Man and Sin by Piet Schoonenberg (1964) 2.2 AL-2

[Progressive TV calls the golden calves and their ornament-bearing, yet unknowing, victims into a mimetic contagion. Both are called to turn against the unwitting scapegoat, the one who is trying to mind her own business.

This is precisely what Paula Dean and George Zimmerman had in common.

Both were trying to mind their own business. One minded a cooking show. The other minded his own neighborhood.

Then, they stumbled into stereotypic events, placing the golden calves and their ornament-bearing viewer-victims on the same side.

What opportunities!

Both events were made for TVProgressive.

The golden calves could proclaim their concern for the victims (standing for the true victims, the television viewers, who cannot talk back and are, therefore, disempowered).

The viewers could be shocked and outraged (thus, acting out frustration and anger at their own disempowered condition, even though they are accomplices to their own disempowerment).

Both Dean and Zimmerman were labeled thinkanti-object and conscienceanti-object.

Both were destroyed by scapegoating.]