Happy Monday.
We need gun control.
Good morning. You already have it. It doesn't help.
I haven't read the thread since I signed off Friday. But over the weekend, I have of course been slowly mentally preparing my first post here for Monday, because I promised I'd be back to discuss it. So here goes.
What happened in Connecticut was a terrible tragedy, the scope of which words falter to encompass as a monster in human shape took the lives of 26 people including 20 children. There's a lot of people asking, "why?" as if there is a sane, understandable reason to commit this sort of atrocity, and for many of those asking that question there will never be a satisfactory answer because the reasoning process of someone who commits such an act is broken beyond mere derangement.
It's apparent to anyone who takes a subjective inventory of their own recent memory that mass shooting events have been increasing in number. Naturally, there are going to be a lot of people whose first (perhaps even only) impulse will be to blame the tools by which these murders are perpetrated - firearms. But the fact is, access to firearms, indeed firearm ownership is at or near an all time low according to gallup. We've had gun control laws in place longer than most of us have been alive. Yes, the so called "assault weapons ban" expired, but it was based less upon a gun's ability to deal death rapidly and more concerned with how scary they looked - if they had a hole in the stock or one that folded, for example.
But let's get the Charlie argument out of the way right off the bat - you can't ban all guns. Not from a practical, logistical, political or even moral standpoint. Not only is it impossible to put the genie back in the bottle, it would be wrong to try - by definition, making guns illegal means that only those who follow the law will not have guns, and that criminals will still do as they please, perhaps even with less impediment. Furthermore, I know you're getting sick of me saying it, but the 2nd Amendment is not about hunting or home defense, it is about making every American able to outfit himself as a soldier - or resistance fighter - at the drop of a hat with similar effectiveness to that of a regular soldier. That's why the "but... but... muskets!" argument is completely invalid. And even if a total ban was possible, consider that the same week as the CT shootings, a man in China murdered 22 children in school at once with a blade.
Furthermore, in all the statistic droppings about tragedies involving guns, nobody's eager to talk about the hundreds of
times per day firearms are used to prevent or lessen crime. A few days ago a mall shooting
was cut short when the criminal was confronted by someone who was carrying (legally, with permit) a concealed weapon. Switzerland and Israel also have a large number of guns per capita, and have safer records than most countries that do not. The common saying goes, that when seconds count, the police are only minutes away. Not only that, but the supreme court has
actually ruled (by 7-2 in 2005) that, no matter what's painted on the side of the squad car, the police have no duty to defend or protect. The police are not there to guard you from harm, they are there to punish those that harm after the fact. That's cold comfort to the victims and their families, especially when the harmer has taken even that away from them by killing himself at the end.
So what has also been on the rise the past 20, 30 years to coincide with the degradation of society we have witnessed? I put to you that it is the death of personal responsibility. From grade school up through adulthood, we are being told, taught and reinforced that what happens to us is beyond our control, and our worth as an individual is far below the worth of the collective. You're supposed to feel self-esteem without any actual reason behind it. You're supposed to get a participation ribbon even if you lose. Think of how an unbalanced person, growing up hearing that nothing they do really matters in the outcome of what happens to them, feels when they're an adult and haven't achieved the shallow dreams that such teachings of easy self-esteem put in their heads. Why aren't they a rock star? Why aren't they president? Why aren't they an astronaut? It can't possibly be
their fault. Everybody knows that when you fail it is because of somebody else,
right? It's just a roll of the dice (and the dice are rolled by a faceless somebody-else) that says that Snookie is a famous millionaire and you aren't. It becomes an easy leap from "nothing that happens to me is my fault" to "nothing I do is my fault" because your actions are only reacting to the injustices perpetrated upon you by an injust society and world - it's their fault you're not a supermodel-banging CEO. And so some start thinking about how they can hurt this faceless society most. And the media has been very kind in glorifying and trumpeting the last acts of folks just like this to the world, and made them immortal. We go to "guns" because it's an easy and fast explanation that prevents us from having to deal with the reality of what has become of our society, our selves.