A brief review of 2011 and 2012: The gun culture of America

Jan. 8, 2011, Tuscon, Ariz.: A man had gone to a political town meeting at a supermarket, with the intent to murder Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. He killed six and wounded 14, including Giffords, who was shot in the head. On Jan. 25, 2012, Giffords, still in recovery from the shooting, walked onto the House floor to a standing ovation. Congress and the President have no plans to restore the assault weapons ban that expired under the Bush–Cheney Administration or to tighten gun laws.

Feb. 27, Chardon, Ohio: A 17-year-old student killed two other students and injured three others in a high school. He used a Ruger Mark III .22 caliber handgun. The NRA and numerous right-wing politicians believe school officials and teachers should carry guns.

April 2, 2012, Oakland, Calif.: A 43-year-old former nursing student entered a classroom at Oikos University, killed seven and wounded three. The suspect used a .45 caliber semi-automatic handgun. The NRA says students should be allowed to carry weapons on college campuses. Five states currently permit college students to carry weapons onto campus. Mixing alcohol and guns, as anyone who watches movie westerns knows, has never been a good idea. About 700,000 assaults a year are committed by college students who have been drinking, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. The National Survey on Drug Use and Health reports at least 40 percent of all college students binge drink at least once a month.

April 6, Tulsa, Okla.: Two White men shot three Black men and wounded two others. One of the persons arrested for the murders, a 19-year-old, says it wasn’t racially motivated, although his Facebook page had racial slurs. There are more than 310 million weapons in civilian hands in the U.S. That is about one-half of all weapons in the world owned by civilians. There have already been more than 17 million applications for gun ownership this year. The NRA claims the Second Amendment allows unlimited gun ownership, and viciously attacks any form of licensing. It doesn’t see the reality that there are hundreds of restrictive laws, all meant to protect the public health. At the annual meeting this month, the executive director claims the NRA is the “human engine of freedom,” and that his organization “represents the very best of America’s character and strength.”

May 30, Seattle, Wash.: A .45 caliber semi-automatic pistol was the weapon of choice for a man who killed four persons in a restaurant, one in a carjacking, and then himself. About half of all mass murderers commit suicide. The NRA and gun-rights advocates believe the problem isn’t the prevalence and accessibility to guns but mental health issues. The Reagan administration cut mental health budgets. States, in the past three years, have cut mental health services by $4.3 billion, according to the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors.

July 8, Dover, Del.: Three persons walked onto a soccer field, killed the tournament organizer, the father of six children, and a 16-year-old player who was a straight-A student. Two persons were injured by random gunfire. There were 15,953 murders in the U.S. last year; 11,901 were from firearms, according to the Centers for Disease Control. More than 60,000 were wounded, according to the Brady Center. The NRA says “Guns don’t kill people. People kill people.” What it refuses to recognize is that people with guns kill people. According to data compiled by the Brady Center, a “gun in the home is [22 times] more likely to be used in a homicide, suicide, or unintentional shooting than to be used in self-defense.” The U.S. has a rate of 2.8 murders by gun per 100,000 individuals. This is the highest rate of the G12 industrialized nations. It is also almost seven times higher than the next 22 countries combined. The lowest rate is that of the United Kingdom, which has a death by gun rate one one-hundredth that of the U.S. The UK has gun controls.

July 17, Tuscaloosa, Ala.: A gunman with a military-style assault rifle went to the house of a man who he believed knew someone else, shouted a racial slur, and shot that man, and then walked into a crowded bar and began shooting. Seventeen were wounded from gun fire, shrapnel, and shattered glass. The suspect had a history of violence. Several states permit persons to carry concealed weapons into bars, unless specifically prohibited by that particular business.

July 20, Aurora, Colo: A man with full body armor entered the Century Movie Theater, killed 12 and injured 58. He used a 12-gauge tactical shotgun, a Smith & Wesson M&P 15-round semi-automatic rifle with a 100-round drum, and a Glock .22 pistol. Within the previous two months, he had bought more than 6,000 rounds of ammunition. “Gun-rights” advocates claim if even a few people in the theater were armed the tragedy could have been averted. Apparently, they naively believe that a concealed handgun would stop an attack by a maniac in full-body armor, carrying assault weapons. They also must have believed there would not be additional panic, and the killing of innocent bystanders by those with the guns who might be see flashes elsewhere in a dark theater and fire back. Of the previous 55 mass shootings, not one was stopped by a civilian with a gun.

