The Market Can't Solve a Massacre
The massacre at Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, one month ago today, left seventeen children and school staff dead. It was the third highest-casualty mass shooting at an educational institution in American history (after Virginia Tech—32 dead—and Sandy Hook—27) and the ninth highest-casualty single-shooter mass shooting in modern American history. Assembling such ranked lists, surveying body count subtotals, and tracking the fatalities balance sheet is nauseating, and it was perhaps in the spirit of that enterprise that South Dakota Senator Mike Rounds told NPR the day afterward: “You have to recognize, our most valuable assets are our kids.”
As a Republican with an “A” rating from the NRA, it would be entirely defensible to say Rounds’s words are belied by his deeds: He may say children are our greatest “assets,” but he certainly seems to value an NRA endorsement far more. But what’s striking about Rounds’ phrase isn’t its hypocrisy, but the way it captures a central truth about contemporary American politics. Our political rhetoric, like our moral imagination, uses the vocabulary and logic of the market, of assets and investments, of incentives and innovation. Your personal health is an asset, which you must safeguard through savvy navigation of insurance markets, shopping for doctors and medications, and close-reading complicated medical bills. Immigrants, too, are assets, human resources whose financial contributions to their communities and potential for entrepreneurship become the pivot on which we hang appeals for empathy and support (This man being tragically deported by ICE is a successful small business owner! This drowned child refugee could have been the next Steve Jobs!). And so on.
There is a word to describe this state of affairs, a word that describes both the way we’ve organized our current political and economic system, and the way we have let that system shape our social and emotional lives. That word is neoliberalism.
What is neoliberalism? The many competing definitions can be confusing and even misleading. And, since the history of neoliberalism has played out in many different countries, what the word denotes in one place is not necessarily the same in others. But we shouldn’t let nuance and complexity dissuade us from using the term, because neoliberalism is an incredibly powerful concept for understanding not just contemporary American life and politics in general, but our reactions to gun violence and school shootings specifically.
Neoliberalism is at once a subspecies of capitalism and a model of governance, a vision of what politics can and should be. It sees political and social life almost exclusively through the lens of the free market, and asks us to consider ourselves and our fellow citizens primarily in terms of our economic activities: as consumers, as workers, as competitors, as human resources. Under neoliberalism, in other words, the individual is less a human subject with rights that entail obligations from the government, but rather a variable in a broader calculus of efficiency, a site for maximizing revenue and minimizing expenditure. Simply put, neoliberalism is about the withdrawal of government responsibility for political problems in favor of market-based “solutions” and individual “choices.”
In a very granular and insidious way, neoliberalism narrows the bounds of what counts as a “political” problem as such. Dramatic political change becomes increasingly unthinkable, dismissed as unrealistic, impracticable, and naïve. Transmuting hopes for radical transformation into market-based “innovation” as a primary driver of social change, neoliberal governance recedes into technocratic administration, busying itself with ever-more-arcane and bloodless policy tweaks intended merely to keep capital flowing smoothly and efficiently. Meanwhile, as state responsibility for political problems evaporates, individuals are left to pick up the slack, obligated to perform vast amounts of compensatory emotional and material labor even as they grow ever more vulnerable, atomized, and overwhelmed. Not coincidentally, neoliberalism has become our dominant system against the backdrop of decades of corporate deregulation, privatization, and the dismantling of social services, developments that it celebrates and champions.
The emotional and political landscape of American gun violence and school shootings specifically reads like an atlas of neoliberalism. To be sure, our singular problem with gun murder—of which mass shootings are only a fractional percentile, one with no real analogue anywhere in any other nation in the world, neoliberal or otherwise—has deep roots in America’s unique history of ethnic cleansing, racial oppression, globalized militarism, entrenched inequality, and violent ideologies of masculinity; these forces shape how gun violence plays out in and determines which Americans must bear its traumas most. But how our society has chosen to frame and respond to the problem of mass shootings, and school shootings specifically, over the course of the past two decades illustrates neoliberalism’s corrosiveness.
