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We All Need To Admit That America Has A Tattoo Problem
The Federalist ^ | 08/04/2017 | Mark Hemingway

Posted on 08/06/2017 10:37:26 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

For a variety of personal and professional reasons, I did an epic amount of travel in the last year, across thousands of miles and several states, and there was one cultural constant: Everywhere I went were lots of people with tattoos.

And it’s not just that people have tattoos, it’s the tattoos they have. At one point, I found myself in Breckenridge, gawking at the majestic Rocky Mountain scenery—imagine the “Sound of Music,” only swap Julie Andrews singing with a middle-aged dad yelling at the kids to stop complaining about the long drive. The view of the mountain valley was promptly ruined when one of the first things my eyes fixed on after stumbling into the parking lot was an otherwise pretty young girl whose thigh was consumed by a graphic picture of a skull dripping blood.

I’d like to chalk such a sight up to youthful indiscretion and Colorado’s reefer madness, but a few days earlier I’d been in Salt Lake City. I have many relatives in Salt Lake, and I’m fully aware that the town has changed a lot in recent decades. It’s no longer the monochromatic Mormon enclave of my youth where the most outré cultural expression imaginable involved the inadvisable addition of walnuts to Jell-O salad.

Still, that didn’t prepare me for the blond, pony-tailed soccer mom I saw at Costco with a low-cut tank exposing an amazingly detailed tat on her chest exploding into deer antlers crawling across her collarbones. As tattoos go, it was fantastic artistry, and I submit that was the problem. It was so realistic and visually arresting it looked less like a tattoo, and more like a manifestation of Lovecraftian soul-rot spreading onto her shoulders like inky kudzu. Suffice to say, this is quite the juxtaposition to confront when seeing someone hoist bulk food into a cart to feed her innocent munchkins.

You’re Not So Special Anymore, Buttercup

My experience doesn’t seem to be entirely anecdotal. If America can be divided into those who don’t have tattoos and those who do, the two groups seem to be rapidly approaching equilibrium. About one in five Americans have tattoos, and among 18-29 year-olds the latest figures peg those with ink at 40 percent.

Speaking of percentages, the Air Force is so hard up for recruits that it recently eliminated its “25 percent rule.” Like all military regulations, the 25 percent rule is painfully exact, but loosely stated, it meant that you weren’t eligible to serve, much less join a bomber crew ferrying around nuclear weapons, unless you were capable of exercising good enough judgment not to cover more than a quarter of your body in tattoos.

Back in the good old days, the problem was getting tattoos after you joined the military. My dad was a Marine colonel, and believe me, it was a problem. If you’ve never seen the tattoo parlors that set up shop on the edge of a military base, well, don’t. I’m pretty sure you can get hepatitis just by looking at them.

If tattoos were once an act of rebellion against cultural norms, now they are a well-established norm. If you want a tattoo, hey, it’s a free country. But it seems many people still get them laboring under the delusion that they’re a hallmark of individualism. The desire to use visual signals on your skin to proclaim yourself unique to people you don’t even know can’t be terribly healthy. It is, in a subtle and penetrating way, kind of selfish. Or maybe my misanthropy is showing, but the omnipresence of people begging to be noticed for such superficial reasons is surely annoying.

At a baseball game last year, I sat a few rows directly behind a woman with a tattoo on the back of her neck in typewritten script that said, “I’m the hero of this story.” She seemed like a perfectly nice woman—from what I observed, she was also a doting mom—but in these circumstances I was all but forced to stare downward at her tattoo. And the more I thought about the sentiment, the more irritating I found it. It took every ounce of patience within me to make it through nine innings without marching down to her and explaining to this self-proclaimed hero of her story that there’s such a thing as an unreliable narrator.

Where’s The Excitement?

If tattoos ever had a singular redeeming quality, the fact they are now inescapable has robbed them of it. Before everyone had one, seeing one was at least exciting. And you had good reason to surmise there was a story behind it. Maybe your uncle’s career as a salesman at IBM didn’t exactly scream international man of mystery, but when he wore the wifebeater at family cookouts you just knew that guy had some tales to tell about what happened on shore leave.