Aug. 5, Oak Creek, Wisc.: A white supremacist entered the Sikh temple and killed seven people. He used a 9-mm. semi-automatic pistol. By fear and intimidation, the NRA has blocked federal legislation, and has used money as its weapon of choice. This year, the NRA contributed about $17.6 million to campaigns, most to Republican candidates or for ads opposing Democratic candidates who believed in reasonable legislation. The NRA refuses to even acknowledge that there can be sensible laws that meet the requirements of the Second Amendment.

Aug. 13, College Station, Texas: A 35-year-old man, who proudly proclaimed himself to be a gun enthusiast, killed a constable and a passerby, and wounded four others, before police killed him. Mitt Romney says there should be no changes in current gun laws.

Sept. 27, Minneapolis, Minn.: Upon being terminated from his job, an employee took a 9mm. Glock semi-automatic pistol out of his belt, killing five and wounding three before committing suicide. It’s more difficult to profile a mass murderer than a serial killer, but evidence suggests they are socially-isolated white males in their 30, who are unemployed or have financial stresses.

Oct. 9, northern Mexico: The Mexican Navy captured the leader of the notorious Zetas drug cartel, believed to have killed an innocent American two years earlier. Mexico’s drug cartels provide about 90 percent of all illegal drugs to the U.S., according to the Congressional Research Service. Most of their weapons of choice, according to data compiled by the Latin America Herald-Tribune, are guns from the U.S, bought online, by gun-runners, or at gun shows. The “gun show loophole” allows unlicensed dealers to sell guns to whomever they want, without background checks. The ATF says between 25 and 70 percent of all dealers at gun shows are unlicensed. There are more than 4,000 gun shows a year, where “lie and buy,” mixed with a heavy dose of greed, is more common than good sense.

Oct. 21, Brookfield, Wisc.: A man walked into a spa, killed his wife and two other women, and wounded four before killing himself six hours later. The NRA says the U.S. should just enforce existing laws, but has actively opposed giving higher budgets or personnel authorization to police and federal agencies. The NRA is on record as having called the ATF a “jack-booted group of fascists,” and that police are “agents wearing Nazi bucket helmets and black storm trooper uniforms.” The extreme right-wing, with survivalist delusions, believe civilian possession of assault weapons will “protect” them against an “invasion” by the U.S. military (or, perhaps, space aliens) against homeowners.

Nov. 22, Black Friday: A shrill paranoid NRA had declared that if Barack Obama is re-elected, “Every freedom we cherish as Americans is endangered.” More guns were sold on this day than any day in U.S. history. Virginia, which had a one handgun per month limit, repealed its law in July, although the Virginia State Crime Commission concluded, “law-abiding gun purchasers in Virginia are not unduly burdened by Virginia’s one-gun-a-month law.” More than 40 percent of all guns used in murders in New York City came from Virginia, according to ATF data. The I-95 corridor along the east coast may be the most open channel for drug and gun traffic. The NRA wants open sales and to eliminate the Brady Law database on background checks.

Dec. 11, Portland, Ore.: A 22-year-old, for reasons unknown, killed two persons in a mall and then himself, using a .223 caliber AR 15 assault rifle. The NRA continues to believe that ownership and possession of assault rifles are protected under the Second Amendment.

Dec. 14, Newtown, Conn.: A 20-year-old man kills his mother, breaks into a school, and murders 20 six-and seven-year-old children, and six adults defending them, and then commits suicide. The killer had a 10mm Glock handgun, a 9mm SIG Sauer handgun, and a .223-caliber Bushmaster AR-15 rifle, which can fire 45 rounds a minute. Three other guns were at his home. All guns were legally purchased by his mother. More than three-fourths of all weapons used in murders were legally purchased. President Obama said on the day of the massacre, “We’re going to have to come together and take meaningful action to prevent more tragedies like this, regardless of the politics.” The NRA, a bully any other time, turns tail and disables its Twitter and Facebook accounts, and remains silent.