Consider, first, the scope of mainstream reactions to mass shootings. The problem of random massacres in public spaces is a properly political problem. It strikes at the core of our basic ability to live together and interact safely with each other in the public sphere. And yet the primary themes in responses of our politicians from across the political spectrum have been disavowal, indifference, resignation, and opportunism. Conservatives who are otherwise unabashed about endorsing heavy-handed and repressive responses to the evils of terrorism respond to gun massacres by waxing theological and proclaiming that evil cannot be “legislated.” Liberals, meanwhile, have long operated from a position defined by a self-fulfilling preemptive concession to “reality” whereby entertaining the idea of an outright gun ban is taboo, foreclosed from the get-go.
Whatever one may think of a total gun ban as either a moral or a practical matter, the fact that it is a position currently espoused in public by precisely zero national-level politicians is significant. The outcome of any political debate partially reflects a middle ground defined by the most extreme positions espoused by mainstream political actors. American politics accommodates plenty of extreme positions, and the Republican party has been particularly successful in normalizing and leveraging the obstinacy of its most extreme politicians and constituents to consistently move policy and discourse rightwards. Yet while voices calling for an elimination of the minimum wage or abortion bans are commonplace among conservatives, the signal absence of prominent Democrats stridently demanding a blanket gun ban—even as an ideal principle, deployed for purposes of bargaining—markedly predetermines the entire national conversation on guns.
-
trump-administration So…Uh…What Exactly Happened Between Trump and “Bubba”? By Jacob Weindling November 14, 2025 | 5:25pm
-
media The NYT Olivia Nuzzi Profile About Her RFK Jr. Affair Is Good Writing and Bad Editing By Jacob Weindling November 14, 2025 | 3:23pm
-
big-story What Should Democrats Learn From FDR? By Thor Benson November 14, 2025 | 12:57pm
-
sports The Best Basketball Player Alive Got Better Again By Jacob Weindling November 13, 2025 | 4:36pm
-
trump-administration Under Trump, the U.S. Is on a Path to Committing Grave Human Rights Atrocities in America By Ross Pomeroy November 13, 2025 | 11:19am
-
big-story The Epstein Files Are Probably Why Trump Doesn’t Think He’s Getting Into Heaven By Jacob Weindling November 12, 2025 | 4:22pm
-
media Bari Weiss and Billionaire Failson David Ellison Have No Clue What They're Doing at CBS By Jacob Weindling November 11, 2025 | 5:39pm
-
economy The Economy Does Better Under Democrats, but Most People Don’t Know That By Thor Benson November 11, 2025 | 12:41pm
-
congress What Is the Point of Voting for Democrats? By Jacob Weindling November 10, 2025 | 1:16pm
-
economy I’ll Bet the Under On Elon Musk’s $1 Trillion Tesla Package By Jacob Weindling November 7, 2025 | 2:45pm
-
congress, trump-administration Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Trump’s Canary In the Coal Mine By Jacob Weindling November 7, 2025 | 12:28pm
-
sports ESPN Tacitly Admits Sports Gambling Is a Problem, But They’ll Still Profit from It By Jacob Weindling November 6, 2025 | 5:37pm
-
economy, technology Meta Is a Fraudulent Company Run By a Clueless, Creepy Boy King By Jacob Weindling November 6, 2025 | 2:28pm
-
international-affairs Israel's Endless Ceasefire Violations Continue Unabated By Roqayah Chamseddine November 6, 2025 | 10:56am
-
trump-administration …Why Is There a “The Oval Office” Sign Outside The Oval Office? By Jacob Weindling November 5, 2025 | 2:38pm
-
elections Small-d Democrats Fight Back By Jacob Weindling November 5, 2025 | 1:37pm
-
economy Trump May Have Popped the Crypto Bubble By Jacob Weindling November 4, 2025 | 5:19pm
-
elections Some Democrats Are Horrified That They May Win and People May Like Them By Jacob Weindling November 4, 2025 | 2:15pm
