by I_Like_Plants » Wed 21 Mar 2007, 16:51:00
That's pretty much standard stuff, this case just happened to be videotaped.
The difference in the US is, I was telling a bulgarian friend about my evil hillbilly neighbors, and the bulgarian told me back in bulgaria, you don't call the police, the neighborhood gets together and beats the holy shit out of them - bad enough so it never happens again.
Living where I am, with fairly decent police (translation: hungry to crack heads) the best option was to work with them, result: hillbillies appear to be gone.
In small-town, truly rural US, you carry a gun and you're ready to use it - the lady would have a gun behind the counter if not on her, and a few well-armed regulars would be around too - the guy who beat her up would be found dead by a drainage ditch somewhere and it would be blamed on illegal immigrants.
But, getting back to US culture in general - I grew up in Hawaii, where the "Beef" or fight to contend finer points of ..... well, anything .... is a way of life. New Samoan or Tahitian immigrants were enthusiastic participants in the "Beef" way of life, and I was talking at a bus stop with an older white guy who'd been around the Pacific quite a bit, hell, he'd probably fought in WWII in fact almost certainly had.
He had a very interesting viewpoint - all over the Pacific and especially in Hawaii where TV ownership was universal, you'd turn on the TV and see American movies. John Wayne! And all the imitators, and there were all these fight scenes. Fight, fight, fight. The old guy told me traditional culture isn't like that, but they see this new stuff and want to fit in, to be modern, and when they'd move to Hawaii, to be American. And all they'd see on TV from John Wayne to Popeye, was all this fighting and violence. Keep in mind this guy's talking about TV in the 1970s, with lots of re-runs and old movies and cartoons and stuff dating back into the 1930s.
Now, if you're making this new thing called the motion picture, or this new thing called an animated cartoon, you want to show the public something interesting. Firemen running around putting out fires were good scenes, the notorious train heading right at the audience, funny stuff with those newfangled auto-mo-biles, leading to the establishment of the standard chase scene. But, just like on the real Main Street, nothing attracts attention like a fight. So, movies and cartoons relied on tension and people fighting to get and hold attention from the start. Ours was always an expansionist, Indian-killin', young culture, where your family was moving from the Big Woods to Cherry Creek to the Prairie, so kids grew up establishing "turf" and our culture's been a pretty violent one anyway, but I am not exaggerating or being an old biddy when I say it's the TV and the movies. Then you had comic books - again, tons of fighting, heck all the superheroes do is fight.
It took me a while to digest what this old guy told me, but I ended up feeling sorry for these "Beefers", traditional Samoan and Tahitian etc culture is kind of physical, but not at all as tense, violent, and alienated as our own.