By Robert King
Saturday,
May 27, 2023
“Woman
up!”
“Be a
woman about it”
“How
do you expect any man to be attracted to you if you don’t have a high paying
job?”
“What
do you mean you are ‘sick’? That’s just ‘woman flu.’”
“Girls
don’t cry.”
“Reach
down and don’t find a pair.”
If these
phrases sound odd, that’s because we sometimes forget that men navigate
currents of social status like salmon swimming upstream to spawn. Be tough;
have independent resources to draw on; jealously guard your honour against
humiliation. Many men’s lives end in fights “over nothing” (as recorded in
police reports). Pool table disputes. Jostling someone’s arm in the pub. “You
lookin’ at my girl?” But these fights were not over
nothing. They were over male status.
Call it
“face.” Or “honour.” Or “prestige.” The differences (and they do exist) between
different types of status do not need to concern us right now. The point is
that we are all descended from men who cared about it. We have done the genetic
analysis, and most males throughout human history
(60 percent) did not get to reproduce. Status was—and still is, to some
extent—exquisitely linked to male reproductive success, and the men who were
blind to its protection simply did not have descendants.
We have
partly tamed, and redirected, this status-seeking in modern society. We give it
acceptable—even useful—outlets. Sport. Awards. Elaborate public rituals in
which we show that a person has so much status to spare that they can even
survive being roasted by professional comedians. Not everyone plays by these
relatively recent rules, however. And, sometimes, fear of loss of status drives
a violent reaction.
A few
years back, on the Jeremy Kyle Show (think Jerry Springer but with British
accents) they brought on a man who routinely beat his girlfriend. There were
the expected jeers and catcalls from the studio audience, but the man looked
Kyle in the eye and told him that his poor girlfriend regularly “did his head
in,” and, when she did this, he would “get the red mist.” In other words, he
could not help but lash out at her.
“Look
what you made me do!” has been the cry of the bully down the ages.
Showing
an unexpected flair for experimental social psychology, Kyle brought on one of
the bouncers employed on the show—about 6’-4” and—as you would expect—built
like someone who throws people out of places for a living. The bouncer
proceeded to insult the bully, poking him in the chest a few times and pushing
him backwards. “Where’s the ‘red mist’ now?” Kyle politely enquired. “He’s
twice my size!” spluttered the bully.
So, not
quite the uncontrollable reflex action that he had led us to believe.
Most
complex behaviours are like this. Not mere reflexes but exquisitely attuned to
local context. This is true even of violent behaviours which, in social
primates like ourselves, takes account of the features of other primates
in the vicinity: their size, status, and formidability.
In the
1960s, the renowned neuroscientist José Delgado performed some disturbingly
insightful experiments using radio-controlled electrodes implanted in mammalian
brains. He could stimulate, or block, the centres of aggression in cats,
primates, and, once, (famously, on live TV) a charging bull—stopping it in its
tracks before it hit him. And, what happened when the aggression centres were
provoked in social primates? They did not just lash out mindlessly at any other
monkey around them. On the contrary, the pre-established social
hierarchies were visible in the patterns of aggression that resulted. Alpha males lashed out at ones
lower down, but not at females they had recently partnered with. Lower-ranking
males lashed out at the youngsters. As the saying goes, the crap tends to flow
downhill, just as it does with humans. I think this partly helps explain why
schoolchildren are so regularly targets of mass killings.
America
has had roughly one mass shooting a day for the last decade—roughly the time when we first
started looking at this phenomenon. Some of the responses to our first paper surprised me. I hadn’t realized
that, up until 2015, the framing of gun violence as a public health issue
was actually forbidden by Congress, resulting in a strange
generational skew in investigations and a lack of investigators. In addition,
America’s addiction to guns (something that, as scientists, we were utterly
uninterested in to begin with, except as a control measure to further our
analysis) started to look like a nicotine addict’s ingenious ways to keep
nicotine in their life. Almost every day someone sends me details of
bulletproof backpacks for junior schoolers, rapidly assembled bulletproof
school walls, suggestions about arming teachers, and similar ingenious (or
downright potty) ideas. They remind me of my ingenious attempts to stop smoking
20 years ago. I tried a pipe. I tried nicotine gum. I tried patches. I’d try
anything rather than face up to being addicted to nicotine. As the Onion puts
it with gallows humour, “No way to prevent this, says the only nation where this regularly
happens.”