-
big-story, international-affairs Dick Cheney, Architect of Our Modern Trumpian Malaise, Dies at 84 By Jacob Weindling November 4, 2025 | 11:32am
-
elections, big-story, climate Bleak Days Ahead - But No Room for Despair By Tiernan Cannon October 31, 2025 | 10:44am
-
media Maybe It's Time for Jon Stewart to Step Back By Jason Tabrys October 31, 2025 | 10:32am
-
trump-administration, big-story, international-affairs Trump Finally Punishes Russia. What Now? By Jen Kirby October 31, 2025 | 10:16am
-
international-affairs Great Hunger: Gang Violence Deepens Haiti’s Food Crisis By Tiernan Cannon October 30, 2025 | 12:49pm
-
trump-administration, international-affairs The Trump Administration Is Creating a Modern Monroe Doctrine to Subjugate Latin America By Roqayah Chamseddine October 30, 2025 | 10:21am
-
economy How Evangelicals Justify Economic Inequality By Ross Pomeroy October 29, 2025 | 1:32pm
-
trump-administration Trump Takes Credit for Another Peace Deal: Cambodia-Thailand Edition By Jen Kirby October 28, 2025 | 1:59pm
-
elections, big-story The Thirteen Most Exasperated Comments from the Dallas Fed Business Survey By Jacob Weindling October 28, 2025 | 1:41pm
-
big-story, technology AI Is America’s Existential Crisis By Jacob Weindling October 27, 2025 | 4:22pm
-
big-story Pre-Sputnik "Star-Like" Study Finds Peer-Reviewed “Empirical Support for the UAP Phenomenon” By Jacob Weindling October 24, 2025 | 4:25pm
-
congress, elections Feckless Democratic Leader Finally Endorses Popular Democratic Candidate for Mayor of America’s Largest City By Jacob Weindling October 24, 2025 | 1:50pm
-
immigration, trump-administration Do ICE Recruits Know How to Read? By Jacob Weindling October 23, 2025 | 2:24pm
-
trump-administration, sports Sports Embraced the Devil, and Now the Devil Is At their Doorstep By Jacob Weindling October 23, 2025 | 12:16pm
-
trump-administration, economy Trump Attacks American Ranchers in More Ways Than One By Jacob Weindling October 22, 2025 | 4:04pm
-
supreme-court Federal Judges Are Mad at the Supreme Court By Thor Benson October 22, 2025 | 10:06am
-
healthcare Trump's Attacks On Healthcare Hit the Poorest the Hardest By Roqayah Chamseddine October 22, 2025 | 9:44am
-
economy The Texas State Fair Suggests the Economy Is At a Turning Point By Jacob Weindling October 21, 2025 | 2:46pm
-
elections Why Would You Run for Senate Before Knowing You Have a Nazi Tattoo? By Jacob Weindling October 21, 2025 | 12:31pm
-
trump-administration, big-story No Kings Was America’s Largest Protest Since 1970 By Jacob Weindling October 20, 2025 | 12:11pm
-
international-affairs Great Hunger: Failed Interventions Have Inflamed Mali’s Food Crisis By Tiernan Cannon October 20, 2025 | 11:53am
-
media Weekly Reader: Stories From Across Paste Media By Jacob Weindling October 17, 2025 | 4:08pm
-
trump-administration, economy Trump Says His Favorite Idea Is “Not Sustainable” But “It Could Stand” By Jacob Weindling October 17, 2025 | 3:21pm
-
international-affairs The Mystery "Drones" Are Back By Jacob Weindling October 17, 2025 | 12:40pm
-
economy I Will Never Talk to Microsoft’s AI PC By Jacob Weindling October 16, 2025 | 1:31pm
-
healthcare, trump-administration Five Explanations for Rising Autism Rates That Aren’t Vaccines or Tylenol By Ross Pomeroy October 16, 2025 | 10:42am
-
palestine How American Academia Supports Israel's Genocide in Gaza By Roqayah Chamseddine October 16, 2025 | 9:35am
-
trump-administration, economy Trump Bankrupted Tons of Crypto Bros and Caused Its Biggest Wipeout Ever With One TruthSocial Post By Jacob Weindling October 13, 2025 | 12:05pm
-
trump-administration The Trump Administration Is Terrified of No Kings Protests By Jacob Weindling October 13, 2025 | 11:11am
-
climate, economy Trump Is Immiserating His Own Voters With His War on Renewable Energy By Jacob Weindling October 10, 2025 | 2:27pm
-
technology A Mars Probe Snapped a Photo of 3I/ATLAS — Very Likely a Comet, Not a Spaceship By Jacob Weindling October 10, 2025 | 12:06pm
