No, maybe no one killed themselves after the show. What's your point? What is important here is your terrible, ignorant logic. We can't "blame" people (society, punk bands, Marilyn Mason, etc) for other peoples' suicidal thoughts or tendencies. What we can do is realise that most often than none, suicide is due to depression. Depression is not a choice of being melodramatic, it is a disorder. A physical instability of chemicals and hormones in ones brain. Are we to start blaming kids with down syndrome for having down syndrome? Or people with pituitary dwarfism for being unable to regulate or produce growth hormones? To even suggest some blame should be made it inconceivable...Al Brown wrote:The other side of me is a bit more defensive and pragmatic. One idea I return to is: no one killed themselves after the show, did they? Another thought I return to is: can anyone other than the suicide victim be blamed for the suicide? Surely there are situational influences in the shape of heartbreak, abuse, boredom, music, etc., but the decision for killing yourself (or, say, murdering people at your suburban Colorado high school) ultimately rests upon your own shoulders, and tracing the blame to a punk band or video game or violent movie seems a bit reductionist.
What about drug addicts and alcoholics that commit suicide while under the influence. This isn't a conscious choice they are making. It is a, sometimes, irreversible choice made due to a hereditary illness. Do we start blaming the alcoholic 18 year old who was born into a horrible family upbringing?
In Vancouver you mentioned respect for people who took their own lives knowing that they no longer had reason to exist. Well, Kurt Vonnegut attempted suicide in 1984. Some of his best novels, short stories, essays, etc, have been written and published after 84'. Are these not iconic fiction pieces created after he attempted suicide? Obviously Vonnegut had a lot more existing left to do despite his own attempts to take his life. People who are severely depressed 'dissociate' which alters affect and consequently try to regulate emotions, sometimes resulting in taking their lives. This people aren't always in a conscious state of mind. Is that fair to them? For every person you think is a hero for taking their life, I would argue there are a hundred who went on to get treated and accomplish great things.Al Brown wrote:Our record was written with these people in mind: Richard Brautigan, Kurt Vonnegut, Sylvia Plath, Mitch Hedberg, Kurt Cobain, Yukio Mishima, Hemingway, uncles, aunts, friends, personal acquaintances, etc. All of whom either committed - or attempted to commit - suicide. It has been on my brain heavily over the past few years. I don't mean to pollute others with unnecessary doldrums, but, for me, the pen writes lyrics that the brain can't stop circulating.
My problem is you make this issue to cut and dry based on your ill interpreted surroundings. There is so much more to suicide than someone just deciding, "Hey, I've graduated high school, had a kid, played in a band... What more could I do with myself now? Well, I guess I'll just kill myself." Again, suicide is most often, it not always, a decision made while not being totally conscious of what your doing: dissociation.
And for the record, I am not saying suicide should be illegal; if I ever get in a car accident and become a vegetable, I would hope my family would allow Jack Kevorkian to pull the plug on me... Although, I believe it's totally irresponsible, naive, and all tongue and cheek to say the things that were said.