For the People: They’re Coming For You.

zombiesinarea490

You’re alone.  It’s late and it’s dark and the streetlights are not quite doing their job. Something, you’re not sure what, doesn’t feel right.  Looking back over your shoulder, you see the shift of shadows and the movement of the bushes that might just be the breeze.  But, it might not.

The best thing to do is get somewhere safe, quickly.  You turn the collar up on your coat and push your hands deep into your pockets and walk as fast as you can without appearing scared.  You are scared.  There is no denying that.  But the last thing you want is to show it.  You don’t understand how the city streets could look so empty and you wonder just how late it really is.  Did time get away from you?  You pull your cell phone from your pocket and your trembling hands fumble it to the ground, where your fast-moving feet deliver a swift kick that sends it spinning under a dumpster.  You look back.  Now you see them.

They’re coming for you.

Morally bankrupt teens like A Clockwork Orange’s Alex and his droogs?  Violent gang members warring over drug turf and colored bandanas?  Tear-drop-tattooed, illegally armed thugs?

Nope.  Zombies.

That’s right.  The restless dead are coming to get you, because they already got everyone else.  Their stiff decaying bodies shamble towards you and cavernous moans escape from their throats.  You can run and hide, but, inevitably, you will be caught and you will be turned into one of them.

Ok.  Back to reality.

rob-zombieZombies have permeated popular culture.  They fit in with modern hipster chic by being a bit ridiculous and laughable.  They have a rich history in folklore, literature, and film.  If you haven’t heard by now of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, I’m not sure where you’ve been.  Certainly not a book store.  Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” video cemented zombies in popular music.  Heck, zombies might have even spared us from the current scourge of teenage-girl-on-vampire-love if they had just adapted into something a little more erotic and a little less necrotic; but, I guess the girls are going to favor the more traditionally handsome undead.

I’ve been wondering lately why zombies are so popular in our culture, and wondering if that popularity reveals something about our national subconscious.

The first thing to take into account is that zombies tend to come in groups, while zombie-targeted humans tend to be alone or in numbers smaller than the zombie hordes.  Second, zombies are typically mindless, ghoulish grotesques that will eat your brains and make you one of them.  Third, they are nearly impossible to fight off because they are already dead.  Finally, the scariest zombies are the ones you recognize as former friends or members of your family.  They clearly aren’t what they used to be, and they want to destroy you.

Do you see it?

We have come to a point in history when everything is “us vs. them” and the lands in which we may travel safely are marked on the map in red or blue.  Travel into the wrong territory, and be horrified by the debase and immoral travesty that the others consider “normal life”.  You must remain hidden undercover, or face relentless attempts at conversion.

I’m suggesting that the zombie phenomenon is, in part, a mirror of the political climate in America.  Actually, it mirrors the near-end result of divisive ideological tactics by the two major political parties.  By pretending to champion causes that have little middle-ground and then selling them to us as the things that really matter, the Republicans and Democrats have created for us mortal enemies in our neighbors.

We are now, each of us, the last sane man.

I believe strongly in the principles by which I try to live my life, and I try to expand those principles to the world around me.  I also believe that I am better than many people at listening to the thoughts, ideas, and beliefs of others and putting myself in a position to understand the “how” and “why” formulating their point of view.  Yet, even with this ability to see other perspectives, I still am wholly convinced that my views are correct, and to not share my beliefs is to be lacking a degree of reason.  I can’t help but think that we are all increasingly rigid in this form of conviction, and it is dividing us from one another like never before.

We don’t all have to be on the same side, of the same mind, with unified purpose, snuffing out anyone who dissents.  I think if we all just made a genuine effort to apply a little bit more of one simple thing to our thoughts before we turned them into words (or laws), we could achieve a balanced blend of thinking that would propel our nation further along the path of world leadership.  What one thing do I mean?

Brains.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Jake Negovan.

Jake Negovan strives to shine a light on truth and hypocrisy when the mainstream media overlooks those small details. “…For the People,” Jake’s column, is his platform to address the issues that our country faces as we continue growing toward a society of equality, as well as to provide him a place to tell you that he’s always right.


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