-
trump-administration, big-story Nobel Committee Snubs Trump for an Ostensible Trump Ally By Jacob Weindling October 10, 2025 | 10:25am
-
trump-administration Republican Governor Slams Texas National Guard Deployment to Chicago By Jacob Weindling October 9, 2025 | 4:05pm
-
immigration, economy Trump’s Immigration Policies Are Creating a Lasting Drag on Jobs and the Economy By Jacob Weindling October 9, 2025 | 2:36pm
-
congress, trump-administration Democrats Have Played This Government Shutdown Fairly Well—So Far By Jacob Weindling October 9, 2025 | 11:52am
-
trump-administration The Legal Battle Over Trump Defunding Democratic States By Thor Benson October 9, 2025 | 10:11am
-
trump-administration Trump: ‘We Took the Freedom of Speech Away’ By Jacob Weindling October 8, 2025 | 3:40pm
-
media, sports Bad Bunny and the Super Bowl Remind Conservative Media They Did Not Win the Culture in the 2024 Election By Jacob Weindling October 8, 2025 | 1:24pm
-
congress, trump-administration Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Now One of the Sanest Republicans By Jacob Weindling October 8, 2025 | 11:13am
-
climate Small Island Tests Big Climate Change Ruling In Court By Jacob Weindling October 7, 2025 | 3:23pm
-
trump-administration, economy Gold Is Telling a Bleak Story About America Right Now By Jacob Weindling October 7, 2025 | 1:35pm
-
elections, trump-administration Trump and the GOP Float a Great Idea to Get Annihilated in Virginia Elections By Jacob Weindling October 7, 2025 | 11:03am
-
trump-administration Tyranny of the Posters By Jacob Weindling October 6, 2025 | 4:00pm
-
media CBS News Further Beclowns Itself With Bari Weiss’ Hire By Jacob Weindling October 6, 2025 | 12:35pm
-
palestine A Majority of U.S. Jews Think Israel Has Committed War Crimes By Jacob Weindling October 6, 2025 | 10:52am
-
sports, billionaires The NBA’s Billionaire Shitstorm They Don’t Want to Talk About Is the Scandal of Our Time By Jacob Weindling October 3, 2025 | 5:14pm
-
media, trump-administration Jeffrey Epstein: Bad Pedophile Lampoons the Crap that Got Us Here By Kenneth Lowe October 3, 2025 | 4:19pm
-
sports, economy Sports Gambling Sees a Sharp Drop In Popularity Among Its Target Demographic By Jacob Weindling October 3, 2025 | 2:21pm
-
trump-administration, economy Stagflation Strengthens While Business Activity Contracts For the First Time Since 2020 By Jacob Weindling October 3, 2025 | 11:50am
-
international-affairs Great Hunger: South Sudan is at Tipping Point By Tiernan Cannon October 3, 2025 | 10:46am
-
climate, economy Tesla’s Sales Spike on the Death of Electric Vehicle Credits By Jacob Weindling October 2, 2025 | 1:47pm
-
trump-administration Trump Pledges To Defend Qatar...Who Was Just Attacked By Israel By Jacob Weindling October 2, 2025 | 12:12pm
-
congress, trump-administration GOP Speaker of the House Doesn’t Deny Allegation That Trump Is 'Unwell' By Jacob Weindling October 2, 2025 | 10:45am
-
congress, elections James Talarico’s Spiritual Bernie-Style Politics Is a Fundraising Force in the Texas Senate Race By Jacob Weindling October 1, 2025 | 3:26pm
-
trump-administration Trump’s Unprecedented Political Prosecutions From a Historical Perspective By Thor Benson October 1, 2025 | 2:05pm
-
supreme-court, trump-administration, economy The Illuminati Prove Again That They Won’t Let Trump Mess With Their Money By Jacob Weindling October 1, 2025 | 12:51pm
-
congress, trump-administration The Democrats’ Bad Political Logic in Trump’s Shutdown By Jacob Weindling October 1, 2025 | 11:39am
-
trump-administration Sleepy Trump Declares War on America By Jacob Weindling September 30, 2025 | 11:49am
-
trump-administration Study: Don’t Give Up Hope By Jacob Weindling September 30, 2025 | 10:12am
-
palestine, international-affairs A Year After the Pager Attacks, Israel’s Assaults on Civilians Continue By Roqayah Chamseddine September 30, 2025 | 9:34am
-