Of course, tattoos were also seen as exciting in more, um, stimulating ways? I think it was Halloween of ‘97 when a sorority girl in a non-regulation Catholic school uniform leapt up on a table at Rennie’s Landing to show us her tattoo. She was what today’s brosephs would refer to as a “smokeshow,” but alas, this act of youthful abandon was not for my benefit.

While I’d like to claim that the force in the universe responsible for equitably distributing female attention is, to recontextualize Tennessee Williams, a hideous b-tch goddess, the truth is that life’s not fair. My buddy Gordon, sitting next to me, is good-looking enough to have been a male model. However, Gordon was halfway inside a bottle of Wild Turkey and, handsome S.O.B. that he was, so inured to hot girls throwing themselves at him that he left my male gaze unchallenged for the big reveal.

Now, of course, it bears mentioning that as forty year-old man with daughters, the symbolism involved here makes me more than a bit uncomfortable. If you’re really looking to round out the Freudian implications of this little Halloween tableaux, it helps to know that, aside from her being dressed as a schoolgirl, I was wearing zombie make-up. And besides, finding out she had a small heart tattooed on her pelvic bone just below her waistline seems more than a little anti-climactic.

Indeed, the accompanying soundtrack to this recollection that keeps running through my brain is less “Cherry Pie” and more “Is That All There Is?” If the big payoff for intimacy is going to be knowledge of hidden tattoos, at the very least make it useful or instructive. A friend of mine used to threaten that he was going to get a tattoo on his right buttock that read, “If you’re close enough to read this, you’re cooking me breakfast.”

Still, at the time—1997 being a more innocent era, back when lurid tales of presidential sex were still kinda, sorta frowned upon—this dramatic tattoo reveal was still sexy on one level. It raised the suggestion that if a nice sorority girl was willing to do something transgressive like get a tattoo, she would, uh, do other things nice sorority girls weren’t supposed to do.

If my hazy pop culture memories hold, we were only a year or two out from the phrase “tramp stamp” becoming part of the national lexicon. Lower-back tattoos on women eventually became so common they prompted an epic “Saturday Night Live” skit in 2004 mocking them. And lest this degenerate into a discussion about sexism, there have been a number of distressingly overused male tattoo tropes. Right now, there’s probably a guy in a bar—it’s happy hour somewhere—whining that back when he first got it, NO ONE had a tattoo of barbed wire around his bicep.

But despite some encouraging cultural derision, tattoos still became more overt and common. As a result, any suggestive power tattoos might have had to indicate you’re a sexy badass is as outdated as the thought of Clintons in the White House. They have become so pedestrian, I simply don’t see a way to make tattoos great again.

Bodies In Motion

Now, certainly Americans of all shapes and sizes are fond of tattoos. But it’s also clear that the trend has dovetailed nicely with increased superficial obsession with our appearance. For instance, there seems to be a large overlap between athletes and fitness enthusiasts and people with ink.

I guess that’s one way of drawing attention to the fact you’ve got a rockin’ bod, but in another more important way, it’s kind of a shame. If you view the human form as beautiful, tattoos are a kind of corporeal vandalism. Much of the appeal of sports, for instance, is an almost subconscious appreciation of bodies in motion. Not just any body—bodies that have been chiseled to specific perfection to achieve strength, speed, or both. In that respect, the prevalence of tattoos means that watching the NBA these days is like staring at the Mona Lisa after it’s been tagged.

If you view the human form as beautiful, tattoos are a kind of corporeal vandalism.

It’s telling that in the sport most obsessed with perfecting the human form—bodybuilding— tattoos are often cautioned against. “Tattoos can be distracting for judges trying to see a builder’s physique,” cautions one article on the subject from Bodybuilding.com. “The tattoo may obscure the natural contours and shadows created by muscular development.” (Yes, it’s true that bodybuilders are also into things that make their physique unnatural and much unhealthier than getting a tattoo, but purely on aesthetic grounds they have a point.)

If the sheer number of tattoos are a sign we are unhealthily obsessed with our bodies, they’re also a reminder that our bodies are ephemeral. Ever see an old guy with lots of tattoos? Tattoos sink deeper into the skin over time and fade, to say nothing of what happens when your skin inevitably starts to sag or you incur sun damage from years of walking around shirtless to show off your ink. That awesome technicolor screaming eagle on your chest could end up looking not much different than a pre-school watercolor. Oh, and when the tattoo ink starts breaking up as you age, it has a nasty habit of traveling through your body and turning up in your lymph nodes. They’re not important, right?

