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Sunday, November 27, 2016

Lesson Learned...NOT!!

In the White Bear episode of Black Mirror, a young woman is punished for her crime of being a bystander in the brutal murder of a young girl. Her punishment is cruel and unusual for a multitude of reasons but what I find most cruel of all is that her punishers zap her memory at the end of each day so that she wakes up every morning without a clue of where she is or what has happened. In her confused disorientation, she struggles through the exact same terrifying day over and over again, for God only knows how long—maybe the rest of her life?
To me, this is extremely cruel in that it robs the woman being punished of the ability to learn from her mistakes or feel any form of true regret or remorse. It does not seem constructive to take away any memory of the crime she has committed and then stimulate her own crime on herself to demonstrate why what she did (or did not do) to the little girl was wrong. How can she feel guilty for something she does not even remember doing? How can she be remorseful for a crime that, at the end of the day, she is not completely sure she committed?
I don’t see the point in it or how it can teach her anything, especially not some “lesson” about not being a bystander in times where you are called to act. In fact, the people who are punishing her become the embodiment of the exact crime for which they are reprimanding her.  Which is the point, I know. But, it still seems hypocritical and counterproductive in the scheme of things. How can you show someone that they should not have done something to someone by doing that exact thing to them? How can you justify hurting someone for something that you will not even let them remember that they did?

I think that her form punishment is not only cruel but also backwards, senseless, not well thought-out, and counterproductive. It does not prevent the behavior from happening again because when she wakes up every day, she can’t even remember the event at all. She does not have the opportunity to truly feel remorse for what she did or to learn from the mistakes of her past. She cannot truly suffer if she does not even understand what she is suffering is for.

2 comments:

Lauren said...

At the end of the episode, we hear Victoria ask the show "host" to just kill her, so she does feel remorse. She is devastated to hear the truth and to find out that she murdered the girl who she thought was her child. So I think that you're right that they don't even give her the chance to learn her lesson and feel guilty to get "better". By wiping her memory, they take away any feelings she had about the situation. It truly is for the benefit of the customers and viewers that Victoria is locked away and pit through this torture.

Anonymous said...

I do think that Victoria suffers and feels remorse, but it is not for long. She is unable to dig deeper into that sense of remorse to enact real change in her person because she does not know it long enough to do it. Her punishment is incomplete, in a way, in that it does not allow her to fully grasp the reality of her situation.