shiddymunkie wrote:squinty wrote:I apologize for going there. I do not think the point of your thread was to dehumanize anyone, nor was it racially motivated, nor could anyone get that impression from this thread. Just pointing out that what you identified as a central characteristic of movie zombies - the moral obligation to exterminate them/absence of culpability associated with killing - makes the zombie metaphor attractive to people with such unsavory ideas.
I understand your concern, and I have no qualms at all with the rule of not referring to real people as zombies. But with that being said, there is no way to discuss the possibility of
real zombies without venturing into the hypothetical realm of
real people being involved. But since the hypothetically-infected don't actually exist, it would be a stretch for them to be considered "real people" -- and so the rule wouldn't apply. After all, those hypothetical people would only be as real as the hypothetical zombies they have fallen victim to, am I right? Further more, implications that we shouldn't discuss the possibility of real zombies, as that would entail labeling real people as "zombies", would be presupposing that the infected still actually qualify as
people.
Current top 5 traits:
1. #5 with 23 votes
2. #18 with 20 votes
3. #6 with 20 votes
4. #19 with 16 votes
5. #1 with 15 votes
(Hypothetical realm = fictitious realm for most intents and purposes, so I'm happier. Still sorry to go Godwin on you, very poor form on my part.)
Well sure, if there was some agent or process that could, hypothetically, make people "not people" then we'd be well on our way to calling them zombies. But I can't think of anything irl right now that could do that. Even with their behavior distorted by drugs or brain injuries people are people. We don't currently kill people with brain damage unless and until they are reduced to brain stems on a respirator. Although maybe that's a good working definition of a zombie: a homicidal vegetable, ie someone with no higher mental function, whom you would normally disconnect from a respirator or feeding tube and allow to die because there was definitely no "them" left in there anymore, except they are somehow able to walk around and eat you. Though Shaun of the Dead even had the brilliance to introduce doubt about
that, in the scene where Shaun says to his mother "I know it looks like him, but there is nothing of the man you loved in that car" but at that exact moment, her zombitized husband reaches up to turn off the stereo that had been blasting music he hated in life, and the zombie stepdad looks, briefly, relieved.
Even a brain injury or disease that
makes a person homicidal and impairs some of their reasoning and survival ability doesn't make them a zombie. Charles Whitman was close. He still had higher reasoning functions, but they were impaired by rage somewhat (a coldly rational Whitman could have killed in subtler ways, and got away with it over and over.) But even him, the only reason to shoot him was he placed others in imminent danger. If he could have been identified as suffering from w/e it was sooner, the response wouldn't be "oh no, he's got that tumor that makes him kill. Head shot!" It would have been to detain him and try to fix the thing that was making him nuts.
Now, a Charles Whitman "tumor" that was somehow highly contagious, and spread so rapidly that the time and resources didn't exist to treat them all would be pretty scary, esp. if it left a lot of higher functioning intact. Way scarier than the typical "higher functioning lost" zombie.
The Return of the Living Dead "Zombies" had some higher functioning, they could talk, use radios, wheedle and cajole their victims, and explain what a terribly painful state was living death. I think
The Crazies introduced a similar "thinking zombies" concept, as the infected in that movie didn't regress to a level of subhuman, unable to use tools impairment. They kept the ability to shoot, drive, run you through with a pitchfork etc. but were so consumed with the urge to kill that they couldn't think very far ahead.