Idiotic Outrage: Thoughts On The Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Rolling Stone Cover
Oh, there’s just so much righteous outrage over Rolling Stone‘s supposedly controversial, supposedly inappropriate cover photo of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. How dare they? It glamorized him, it glorifies him, it disrespects the victims, it’s so very, very wrong, the shame!
Please.
First, this is a “selfie,” a photo the young Tsarnaev took of himself. Yes, he looks a bit like a rock star, but that’s the point of the article. This isn’t the sort of guy you’d expect to find at an al Qaeda training camp in some remote part of some hellish part of the world. He seemed “normal,” and most of those around him, most of those close to him, talk of how wonderful he was, of how promising his life was, how he seemed to be your basic American kid.
But that’s too complicated, apparently. People want to vilify him, to find him evil incarnate, refusing to acknowledge that there was, and likely still is, much more to him than that, that even if he’s guilty, as he likely is, it’s not as easy as saying he’s a good-for-nothing killer.
This troubled me at the time and troubles me even more now. Did he do horrendous things? Does he have innocent blood on his hands? Yes, it appears so. But why did he do those things? Why did he — this promising young man — follow his brother into an act of terrorism and the additional bloodshed that followed? This outstanding article by Janet Reitman tries to answer that question, or at least tries to get us closer to the person, to see him for what he was, and is, the human being instead of the evil psychopath who is held up in the media and by those who have no interest in understanding anything.
Second, even if he looks good on the cover, the magazine is pretty clear in its assessment of him. He’s called “The Bomber” and “a Monster” right on the cover. So much for the presumption of innocence. Those freaking out about how he looks might want to read the cover, not to mention the article itself. But no, they prefer to traffic in the politics of outrage and the good-versus-evil simplicities of the war on terror.
Third, speaking of the politics of outrage, one expects such mindless nonsense from conservatives, who for partisan purposes but also because they’re morons freak out over the tiniest slight, perceived or otherwise, but the outrage, faux or otherwise, has been coming from others as well, including Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick and Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, and now CVS, the large pharmacy chain that operates in Massachusetts, is refusing to stock this edition of the magazine.
How incredibly stupid, this whole outrage. CVS is obviously bowing to pressure, as companies often do when they sense that their bottom line might be affected, and it’s as cowardly as usual. A question is whether political leaders like Patrick and Menino are genuinely outraged or whether they’re doing this for political purposes as well. If the latter, they’re as shamelessly cynical as those on the right. If the former, they’re just stupid. It’s particularly disappointing coming from Patrick, a rising star in the Democratic Party who should know better — and who should do better as well.
Fourth, while I sympathize with the people of Boston, not least because I used to live there, enough with the whole oversensitivity thing. What Boston went through is what a lot of places in the world go through. What happened is awful, yes, but does that mean no one can say anything “controversial” without everyone freaking out about how it’s so insensitive to the victims and how the city has been through so much? Even if the Rolling Stone cover were inappropriate, so what? Can Boston just not handle that? Are the people of Boston, including its leaders, so thin-skinned that anything short of vilifying the Tsarnaevs as Osama-like evildoers hurts their feelings and requires the sort of cowardly response we’ve seen to the cover photo? Seriously, grow the fuck up, everyone.
Fifth, even if some might look longingly at the photo, thinking that Dzhokhar is some glamorously glorious figure, so what? The only people who might do that are terrorists, would-be or otherwise, and Dzhokhar’s small cadre of crazy fans. But are terrorists really taking their cues from the cover of Rolling Stone, not least when that same cover says this guy’s a monster? Is anyone really looking at that photo and thinking, “Yeah, that dude’s so cool, I’m gonna do what he did?” Please. I think most people know what happened to him, and it’s not exactly a desirable path to take to celebrity status. What’s more, it’s not like Rolling Stone just pulled this photo out of nowhere. It was public before, and whatever power it has doesn’t require a magazine cover.
Even if it were an inappropriate cover, shouldn’t people — shouldn’t Boston? shouldn’t America? — have the fortitude to deal with it without all the silly (faux) outrage, without calling for a boycott, without refusing to sell the magazine?
But it’s not inappropriate. It’s an excellent image to use given the purpose of the article, given that people should see this guy for what he was in his full complexity, not merely as some evildoer as he is made out to be in the media and by the mindless morons mostly on the right but generally across the spectrum.
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