We can’t. There will
always be some mentally deranged individual devising some means to mass murder innocent lives. But wise and intelligent things can be done
to profoundly reduce the potential for such tragedy. Certain technological innovations can help
but eventually it must be recognized that the problem is in ‘we the people’,
not the weapons we possess.
Sandy Hook will not be the “turning point” most are hoping
for. It may gain us more gun control
laws. It may even reduce the number of
children killed by guns. But it won’t
reduce the number of innocent children murdered by angry, mentally ill, or
ideological extreme individuals.
Effective gun control laws may actually make it easier to commit mass
murder.
In 1995 nineteen children under six were killed in the
basement of the Oklahoma City Federal Building when Timothy McVeigh detonated a
Ryder truck filled with a simple mixture of fuel oil and fertilizer. Nearly 150 adults were killed too. He was sane.
He and others considered himself a devout patriot!
And that wasn’t the first or even
the worst mass child killing in the US.
On May 18, 1927, Andrew Kehoe, school board treasurer, upset about a
proposal to increase taxes for schools, unleashed dynamite, firebombs and pyrotol on a school in
Bath Township, Michigan. He killed 38 children in the second to sixth grades. Six other adults
died and at least 58 injured. This anti-tax
advocate had mental issues. He first killed his wife and later committed suicide
with another explosion. He carried a
firearm, but didn’t use it.
It’s self-evident that the worst of all human experiences is
a parent’s loss of a child. Even
suspecting a child’s mortal danger is the most terrifying of all human experiences. No words can comfort a parent in such loss
and the loss of children at Sandy Hook elementary school will profoundly alter their
parent’s lives forever. It will even
effect people known and unknown to them.
The school building itself will never be the same. Not even if they raise it to the ground and
build another with a different name.
With such unimaginable pain comes the question “why?” Understanding may help grieving. But, understanding the real cause is vital to
preventing the need for future grieving.
So what are the basic elements that enable every perpetrator? An individual’s access to a weapon. An individual’s state of mind. And, the individual’s cultural/environment.
Many believe ‘guns’ are the cause. A
country full of guns. Guns with the
capacity to kill dozens of people in a very short time. But this belief, as strong as it is, doesn’t
constitute a functional analysis of the problem. Removing guns from the equation won’t prevent
mass murders.
There are
only three things we need to consider; the killer’s intention, their capacity
for planning and their willingness to kill many. The one common ingredient
missing in each mass murderer is a commitment to the protection of innocent
life. Here’s where it gets interesting
and troublesome.
Where else
to we see this same three factors in the death of innocent lives. If you answered “Presidents, Dictators, or
Generals” you would be correct. These
leaders all have one thing in common with mass murderers. A lack of commitment to protect at all costs,
innocent life.
And, we defend our leaders when they
do so. The use of drones in Afghanistan,
deadly sanctions against Iran, or arms sales to Israel ensures the loss of
innocent life. We rationalize the
deaths of innocents associated with such use of force because it is not
intentional. Yet it is none the less
mass murder of innocence. According
to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism 176 children have been killed by US
drone strikes in Pakistan since 2004. Hundreds more were critically injured. Yet
this 'collateral damage' as acceptable to most Americans. Rarely do we consider the impact on the parents of the dead or disabled children.
While these grieving parents may
curse the Drone’s that bring such unwanted suffering, they will not focus their
rage on the weapon. They will turn their
focus those who use it. And even if we didn’t personally use the
drone, we live in a democracy where a majority of us didn’t reject the policy
leaders who pulled the trigger. And, sometimes,
we overlook the trigger pulling even when the loss of innocent lives is central
to our greater goal.
To this day, there has been no
civilian or military leader charged for the hundreds of thousands deaths of
innocent Iraqi men, women and children who died in the first gulf war as an
intended result of US policy. After
Saddam’s army invaded Kuwait US strategists wanted Saddam to fall. Their tactic was to bomb Iraqi water and
sanitation facilities full well knowing innocent people would die from lacking
such essential elements of life. Our
military leaders believed that by making ‘living’ conditions unbearable in
Iraq, the people would overthrow Saddam. Unfortunately, Saddam had control of most of the
guns.
