a song called "Get Your Gunn." The title is spelled with two  n's because the song was a reaction to the murder of Dr. David Gunn, who  was killed in Florida by pro-life activists while I was living there.  That was the ultimate hypocrisy I witnessed growing up: that these  people killed someone in the name of being "pro-life."
The  somewhat positive messages of these songs are usually the ones that  sensationalists misinterpret as promoting the very things I am decrying.  Right now, everyone is thinking of how they can prevent things like  Littleton. How do you prevent AIDS, world war, depression, car crashes?  We live in a free country, but with that freedom there is a burden of  personal responsibility. Rather than teaching a child what is moral and  immoral, right and wrong, we first and foremost can establish what the  laws that govern us are. You can always escape hell by not believing in  it, but you cannot escape death and you cannot escape prison.
It  is no wonder that kids are growing up more cynical; they have a lot of  information in front of them. They can see that they are living in a  world that's made of bullshit. In the past, there was always the idea  that you could turn and run and start something better. But now America  has become one big mall, and because of the Internet and all of the  technology we have, there's nowhere to run. People are the same  everywhere. Sometimes music, movies and books are the only things that  let us feel like someone else feels like we do. I've always tried to let  people know it's OK, or better, if you don't fit into the program. Use  your imagination -- if some geek from Ohio can become something, why  can't anyone else with the willpower and creativity?
I chose  not to jump into the media frenzy and defend myself, though I was begged  to be on every single TV show in existence. I didn't want to contribute  to these fame-seeking journalists and opportunists looking to fill  their churches or to get elected because of their self-righteous  finger-pointing. They want to blame entertainment? Isn't religion the  first real entertainment? People dress up in costumes, sing songs and  dedicate themselves in eternal fandom. Everyone will agree that nothing  was more entertaining than Clinton shooting off his prick and then his  bombs in true political form. And the news -- that's obvious. So is  entertainment to blame? I'd like media commentators to ask themselves,  because their coverage of the event was some of the most gruesome  entertainment any of us have seen.
I think that the National Rifle Association is far too powerful to take on, so most people choose Doom, The Basketball Diaries  or yours truly. This kind of controversy does not help me sell records  or tickets, and I wouldn't want it to. I'm a controversial artist, one  who dares to have an opinion and bothers to create music and videos that  challenge people's ideas in a world that is watered-down and hollow. In  my work I examine the America we live in, and I've always tried to show  people that the devil we blame our atrocities on is really just each  one of us. So don't expect the end of the world to come one day out of  the blue -- it's been happening every day for a long time. 
MARILYN MANSON
(May 28, 1999) 
Posted May 28, 1999 12:00 AM

 
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