There will be 33 more deaths from gunshot wounds today. There will be 33 more tomorrow. And the day after that and the day after that. And there will be 33 murders by guns on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.

The man known as the “Prince of Peace” probably doesn’t care what the NRA believes.

Walter Brasch, who shoots trap, believes in responsible gun ownership and, more important, responsible laws. His latest book, “Before the First Snow: Stories from the Revolution,” looks at violence in America.

3 Responses to A brief review of 2011 and 2012: The gun culture of America

  1. This litany of gun-related murders is certainly appalling, but it does nothing to offer effective solutions. Statistics can tell many stories, depending on how they are used. Which organization is more believable — The Brady Center, a group with a clear anti-gun bias, or the FBI — an institution with little to gain by favoring gun owners? Despite the carnage wrought every year by firearms, a study in The Journal of Quantitative Criminology reports that U.S. civilians use guns to defend themselves and others from crime at least 989,883 times per year. That means 82 people successfully use a firearm to defend themselves from a criminal, for every person killed by a gun. That ratio sounds pretty good to me. Furthermore, in the vast majority of cases, those armed citizens never even discharged their weapon, much less hit anyone. The deterrent value of a gun is absolutely unassailable.

    Another undeniable fact: According to detailed FBI data, over the last five, ten, and twenty years, violent crime of all types (including the use of firearms) has consistently and significantly decreased — directly in the face of increasing gun sales. This tells us clearly to stay the course in legally arming responsible and capable individual citizens. It also gives credence to the aphorism “An armed society is a polite society.”

    Reasonable gun registration procedures and background checks make sense, but banning any kind of weapon or accessory only puts those devices in the hands of criminals instead of lawful citizens. This shifts the balance of firepower to the criminal class and immediately defeats the ostensible purpose of the law.

    As for the second amendment, anyone who would blithely dismiss a citizen’s need to keep a watchful eye on their own government, is woefully ignorant of history. Lenin, Mao, and Hitler all made well-known statements about the usefulness of armaments for purposes of control, and the desirability of disarming a population. The economic degeneration and moral corruption of our country over the last few decades speaks for itself. It should be evident to everyone by now that our leaders are more than willing to ignore the rights of the common man. Under these conditions, only a fool would surrender one of the few tools that are still available to protect his personal freedom.

    Yes, gun violence occurs far too frequently in our culture, that much is undeniable. However, a simple examination of criminal and legislative data shows that gun restrictions offer no benefit whatsoever – in fact they hinder our progress. Consider Chicago and Washington D.C., where restrictions on gun ownership did absolutely nothing to reduce the number of shootings. Any useful response to gun violence needs to be targeted in an area where it will do some good — starting with the glamorization of violence and desensitization to killing that occurs in movies, TV, and video games. How about heroes who think, communicate and negotiate to solve problems, instead of blowing someone’s head off? NRA opponents would be much better served by taking their complaints to Hollywood. That response could be followed by visits to federal, state, and local health agencies and lawmakers, seeking changes in the area of mental health services — improved access, diagnosis, and treatment of people displaying socially violent behavior. One of the easiest battles to fight in this war against gun violence is to harden the social institutions most susceptible to attack — schools, malls, sporting events, and so on — by eliminating “No carry” (“Cooperative victim”) zones, training and arming capable, responsible, and stable personnel (either institutional staff or private citizens) to carry and use concealed weapons when and where necessary. The numbers actually show that armed citizens are less likely than the police to shoot an innocent bystander.

    In the coming weeks, we are going to see a barrage of knee-jerk, irrational responses to the tragedy in Newtown. It’s only natural that shock and grief cause us to lash out at things that hurt us — but after careful consideration, we still cook with fire, drive cars, and swim in the ocean. Let’s take time to heal our hearts, but tackle this problem with logic, not emotion.

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