And before that when Saddam was our ally and at war with Iran we allowed
the shipment of biological and chemical weapon precursors to him for use
against Iranians. We looked the other
way when he was using chemical weapons on Iraqi Kurdish villages in the north.
And today with our endless war on
terrorism, we find it easy to overlook the deaths of over 20,000 children under
the age of five…every day! Because
dealing with terrorists who killed a few thousand Americans over 10 years ago
is a higher priority than saving innocent infants and children in poverty.
Child deaths in the US are rare but still too high.
FBI statistics show an average of over 400
baby deaths each year from extreme physical abuse by their own parents or
so-called caretakers (and these are just the ones reported).
These infant deaths are also the result of a
human mind set that has no regard for innocent life -- or what experts call a
‘mental health problem’.
And, car
accidents kill far more young children than guns.
The mass murder of children by guns is
extraordinarily rare.
Sandy Hook was a
horrific aberration.
But those who don’t
like guns will use the horrors of the Sandy Hook massacre to limit the one thing
they dislike most.
Guns.
Infant and child deaths?
Not such a big deal.
Intended or not, any focus on gun control or
the freedom to own guns only distracts us from addressing the far greater child
survival concerns that are easily preventable…here and abroad.
Why?
Face it. We live in a culture that doesn’t really
value all children. We value our own,
especially those that look like ours.
We quickly blame others (and other
things) for mass murders. But we ignore our
responsibility the mass murder of innocent lives when our tax dollars are
involved. Or when billions of our tax
dollars are used annually to subsidize other special interest ‘needs’ (oil
industry, tobacco growers, Wall street
millionairs…) while children die.
We are either hypocrites, ignorant,
lazy or just plain crazy. We know how to
prevent mass murder by omission or commission.
We only lack the political will to do so. We can’t seem to muster the courage to
enforce the inalienable human right to life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness for all. A profound ideal that
our founding fathers based the creation of this nation on….but never really
followed.
Recently 8 health professionals
delivering polio vaccines to children in Pakistan were gunned down simultaneously
in different locations. But don’t think
it was guns that caused their
deaths. Those doing the killing had a
belief that our nation’s CIA had used a similar vaccine effort as a cover to confirm
DNA evidence of Osama Bin Ladin’s location. Now,
the UN led polio eradication campaign has been halted there, and more innocent
children will suffer, because our Global War on Terrorism was a higher priority. Unfortunately, Americans may now also suffer
more. If the polio virus mutates before
it is eradicated globally the new strain could spread to the US costing hundreds
of millions of dollars and possibly the health or lives our children, and
millions of children worldwide.
Guns don't kill people, forks don't make people fat, and pencils don't
misspell words. Connecticut parents loved their children as much as we do. They
have the 5th strictest ‘gun control’ state in the nation and it didn't matter.
It wouldn’t have mattered if they had
outlawed all guns in the state.
A person
can buy a gun in VA and bring it into CT.
And, if guns were outlawed in the US limiting
their availability would be as effective as limiting the availability of drugs.
Even with an extremely intrusive police
state…it just isn’t going to be successful.
(See Mexico’s war on drugs and it’s death toll of well over 30,000
people in the last decade.)
Is it
possible to have so many guns in our nation and not have a high gun murder
rate? Yes. Switzerland insists that every male of
military age must keep a powerful, fully automatic assault rifle in his home. By law every home is armed. Some even keep mortars. Yet Switzerland has one of the most
law-abiding citizenry. It has the lowest
crime rate, and least violence of any country in the free world. And it
has remained free for over a thousand years. Compare it to New York and
Washington where handguns are completely banned. Maurice Turner, the Chief of Police of
Washington, DC, once said that the District of Columbia gun ban law had
completely failed and called for armed citizen's police auxiliary to help
restore order. But guns and elite army’s don’t ensure
security either.
Both sides of the gun argument must
sooner or later come to the same conclusion.