Of course, if you just have small tattoo or two, these concerns might not amount to much. However, cultural mores on tattoos have shifted rapidly we haven’t really seen a sizable enough percentage of old people with extensive ink to make firm judgments about the regrettable appearance—or just plain regret—related to being all tatted up.

Personally, I suspect that if you want to make a killing, you should move to Boca, open up a tattoo removal clinic, and wait about ten years. You’ll be booked solid for the rest of your life.

But Your Tattoo Is Okay, Right?

Now I realize that inveighing against tattoos in twenty-first-century America is the Little Big Horn of the culture wars, not in the least because so many of you reading this have tattoos and are probably annoyed by this cranky string of get-off-my-lawnisms. I understand people get tattoos for deeply personal reasons. Not all of those reasons are bad or merit the judgment of others.

If you are a giant Samoan, Tongan, or Maori, please don’t hurt me for maligning your cultural heritage.

Every once in awhile, I see someone with a tattoo dedicated to memorializing someone special to them and admire the gesture. And obviously if you are Polynesian and have thousands of years of spiritual tradition behind your tattoos feel free to disregard all of this. (More specifically, if you are a giant Samoan, Tongan, or Maori—are there any other kind?—please don’t hurt me for maligning your cultural heritage.)

A few years back, in a fit of Extreme Parenting, my wife and I hired a nanny off Craigslist without bothering to get any references. This worked out far better than it should have; she turned out to be Mary Poppins reincarnated as an Arizona State sorority girl. The only time we had any doubts about her was when she somewhat reservedly mentioned she had a tattoo of the Waylon Jennings band logo.

We were briefly horrified about the possibility of having hired the Pamela Des Barres of Outlaw Country, but it turns out she was Jennings’ niece. Aside from family pride being an acceptable reason for the tattoo and Jennings being true legend, he makes a good cautionary tale. We encouraged her to tell our kids scary bedtime stories about the horrors of whiskey and cocaine.

A W.A.S.T.E. Of Money

But I still stand by my general assertion that Americans have too many tattoos, even if I understand the impulse to get one. In fact, I think my aversion to tattoos stems, in large part, from the fact I seriously considered getting one. In college, I went through an angsty PoMo literature phase and I thought it would be great to get a tattoo of the muted postal horn symbol from Thomas Pynchon’s inscrutable novel, “The Crying of Lot 49.”

What does it represent? Well, I’ve read the book a few times and… Oh, who knows what it means. The point is that it is cool and “postmodern,” and I thought it’d be a pretty awesome thing to have on my arm as a young man. I imagined I’d get asked about it by women, whereby I’d respond with erudite things like, “Well, Pynchon being one of the great literary interpreters of cold war America’s countercultural tendencies, the symbol represents a fictional conspiracy of…” In retrospect, that’s about as far into my prepared spiel I would have made it before the girl in the Catholic school uniform would have climbed down from the table and filed a restraining order.

In any event, I still spent a few weeks talking to friends about what a tattoo might involve and immediately hit a roadblock. It turns out that tattoos, even small ones, aren’t exactly cheap. I was a broke college student, and a tattoo would put a serious crimp in my plans to subsist on Taco Bell.

Anecdotally, I’ve heard stories of guys at alimony trials being chewed out by the judge for showing up with fresh ink when they claim they can’t pay. A friend of mine recently filled me in on the travails of a rather colorful mutual acquaintance. While the update wasn’t as exciting as previously learning he may or may not have been smuggling gems out of southeast Asia, I was blown away by the expense this fellow was currently taking on to make repeat visits to a renowned tattoo artist in Mexico City.

Your Favorite T-Shirt

Anyway, it was penury, not good judgment, that spared me from getting a tattoo. Not being able to afford one, I decided it would be cool to just have a T-shirt with the muted postal horn symbol on it. With Internet commerce having matured considerably, these days you can order a Crying of Lot 49” hoodie in seconds. But back then, I would have to have one made by finding someone to silkscreen it, and, well, that would be a lot of effort for a guy who couldn’t be bothered to write term papers prior to the night before they were due.