But
that’s not quite fair. Spree killings are not uniquely American. Indeed, we are
currently documenting and analysing killings, with exactly the same profiles,
worldwide—but typically using vehicles or knives. What is unique
about America is the ready availability of firearms coupled with a lobbying
body that resists any attempts at restricting their access. That means that the
death rate in other countries is much lower. Also, the phenomenon of mass
public killings of strangers by men is not new. It was not that long ago that
such killings were regarded as an old and culture-bound syndrome. After all,
“amok” is a Malay word. And here is how one contemporary (from a couple of
centuries ago) described it:
A man — it was almost always a man — would feel he had endured an
unbearable indignity. After a period of brooding, he lashed out by attacking
everyone in sight with knives or other sharp weapons, hacking away until fellow
villagers or the authorities finally killed him.
Mass
killings are statistically unlikely ways to die, but crude, consequentialist,
corpse-counting is not the only way to assess damage in a civilised society.
Although the absolute risk of dying at the hands of such a killer is low, many
people stubbornly refuse to acknowledge how low the likelihood is. This should
not surprise us. Mass killings are, among many other things, a deliberately
public, attention-seeking attempt to drive a wedge into the existing social
order. Some of these motives are obviously political—in such cases, the intent
is to sow fear and destabilise governments—and I will not have much to say
about those (although we suspect some of such attempts are beginning to
overlap). What about more individual motives?
Our
initial study was an archival study of 70 mass killers going back nearly a
century. Our methodology was highly conservative, using only those killings for
which we could obtain independent corroboration of details. The media tend to
get highly speculative about these events, and we did not want to get taken up
any garden paths. We restricted the search to the United States for two
reasons. First, the ready presence of firearms makes the expression of such
murderous desires much easier to compare between events, whereas those using
vehicles or knives have fewer victims. Second, the United States has an
efficient, detailed, and (at least somewhat) independent media archive.
We fed
in as much data as we could get—age, number of victims, type of clothing worn,
personal history, recent key events, and so on—turned the crank on the
statistical machine, and saw what patterns emerged.
What we
found was very interesting, and a reminder that averages can often be highly
misleading. Although the average age for the mass killers in our sample was 33,
this number was highly unrepresentative of the population. The
range of ages was from 11 (yes, really) to 66 (yes, really). Much more
interesting was that the distribution of ages was bimodal, that is, it had two
peaks. And here is the surprising part: the two groups that clustered around
these age peaks could not have been more different from one another.
The
younger group (average age 23) tended to have been in trouble with the law, and
they were more likely to have had mental illness. In other words, at the age
when most young men are acquiring status (and the skills and abilities that
will enable them to do so) these men were showing signs that they were on a
fast track to reproductive oblivion. In ancestral times—times without highly
trained and equipped SWAT teams—a Hail Mary attempt to attract attention and
make “them” take you seriously might (just might) have worked. This age group
also tended to be less likely to be killed at the end of their murderous
spree. Follow-up work we have done suggests that many of this
younger type attract a significant amount of female attention when in prison.
The
older group (average age 41) were much more likely to be married, and they
often had children. They were significantly less likely to have had prior legal
issues or mental illnesses. They were also more likely to die in the
rampage—either through suicide or suicide by cop. And, a peek into their
personal details (so far as we were able to) revealed that they had a pattern
of recent status loss. A job. A relationship. A custody battle. A looming
scandal. These older guys were not so much trying to acquire status; their
actions looked more like a highly pathological attempt to not lose
it. “Death before dishonour” is a cruel joke—especially when what you actually
get is both. However, self-perceived status loss could be a missing piece of
several murderous motivational mysteries.
Perhaps
because we behavioural scientists tend to be rather timid, bookish types, we
tend to see violence as alien and inexplicable. Our psychology textbooks call
it “mindless” or “anti-social,” but these are not helpful epithets. Indeed,
they blind us to some of the instrumental features of violence. As the famously
irascible philosopher Jerry Fodor was apt to say, in response to platitudes
like “To understand is to forgive,” we can thump the table and go “No,
sometimes it just sharpens your contempt.” And what could be more contemptible
than murdering innocent children in the furtherance of your aims? What makes us
gasp at this is the thought that even violence like this could be, at some
level, explicable. Alas, we do not have the luxury of just wringing our hands
and wishing away our hierarchical primate natures. Are we really so insecure
about our moral commitments that we need to announce in our methodologies that
we think that killing innocent children is wrong? And do we really need to get
into asinine definitional exchanges about what does, or does not, constitute an
“assault weapon”?
For talk
of toxic masculinity to have meaning, attention needs to be paid to the toxic
soils in which it grows. Pretended innocence about human nature will not help
us here.
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