economy Debt Markets Are Making Wall Street Nervous With Their ‘Star Wars Garbage Chute Situation’ By Jacob Weindling September 29, 2025 | 4:09pm
-
sports America Gets Embarrassed On American Soil By Jacob Weindling September 29, 2025 | 1:28pm
-
trump-administration Does Trump Know What’s Going On? By Jacob Weindling September 29, 2025 | 10:21am
-
Epstein Documents: 'Elon Musk to Island Dec. 6' By Jacob Weindling September 26, 2025 | 2:54pm
-
immigration, trump-administration, economy Trump Is Annihilating America’s Soybean Farmers and Betraying Them for Argentina By Jacob Weindling September 26, 2025 | 12:46pm
-
international-affairs The Prodigious Incompetence of Britain’s Would-Be Left Party By Tiernan Cannon September 26, 2025 | 12:09pm
-
trump-administration Trump Is Weaponizing the DOJ Against James Comey and Other Political Enemies Most People Don’t Care About By Jacob Weindling September 26, 2025 | 11:18am
-
economy, palestine Microsoft Cuts Israel’s Cloud Access Over Their Surveillance of Gaza By Jacob Weindling September 25, 2025 | 3:27pm
-
sports I Welcome Baseball’s New Robot Overlords By Jacob Weindling September 25, 2025 | 1:33pm
-
trump-administration Can You Trust Donald Trump’s FBI? By Jacob Weindling September 25, 2025 | 11:47am
-
healthcare, trump-administration President Trump’s Top Tips for Lifelong Health By Ross Pomeroy September 25, 2025 | 10:15am
-
economy The Stock Market and Crypto Are Becoming Increasingly Similar to Disturbing Degrees By Jacob Weindling September 24, 2025 | 4:11pm
-
media, sports, economy Sinclair and Nexstar Are Playing a Very Dangerous Game With Disney By Pre-Empting Jimmy Kimmel By Jacob Weindling September 24, 2025 | 12:37pm
-
media, trump-administration Last Night Was The Night That Jimmy Kimmel Became President By Jason Tabrys September 24, 2025 | 11:31am
-
big-story, international-affairs Great Hunger: Sudan’s Suffering and the “Norm of Indifference” By Tiernan Cannon September 24, 2025 | 10:51am
-
elections Kamala Harris Shows How Easy it Is For Real Democrats to Endorse Zohran Mamdani, New York City's Next Mayor By Jacob Weindling September 23, 2025 | 2:43pm
-
trump-administration Trump Embarrassed America in Front of the Whole World at the UN, and We Deserve It By Jacob Weindling September 23, 2025 | 12:16pm
-
media, trump-administration Trump Wants to Impose a State-Sanctioned Echo Chamber on America By Roqayah Chamseddine September 23, 2025 | 11:15am
-
congress, elections What Democrats Should Do if They Take the House Next Year By Thor Benson September 23, 2025 | 10:05am
-
media, economy Disney Reinstates Jimmy Kimmel And Demonstrates the Downside of Corporate Consolidation By Jacob Weindling September 22, 2025 | 3:48pm
-
climate, economy Why Trump May Bail Out Argentina and How Climate Investment Could Help Him By Jacob Weindling September 22, 2025 | 2:49pm
-
trump-administration Why Are We Bombing Drug Boats? By Jen Kirby September 22, 2025 | 1:16pm
-
elections, healthcare Spineless Democrats Stuck in 1996 Like Ezra Klein Should Just Admit They’re Anti-Abortion By Jacob Weindling September 22, 2025 | 12:13pm
-
media Weekly Reader: Stories From Across Paste Media By Jacob Weindling September 19, 2025 | 3:52pm
-
trump-administration, sports Trump Doesn’t Know Ball, the NFL’s New Kickoff Rule Is Great By Jacob Weindling September 19, 2025 | 2:01pm
-
trump-administration, economy Trump’s Polls Are Slipping as Non-MAGA Republicans Split From MAGA on the Economy By Jacob Weindling September 19, 2025 | 11:51am
-
palestine Israel’s Campaign in Gaza Is Structured to Maximize Human Suffering By Roqayah Chamseddine September 19, 2025 | 9:30am
-
media Vanity Fair Hires RFK Jr.’s Boo Olivia Nuzzi Because Journalism Is Dead By Jacob Weindling September 18, 2025 | 3:49pm
-
supreme-court, economy Trump Asks Supreme Court to Let Him Crash the Economy By Jacob Weindling September 18, 2025 | 2:07pm
-
media, trump-administration No Actual Strong Man Is Intimidated by Jimmy Freaking Kimmel By Jacob Weindling September 18, 2025 | 11:38am