In defense of 'thoughts and prayers'

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When a tragedy occurs — particularly one that involves gun violence, like Sunday's mass shooting in Texas — two things are quite predictable in the aftermath: First, lots of people,


including politicians, will offer their "thoughts and prayers." And second, an increasingly large cadre of critics will react to these offerings of "thoughts and prayers"


with outrage. Why? It seems people think "thoughts and prayers" are a lazy substitute for embarking on some real political action that might help prevent such tragedies from


occurring in the future. Critics believe those who offer up thoughts and prayers — particularly Republican officeholders who get donations from the National Rifle Association — are trying to


deflect from their own inaction, or that they are complicit with the status quo. It's true some politicians are being opportunistic when they chime in with such platitudes. But in


general, this line of thinking is insane, and, what's more, it makes the world worse. SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEEK Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from


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directly to your inbox. From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. Contrary to the enraged certainties of


many anti-gun liberals, there are actually few policies we know of that could serve as easy remedies to things like gun massacres. Even if you could magically make the NRA go poof, and make


the Republican Party go poof, and make the Second Amendment go poof, and suddenly change the minds of the majority of Americans who support gun rights, the country would still be full of


guns, and episodic massacres would still occur. The point isn't that America's gun legislation is perfect, or that nothing can or should be done. The point is that NRA-GOP


obstruction is not the one and only thing preventing the end of gun violence. The urgency and vigor of those who despise the notion of "thoughts and prayers" would only be


justified in their reaction if there were indeed a magic button we could push to fix the problem tomorrow. And there isn't. But there's something more fundamental at play. This


isn't just about guns. It's about how we see political action. The implicit, maybe unconscious, but clear premise of the anti-"thoughts and prayers" line is that the


_only_ proper response to bad things happening is always political action. But turning everything into a political battle ensures that every single issue will become a conflictual one,


leading to the progressive fraying away of social norms and of the belief in shared American values — which is what allows for political debate to begin with. Political debate in a democracy


is what happens among groups who agree on more things than they disagree, which is why the losers lose gracefully and the winners don't press their advantage too much. If you disagree


with the other side on _everything_, then there's no point in having a debate. The only solution is a civil war. But the problem here isn't just political — it's spiritual. No


doubt part of what drives people mad about "thoughts and prayers" is that they think prayer doesn't do anything, presumably because they don't believe in God. Of course,


there are lots of people who believe that prayer is not only effective, it is, at the end of the day, the _only_ effective thing, and that political action without a connection to a higher


power ultimately becomes self-defeating. Some people have to offer "thoughts and prayers" because they genuinely want to express their grief over an unthinkable act. If the only


thing you think about after a tragedy is the next bill that should be passed, then you have no consideration for the victims as human beings — they are simply pawns in your political


calculations. You are using still-warm bodies as props in a political marketing campaign — how noble! In this context, "thoughts and prayers" are not beside the point, they are the


whole point. They remind us that the Sturm und Drang of politics is not about enemies and allies, winning and losing. It is — or it should be — about actual individual human lives, every


single one of whom is endowed with inalienable dignity and splendor. Being reminded of that might be one of the very few things that keeps us from falling off the precipice into a world


incalculably more cruel than this already wretched Earth. And I'll be praying that doesn't happen. Explore More Zurich