Yep, when I stirred, and flipped open my phone this morning, my feed was filled with memes about garden-roaming, kid-attacking wild swine. I was utterly confuddled. After a bit of digging, I found the tweet that started it all:
— William McNabb (@WillieMcNabb) August 4, 2019 Now, anyone who spends any sort of time online knows memes aren’t newsworthy by themselves. Yes, they’re an integral and longstanding part of internet culture, but are generally fast moving and light by nature. But the feral hog meme is different. It stood out in a way that’s representative of a very online way of dealing with tragedy. Of course, things on the internet spread quickly, but the feral hog appeared faster than most. When I went to sleep, it was nowhere. When I woke up, it was unavoidable. This graph from Jason Baumgartner highlights its sheer scale:
— Jason Baumgartner (@jasonbaumgartne) August 6, 2019 But the real meat of the meme is its context. You don’t need reminding about the two horrendous mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton over the weekend. The origin of the meme (the aforementioned tweet) is a ridiculous response to a post condemning the ownership of “assault weapons.” Whenever a mass shooting occurs, the issue of gun regulation rears its head, yet nothing ever changes. Hell, I don’t even live in the US and I find the discussion demoralizing and exhausting. No other country in the developed world has the same lack of gun regulation and the same sort of murders. I mean, as of October 2018, 61 percent of Americans wanted stricter gun control. But everything stays the same. The feral hog meme isn’t just about making fun of someone who believes they need a machine gun to protect their children from a swarm of swine — although that is definitely part of the joy. No, it’s something more than that. It’s a way of taking control of the uncontrollable. There’s a powerlessness in watching the same awful, preventable thing happen time and time again, and no one in power lifting a finger. It’s a dreadful, crushing feeling, but humour gives people an escape, a way of finding some connection and humanity in a monstrous situation. The feral hog meme is a mass in-joke, a reversion of order, a serious point swaddled in mirth. In other words, it’s seriously online. It’s the way we make sense of tragedy today. It encapsulates the best side of the internet. In my mind, there’s only one way to conclude this. So, please, sit back, and enjoy some of my favorite feral hog memes:
— Jess Dweck (@TheDweck) August 6, 2019
— Dan Douglas (@dandouglas) August 5, 2019
— david hasselhogg (@jamesak9182) August 5, 2019
ME, SEEING EXACTLY ONE ADDITIONAL HOG RUNNING INTO MY YARD: pic.twitter.com/6MTXSDK8qb — Grant Brisbee (@GrantBrisbee) August 5, 2019
— Patrick Monahan (@pattymo) August 5, 2019
⚪️ male ⚪️ female ? 30-50 feral hogs Seeking: ⚪️ male ⚪️ female ? a yard with unsupervised small children to run in to within 3-5 minutes — AshPop (@BarbiturateCat) August 5, 2019
— fuck the sun #jft96 (@thedanstringer) August 5, 2019
— Edcrab (@Edcrab_) August 5, 2019
— Lil’ Kim Jong-un (@James__Nesbitt) August 5, 2019
I have eaten the kids that were in the backyard Who you probably left for three to five minutes Forgive me I am thirty to fifty feral hogs — Leigh “Birch” Harlen? (@LeighHarlen) August 6, 2019