Security is not a function of armaments or disarmament.
Liberals believe disarmament is the path to security.
Conservatives believe armaments are.
Neither ensure security.
Security is not a function of armament or
disarmament.
It is a function of
justice.
This is so because of three
basic factors.
First, it is impossible to eliminate or even reduce the means of murder or mass
slaughter given the dual use nature of all technology and the vulnerability of
a human life.
A car in the hands of a
determined individual can kill more people than an assault weapon (See: Timothy
McVeigh or IEDs).
Machetes and clubs
killed more Rwandan’s in 6 months than the guns Pol Pot regime used to kill
Cambodians in a year.
Trying to limit or
eliminate lethal technologies will require the universal loss of privacy on a
scale unimaginable.
And that itself
would cause mass murder because of the hostile resistance it would foster.
The bumper sticker “You can have my gun after
you pry it from my cold, dead body” might come to mind.
Second, no army or sophistication of firepower can defend against a cleaver
biological, chemical or cyber attack (or eventually nano weapons).
It's hard enough defending against IEDs and
snipers.
Technological power gives advantage
to those on the offense not the defensive.
Being offensive with any use of force that kills innocent lives only
increases the lethal determination in bereaved survivors.
Trying to eliminate all the survivors to
ensure security is genocidal.
Not a
practical path to security.
As MKL once
said taking “An eye for an eye will make the whole world blind.”
Last, if someone really wants to commit mass murder, the freedom we have and
the access we all have to an increasingly powerful, affordable, ubiquitous and
stealth technology, ultimately makes each of us super powered individuals.
Our only hope is to invest in a world where justice is our primary path to
security.
We must build a just world
where all people are guaranteed the most basic of human rights [see the UDHR]
and everyone is treated equally and fairly.
Yes, there will always be crazies.
But it is crazy to believe we can arm or disarm ourselves to achieve
security.
Trying to do so will only
hasten the sacrifice our most cherished freedoms. Not in the sense of losing
access to guns.
But in the reality that
our privacy and civil rights will need to be surrendered entirely in any
serious effort to ensure that no one will have access to lethal force or WMD.
We must effectively treat the mentally ill but budgets
wasted on trying to control drugs or weapons will drain existing government
resources.
Most unfortunate we know that criminals can be 'made'.
Take a perfectly innocent child and torture
him from birth and he will likely wind up with 'mental' health problems.
Family members may know of it and say or do
nothing.
Rarely is a child is a born
murderer, but most can be trained.
The mainstream media uses the term
"school shootings" because it fits nicely into a liberal narrative
that guns are to blame . But by limiting
our discussion only to shootings, we ignore these other lethal assaults on
children. Assaults that are far more lethal than gun shootings.
On the same day of the Newtown
killings -- a world away, a 36-year-old man walked into a grade school and stabbed 22 children. In China, guns are
banned so attackers generally use knives and meat cleavers. What a relief this man was not armed with a
car bomb, biology lab or chemistry degree.
My own experience with guns:
Dear Editor,
My childhood mirrored Debbie Dingell’s (“We need a new
dialogue”, Washington Post, Oped 12-21-12) life in many ways. I grew up with guns in the same era as she. My father was a veteran of WW II, a boxer and
willing brawler often for no reason. I didn’t fear the guns in my father’s gun
cabinet; I was comforted by them. I knew
that any day when I, my sister and/or my mother was on the receiving end of one
of his physical assaults, I could later that night go the cabinet, load a
shotgun, and relieve us of our occasional injury -- and our perpetual fear.
Many days and nights I fantasied multiple scenarios of ending
his life. Cutting his throat or crushing his skull with a bat or a hammer while
he slept. Rat Poison. Gasoline.
I often wondered why my mother, a smart woman and experience hunter, had
not done so herself. When I told her of my intense desire her
saintly Catholic demeanor warned me of the mental hell and lifelong regrets I
would face if I acted on it. That hit
me hard. Then, one night in a dream, my
father was approaching me in anger, I raised a German grease gun (a WWII
machine gun I’d seen many times in war movies) and without warning him… pulled
the trigger. I dropped him with a sense
of righteousness, then continued riddling his body with bullets as his body
jerked around on the ground. I woke up
sobbing – At that moment I realized I really didn’t want to kill him. I just wanted to stop the violence and the fear.
