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Would a Change in Law
Change Behavior? More Gun Control-While Ignoring Causes and Cures.
Blaming the NRA is like
saying GM or Smirnoff is responsible for drunk driving deaths…CNN and other left wing,
anti-gun media drool over these incidents and the press in general have a
policy “If it bleeds, it leads.”
It has become a cliché
in America. After every gun shooting,
the same players trot out the same failed arguments about why need more ‘gun
control.’ They NEVER examine the root
causes of why people conduct these horrific acts. Instead, it is always the same ass-backward, senseless
mantra-blame the gun, not the person.
Now they’re trotting out small-minded individuals who suggest boycotts
of the NRA are the solution which is typical simian thinking. The NRA had nothing to do with this or any
other mass shooting. Indeed, the group
promotes responsible gun ownership and training.
We
already have scads of gun laws in place but what we don’t have are enough
safety checks for individuals either through schools or for families. Other nations have automatic weapons in their
homes but nearly zero gun related shootings.
Why is America so different? It
wasn’t always this way. What has changed
in our society and why do people think changing laws will change behavior?
They
rarely air protests about opioids which kill more people or drunk driving which
also kill more people and are almost always overlooked by much of lamestream
media. Their lack of logic baffles
me. After all, we don’t demand the ban
of vehicles or the ban of doctors and pharmacies.
Manipulated student protests are aired to a
salivating press which has had an anti-gun bent for years. But what exactly is ‘more gun control?” Most of us know it is a code for a complete
ban on all guns as they’ve done in Australia and the elimination of our Second
Amendment [most high school students aren’t taught American history or the Bill
of Rights at this point any longer so they probably don’t know what I’m
referring to].
When
I was growing up virtually every boy in our city owned a BB gun. I spent summers at my Grandfathers’ cottage
where my uncle, an avid hunter shot clay pigeon over the canal. He let me shoot his 12 gauge once. It promptly put me on my ass much to the
amusement of everyone watching. He owned a lot of guns but I didn’t have to be
told not to touch them. It was the
RULE! When I joined the Boy Scouts, I owned a .22
rifle. When I was 16 I got my first
hunting rifle as did many others in our area of Ohio, MI and PA.
In
those days I purchased a survival .22 [everything concealed into the stock]
from a Sears sporting goods department for about $60. A bargain considering what they sell for
today. No identification was required,
cash and carry.
Eventually, I purchased a semi-automatic
carbine. I’ve never caused anyone harm
as a result of firearm ownership and to the best of my knowledge, neither have
any of my uncles, cousins, grandfathers, or friends…most of which have been
lifelong hunters.
What
has changed since I graduated high school are the rise in broken homes,
single-parent families on welfare, deteriorating schools, increasing numbers of
children placed on psychotropic drugs, an increase of discipline problems in
our schools, a decrease of parental involvement with the upbringing of their
children or involvement with their school work, a tremendous increase in the
disconnect of family as a result of electronic devices [too much time spent
with cell phones, video games, tablets, - people are addicted to shiny objects
and no longer communicate with each other face-to-face as much like at family
dinners each evening for example.]
Gun control begins
(and ends) at home.
As James Davenport recently pointed out in FEE, there are reasons why Congress doesn’t act on gun
violence. (“The reality is,” says James Davenport, “Congress isn’t, and can’t
be, responsible for anyone’s personal safety.”)
There’s growing sentiment (at least that’s what the media wants
you to believe) that the (at least) 60,000,000 gun owners, in possession of
over 300 million guns shouldn’t have some, or in the most extreme positions,
all of them.
And, at the very least, they shouldn’t have those devious
machines deemed “assault rifles.” (Of which, contrary to popular thought, the “AR” in “AR-15” does not stand for.)
But would a ban on AR-15’s quell shootings or terror attacks?
Would it, like a well-received rain dance, wash the violent
impulses from the loonies and sprout rainbows from the pastures?
Unlikely.
In reality, it’s a tiny, shriveled, used band-aid applied on an
incredibly deep and complex gash (a band-aid which, no less, could cause
drastic unintended consequences from its use).
It is, I propose, one of the least effective ways of
quelling violence.
Here are seven
reasons why.
- Guns or violence? Is getting rid of
guns wholesale the sole goal? If so, why?
Those sincere to the cause can find common ground with those
they deem as “gun nuts.”
The incredibly vast majority of this country want the same
things...
Namely, for the despicable, deranged acts of violence to go
away. Most people want to live in peace.
(There are, of course, exceptions…)
But wishing violence away with a law (enacted by... wait for
it... more violence) is one of the least effective ways to get it.
Seeking common ground with our fellow citizens is more
effective.
- War on Poverty… War on Drugs… War on Terror…
It’s a strange phenomenon.
Whenever the federal government declares war on something, we
tend to receive more of the very same thing.
A “War on Guns” would be, behind the smoke-screened doublespeak,
a “War on Violence.”
How would you wage such a war on violence? With violence.
Soft power, making peace appealing and attractive in
communities, rather than beating disobedient individuals into submission, is a
more effective, and less disastrous, strategy. (But where’s the political clout
in that?)
What you resist persists.
Wholesale bans empower the criminal class and enrich
the black market.
Blanket bans in any form are almost always unfavorable to the
most vulnerable.
Not only do all laws create criminals (which is why they should never be
applied lightly), they often have a way of emboldening and empowering the
criminal class through perverse incentives. (AR-15s, for example, become a hot
ticket item on the black market. Profit margins go significantly up.)
Incentives which weaken the honest and most vulnerable.