I do, however, think my tattoo desire would have been satiated by getting a Pynchon T-shirt. Which is ironic, because the best explanation of tattoos I’ve ever heard was from someone on Facebook who put the problem of tattoos this way: “Imagine having a favorite T-shirt. Now imagine having to wear that shirt every day for the rest of your life.” At some point, it would cease to be your favorite T-shirt, right?

Along these lines, I refuse to believe even a sizable percentage of tattoos have been worthy decisions. For some select people, maybe tattoos are small part of their grand plan to live life to the fullest. But the vast majority of people should be encouraged to lead exciting and meaningful lives without needing to, in some cases literally, tattoo their personal vanity and insecurity right on their forehead. Fortunately, for now forehead tattoos still make you a bit of a pariah—after all, even the Air Force still has some standards.

Mark Hemingway is a senior writer at The Weekly Standard. Follow him on Twitter at @heminator


TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: fashion; tattoo; trends
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To: Texan5

You realize that was a joke, right?


301 posted on 08/06/2017 8:39:14 PM PDT by Noamie
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To: ozaukeemom

ENABLERS

Family upbringing is filled with enablers. Due to conformity peer pressure people do not speak honestly to others. Tatoos, drinking, STDs; honest feedback is rare.

A positive note is family enabling kills many early due to smoking & drinking. Better to be tatooed and still alive.


302 posted on 08/06/2017 8:54:17 PM PDT by TheNext (Congress Leaks thread)
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To: bgill

That looks like the tribal people that were featured in National Geographic years ago.

I am not against tattoos; I don’t have any or ever will but I don’t care what others do. When I see some of the tattoos out there or people that are covered in them I think that is too far, but none of my business.

I do wonder how some expect to be able to get a job, rent a house, or do the zillion other things where people often judge you pretty hard on first impressions.


303 posted on 08/06/2017 9:15:09 PM PDT by Tammy8 (Please be a regular supporter of Free Republic !)
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To: a fool in paradise

For some reason that looks like a case of “Venezuelan Herpes” on Slow-Joe.


304 posted on 08/06/2017 9:21:15 PM PDT by eyedigress ((Old storm chaser from the west))
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To: Ammo Republic 15

The restaurant chef has many tatoos because he limited his life’s opportunities, to being a chef.


305 posted on 08/06/2017 9:22:08 PM PDT by TheNext (Congress Leaks thread)
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To: rlmorel

They are real beauties when they take that plug out. Their lips hang loose like their ear lobes. Try kissing THAT! :-)


306 posted on 08/06/2017 9:30:34 PM PDT by Oatka
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To: Noamie

I rather hoped it was-but having had frilly females fainting over my attitude and doings when I am unfortunate enough to be around them, I’m cautious enough to make sure, FRiend-cities are another world-like a cage or a hive-no offense intended and I hope none taken...


307 posted on 08/06/2017 9:34:39 PM PDT by Texan5 (`"You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: ABN 505

Well, I’m glad you didn’t get sick. There’s a Ben Gazarra movie (I forget the name) in which there is a long talky sequence in which he gets a tattoo at some sleazy parlor in Singapore, I believe. Yuck!


308 posted on 08/07/2017 3:14:24 AM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: Bodleian_Girl

No, I’ll not be a chef when I finish school - if I finish it. I’m way too puny and weak to do the kind of hard physical work required of poor line cooks and I’m too old to take the abuse. Already I’ve fired back at a few of the lab workers who behave like Captain Bligh on the Bounty when the culinary professor has his back turned.

I’m now thinking of transferring to pastry classes in NYC. That’s where my strength and talent is.


309 posted on 08/07/2017 3:34:09 AM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: Oatka

If Elizabeth Warren wants to get one, I will pay money for it!


310 posted on 08/07/2017 4:19:51 AM PDT by rlmorel (Those who sit on the picket fence are impaled by it.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Agree.

Groucho on Lydia——

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n4zRe_wvJw8


311 posted on 08/07/2017 4:39:21 AM PDT by John W (Trump/Pence 2020)
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To: SeekAndFind

My father-in-law tromped around Korea with a USMC rifle company as a Navy medic. He never wanted to talk about what he went through over there, but later in his life he had a USN Anchor with a Corpsman insignia tattooed on his bicep.