Later I made the decision to physically prepare myself to try
and counter his assaults. I say ‘ try’,
because he was a tall strong man, with two huge and lightning quick fists. I became a wrestler. Years later as a very capable 6’, 155 lb
defender I used my skills to overcome his 6’2”, 220 lb assault. After a brief struggle I was on top effectively
countering his every effort to rise. Exhausted
and frustrated, he asked me “What are you going to do now?” I said “I’m going to let you up”. I did and he went to the gun cabinet only a
few feet away and withdrew a loaded pistol.
He put in my face telling me between breaths “no one is ever going to
get the best of me”. I stood there
pumped with adrenaline but feeling empty --in fear of dying. My mother was in hysterics next to him,
begging him not to shoot me. He
didn’t. And our lives were changed. There were far fewer assaults and a few
valuable lessons gained.
I made up my mind to never hit a child or a woman and that I
would offer my abilities in their defense if ever given the chance. ( I once
slapped my teenage son in the face in anger, but it was I who cried…not him. )
I forgave my father for his ways. He was an ignorant and pained man . He dropped out of 3rd grade to
help his family, eventually joined the Civilian Conservation Corps and at 20
got a High School equivalent credential.
Later in his life he lost his first son (2 years old) in a drowning
accident for which my father was somewhat responsible. My father never quite recovered.
When I became a father I knew that my father beat me not
because he hated me. But because he
loved me. I believe his rage was largely
because of his ignorance and his pain. It
was the only way he knew for expressing his love and concern for us. I now believe all he really wanted was for
our lives to work out. He was an
extraordinarily hardworking man who made many sacrifices that he was never
fully recognized for or acknowledged.
Today, a decade after his passing, I still thank him for
helping me to become who I am today -
A somewhat disciplined individual committed to nonviolence, but able and
willing to use verbal and physical force if needed to confront injurious or
lethal injustices.
He also taught me another invaluable lesson applicable to
the recent shootings in Newtown, Ct, the attacks on 9-11, the
Israel-Palestinian problem, and virtually every other condition where innocent
people are maimed, killed or forced to
live in fear. If someone is pushed far
enough --they will find a way to react. Even if they are weak. Violence begets violence. Fear begets fear. It is not the absence of guns that will stop
us from killing. It will be our collective
decision to refuse the use of lethal force for resolving problems. We have other options. Kindness, love, education and the ultimate
ideal in an unloving world --the force of law (justice) over the law of force
(power).
I don’t own a gun. But I’m thinking about buying some. I believe some very bad things are going to
happen (Pandemics, bioterrorist attack, EMP event, astroids, earthquakes,
volcanoes..). There are rational reasons for owning
impressive fire power but a tyrannical government is on the bottom of that
list.
It’s the threats that
are coming because of an absence of a powerful government -- a government that
can actually prevent a biological or cyber terrorist attack, or better respond
to a natural disaster… by creating global conditions where individuals or
groups anywhere have no desire to use any kind of WMD, and every desire to aid
those in distress.
I favor a global
government, specifically a world federation, mirroring much of the ideals of our
nation’s founding fathers. A federation
capable of educating humanity and empowering us to the special task we have of
ensuring the survival of our species -- and all species beneficial to the
environment on which our lives depend.
A world government that enforces the 9 word pledge that every world
citizen would be encouraged to make, “I pledge allegiance to liberty and
justice for all”
Obama was right. It’s not about the guns. “We must change.”
2 Comments:
"Some even keep mortars" haha. Nope, definitely not. Cheers from Switzerland. And by the way, soldiers don't have to keep the guns at home. Check your facts before posting .
Thank you for the correction! I was repeating what I had read in some American media. Next time I use Switzerland as an example...I hope you will be my editor in chief
.
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