As the ancient Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu, author of the Tao Te
Ching, sagely said: “The more laws and restrictions there are, the poorer
people become.”
- The right to self-defense is a negative right -- a
right which doesn’t inherently, by its nature, infringe upon the rights of
others.
Positive rights entail government taking action, infringing upon
individual rights for the “greater good” of the collective.
Rarely is the “greater good” how such interventions turn out in
the long run.
Power that is so absolute to have free reign to roll over the
individual (the smallest minority) as it pleases is always in danger of being
perverted.
“Shall not be infringed” leaves very little room for ambiguity.
- The right to self-defense.
Guns represent one’s right to defend one’s own self, one’s own
spark of existence, one’s own life from unprovoked attack.
Historically speaking, they’ve helped to turn the tables on
physically strong predators who wish to prey on the weak, meek and most
vulnerable.
Like all technological innovations, they ushered in a new
paradigm. Each paradigm has its own set of pros and cons.
Each paradigm is also a psychological construct.
To demolish this psychological paradigm for an illusion (yes,
illusion) of safety, even just by chipping away at the idea of it, sets, as
history shows, monumentally dangerous precedent.
It’s a step backward.
- Healthy homes and communities heal.
Mass shootings, defined as four or more deaths by one or a few hands, happen year-round.
The amount of press one will receive, unfortunately, depends on the zip code.
Local action and soft power is more effective and humane than pleading for more force.
For example, on a micro scale…
Mass shootings, defined as four or more deaths by one or a few hands, happen year-round.
The amount of press one will receive, unfortunately, depends on the zip code.
Local action and soft power is more effective and humane than pleading for more force.
For example, on a micro scale…
Adding beautiful green spaces or community centers to a
downtrodden place (park, urban garden, etc.) has been shown time and again to
reduce crime in that area.
Getting children engaged in community activities (or, heck,
allowing young kids to work) reduces the time they have for dwelling on
untoward things, gives them a sense of responsibility for themselves and those
around them.
Strengthening community ties allows for individuals to see more
clearly who is a danger to the community and might need some form of
intervention. (Nosy neighbors are good for some things.)
Although all of this might sound insignificant, it’s not. It’s
the grassroot. It’s where the action happens.
It’s where the wild things live and grow.
Violence is always a situational issue and can never be painted
with a broad brush.
We are individuals, each with our own individual needs.
Abstracting the problem, then outsourcing the solution to the
house on The Hill does little.
It makes us feel, erroneously, that such violence is something
which can be fixed nationally with the flick of a switch.
It reinforces the idea that collective response is the only
option.
That our energy should be funneled into changing the minds of
the out-of-touch political class (who saunter around with armed bodyguards)
rather than hacking at the root.
- Violence emerges from individuals. Individuals are
responsible.
The Parkland shooter reportedly killed animals for pleasure,
self-harmed, acted out violently, had the cops called on him over 30 times,
threatened to shoot a school, had the FBI tipped off about him twice -- all
clear signs of a compulsive and incredibly violent and dangerous individual.
He was essentially a Jeffrey Dahmer reincarnate. (They both had
similar impulses and both killed 17 people, except Dahmer didn’t use guns.)
Where are the parents? The community? The people who deal with this person on a regular basis? (Dahmer’s parents were absentees, too wrapped up in their own lives to see what was happening.)
Where are the parents? The community? The people who deal with this person on a regular basis? (Dahmer’s parents were absentees, too wrapped up in their own lives to see what was happening.)
Historically, communities would’ve been much more likely than
they are today to take action and intervene.
It was, for them, a matter of keeping everyone safe and the
bonds strong in the “tribe.”
You are, after all, only as strong as the weakest link.
ALSO NOTED:
Half of parents recently surveyed said they are at
least "somewhat concerned" that their child's mobile device usage
is negatively affecting their mental health.
|
I’ve
been tracking the connection since 1999, when I wrote a long white paper, for
the Truth Seeker Foundation, on school shootings and psychiatric drugs. The
paper was titled: “Why Do They Do It? School shootings Across America.”
What about you? Got anything interesting
to share?
Bruce, the Poor Man, free thinker, social critic
& cynic
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4 comments:
Just incredible how quickly the left managed to gear up and mobilize its anti-gun troops to blame the NRA, even scripting mindless youth in its efforts. To see corporate America join in against the NRA was dumbfounding [must be a politically correct defect in their poor judgment] I like Shapiro's argument as explained below on YouTube:
'These Kids Know Nothing About Gun Control' - Ben Shapiro REACTS To Liberals Using Kids For Agenda
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1aGnT0kXTeU
The anti-gun movement is very well funded thanks to Soros and other billionaires. Several of these groups have banded together and have hired a PR/Marketing agency to assist them with their anti/No gun agenda. They've created a how-to manual which shows these groups two things: How to effect change and How to get anti-gun people elected to office...the ultimate goal is to eliminate guns altogether in America and turn us into another Australia. This is the agenda.
The NRA is not responsible for these nut cases-PERIOD! A pox on those idiot corporations who boycott the NRA. All of my friends re-upped their memberships early to support the NRA!
I wasn't a member before but I plan to join the NRA now. There are more idiots today compared to when I was young. I've hired high school kids who can barely speak English, can barely write and know next nothing about our own history. Schools do a dismal job teaching the basics let alone anything about our Bill of Rights and the Constitution. No wonder there are so many left leaning socialist morons in this country.
Amen brother-you hit all the salient points. There are a lot of nut cases today and more gun control isn't going to stop despite all the whining from the Left and the Democraps.
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