Rarely a week goes by without news media using an anniversary peg for stories and this week is no different. The Jonestown massacre,
a mass poisoning of over 900 members of Peoples Temple, occurred 30 years ago this Tuesday. Tim Reiterman, a reporter who has covered the story since the beginning, talks about revisiting it every five years.
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Comments [4]
You must be culturally and historically illiterate to completely and totally miss the meaning of 'drinking the kool-aid.' Unless you were born in 1985 how can you not know about the Jonestown Massacre? Unbelievable. It means you are like a cult member who would follow orders to your own death. "Reappropriating and rearticulating the metaphor," what kind of post-modern garbage is that? You need to know what you are talking about if you're going to showboat. If you have such a command of the English language, get a command of history as well.
I have to agree with Stuart on this. I believe that drinking the Kool-Aid is a part the legacy of Tom Wolfe.
To be honest, I didn't know anything about the Jonestown Massacre up until listening to this piec you had in the show.
I had been ruminating over this one for a day or so when I read a post on our local, on-line newspaper, the New Haven Independent, from a regular who signs himself FedUpWithLiberals, about a rise in fees at a local beach. He wrote: “ROBN Have no fear about the water. Much better for you than Kool Aid!”
That helped this crystallize.
FUWL, just this time I have to say that was in bad taste. As has been well-recounted recently, most people at Jonestown were murdered and I never thought Kesey's acid tests were a good thing.
I had lunch with the former, and I avoided demonstrating against war with the other all on the same day in Berkeley in 1971.
Ken looked too much like my eldest brother, driving his camera-armed armored personnel carrier onto the campus plaza, as my brother eventually was about to do (not exactly but, close enough for government work) here at Yale’s Beinecke.
A show of force, even mock force, is not a model for ending a war and Jones' use of force was just pure evil.
Reappropriating and rearticulating the metaphor: When I think of drinking the Kool-Aid, I'm referring to joining a group’s collective, delusional, and typically sanguine, mindset. I’m reminded amusingly of Ken Kesey's “Electric Kool-Aid” in Tom Wolfe’s “Acid Test”–not the mass murder at Jonestown.
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