On my upper right arm I have the Nyberg Flag in assault-forward position with the Oathkeeper’s rocker above it and “Guardians Of The Republic” below.

Sorry not sorry that offends some of you. Your sanctimony for harmless expressions, which in no way impact the life/liberty/pursuit of happiness of anyone except the bearer, says more about you than the person of whom you disapprove.


312 posted on 08/07/2017 6:18:45 AM PDT by Hat-Trick (Do you trust a government that cannot trust you with guns?)
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To: SeekAndFind

Grandma with tattoos..... or grandpa’s.
I had a neighbor who was in his early 20’s who looked like he was spray painted by a graffiti artist. He managed to find a girlfriend who had a few tattoos including one larger one below her neck.

Why not try temporary tattoos like a sticker you get out of a cearal box. You can at least wash it off.

Kaley Cuoco from the tv show “The Big Bang Theory” got a tattoo of her date of marriage below her neck. Then she got divorced a year later. So instead of removing said tattoo she made it worse by having a moth <- yes a moth tattooed over the dates. She makes a million a show but is still dumb.


313 posted on 08/07/2017 7:55:55 AM PDT by minnesota_bound
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To: SeekAndFind

“It was so realistic and visually arresting it looked less like a tattoo, and more like a manifestation of Lovecraftian soul-rot spreading onto her shoulders like inky kudzu.”

Brilliant.


314 posted on 08/07/2017 9:59:29 AM PDT by RansomOttawa (tm)
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To: Texan5
Country girls are taught manners by our parents and we don’t normally turn to drugs or into criminals-but if you want to call us low class, that is your prerogative.

I'm a country girl too, but wouldn't threaten to harm someone simply for being critical of my tattoos (which I don't have).

I share the other FReeper's opinion that tattoos are skanky and disgustingly ugly. No, I would never say so in public, because it's rude to try to embarrass anyone (I was taught manners too). But to me it's the brutal, honest truth. I'm not going to shy away from that.

The same would apply to women who have had abortions. I would never shame a woman in public for having had an abortion. But in a pro-family forum like FreeRepublic, you can bet I will voice my opinion that abortion is a terrible, horrendous, disgusting crime.

315 posted on 08/07/2017 10:33:39 AM PDT by shhrubbery! (NIH!)
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To: SeekAndFind

I have had women shut me down cold when i said i don’t really like tattoos.
You would have thought i insulted their religion..?


316 posted on 08/07/2017 10:43:16 AM PDT by Leep (Less talk more ACTiON!)
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To: Leep

I can’t believe she didn’t fall for your sweet talk.


317 posted on 08/07/2017 10:45:15 AM PDT by morphing libertarian
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To: SeekAndFind; newgeezer

I actually loathe those earing “gauges” more than the average tattoo. It’s too close to being a lip disk.


318 posted on 08/07/2017 10:46:03 AM PDT by DungeonMaster (How many ways do liberals hate the bible?)
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To: SeekAndFind
I worked a college graduation earlier this year. Saw a young woman that had a huge tattoo of a Kitchenaide mixer tattooed from shoulder to elbow


319 posted on 08/07/2017 10:57:53 AM PDT by csvset ( Illegitimi non carborundum)
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To: shhrubbery!

If a guy is critical of a woman’s tats or whatever, I doubt they would be harmed-that is just his opinion and we are all entitled to that. If he decided all on his own that it meant she was a skank and came on to her with attitude and insult, he would likely get a shove at the very least-no one I know will put up with that crap-it is something only a totally rude tourist would do.

I come from a large extended family-although I don’t have tats or a sibling with them, several of my male cousins have military and patriotic tattoos-a couple of my female cousins have small decorative ones, and although some family members don’t care for it, they don’t make it a big deal-it is just ink, and harms no one.

However, if a sibling or cousin supported abortion they would be banished from the family-if they ever got one they might well be taken behind a barn and shot when the rest of us found out-all of us, male and female alike were brought up believing abortion is murder...


320 posted on 08/07/2017 11:14:50 AM PDT by Texan5 (`"You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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