I had not intended to reintroduce Ain't Studying You with this post, but I've been doing so much writing and thinking on gun violence in the US that it seemed appropriate.
I nearly typed that I'd been doing thinking "in the wake of Newtown." I hesitate there because I am disturbed by the tendency to disconnect Newtown from Kansas City, Jacksonville, Sanford, not to mention the number of fatalities by guns or drones that remain untold and publicly unmourned.
It seems important to think about the injunction to feel worse about this loss of life than about others. (I'm drawing here on
Fred Moten's crystalline explanation of the demand on the so-called Left
for "more feeling" for the dead of 9/11 than those innocent dead of US strikes
before or after it.) The distribution of sympathy--as much as that of wealth, rights, and guns--remains a life or death
matter. What follows is, quite simply, a call to feel more often about more people.