Posted on Sep 11, 2015
COL Strategic Plans Chief
5.6K
21
24
7
7
0
The word "survivor" is now used as a suffix to any traumatic experience (or percieved traumatic experience). The most recent one, which prompted this, was "gun violence survivors." Some were shot and "survived" the experience, others had family members killed. Should this be labeled "survivor?" It seems to build on the victim profile we continue to build for people. Honestly, unless you have been the target of a homicide, and the intention to kill is present...isn't that the only time you're really a survivor? Someone tried to kill you, but you made it. Everything else is surely tragic, but saying you survived something that doesn't involve attempted killing of some sort seems...alarmist, and just wrong.
Posted in these groups: Article319418 21 no violence2 ViolenceAd41a203 Murder
Avatar feed
Responses: 13
CPT Military Police
0
0
0
COL (Join to see) Curious about how you view obituaries stating, "survived by"... What if a person is a "survivor" because they fought off urge to commit suicide? What about breast cancer survivors (male and female)? What else would we call someone who "survived" breast cancer? I don't watch the show Survivor I think it's on the same level as WWE wrestling shows.
(0)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
LCDR Sales & Proposals Manager Gas Turbine Products
0
0
0
In the context of a society and infrastructure driven by "event = benefit", yes.
In the context of individual experience...well, it's subjective at best. If someone missed getting hit by shrapnel from an incoming round, or an insurgent took a pot-shot at 2,000 yards without even using the sights...does that equal being in a plane crash, or spending a week on the slope of Everest? Probably not.
(0)
Comment
(0)
COL Strategic Plans Chief
COL (Join to see)
>1 y
I'd say that you could be a plane-crash survivor. That meets my definition. An Everest survivor? I guess. That's like trying to commit suicide and failing. I guess that fits too.
(1)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
MCPO Roger Collins
0
0
0
Been saying that about survivors and heros for years, COL.
(0)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close