There’s just too much left to say about the shooting a
week ago this morning in Newtown, Conn., and it’s hard to know where to begin.
After most mass shootings (and isn’t that a telling, sad thing to write), there
are clearly drawn sides on either pole of the gun control debate. One tiny
silver lining in the aftermath of this shooting has been that its severity, and
particularly the targeting of small children, has seemingly prompted a more
serious reflection. At least in my experience – I can’t tell you how may times
in the last week I’ve heard my most conservative friends and co-workers
complain that assault weapons are too easy to come by in the U.S. The normally
silent majority finally seems to be willing to drown out the pontificating of
our corporate lobby-funded elected officials to say that there IS a happy
medium between you owning a rifle or handgun and some nutcase owning an assault
rifle, and it’s high time we found it.
I feel like the people in charge of our public policy on
this issue only acknowledge that there’s no one solution when they’re looking
for an excuse not to do anything at all. As in, banning semi-auto weapons/X
type of ammo/all guns EVER won’t stop criminals from getting their hands on
illegal weapons, so let’s not make any new gun control laws at all. (Which is
the equivalent of saying that we should do away with highway speed limits
because of how I drive every morning.)
But in this case I think it’s become clear that
preventing the next tragedy isn’t about making one single policy change. That’s
not a cop-out. Connecticut has an assault weapons ban; Adam Lanza’s mother
purchased her guns legally (thus becoming part of the statistic that gun owners
risk being killed by their own weapons). While the U.S. far outpaces the rest
of the world in firearm ownership, we’re not exactly the only place in the
world where lots of people own guns. We’re looking at a health care system with
fewer resources for the mentally ill, and a culture that offers too many role
models to an angry, pathetic person who can only make a name for himself by
hurting others.
“Guns” as a concept in and of themselves don’t automatically
turn their owners into killers. But it’s also true that killers tend to go forguns. In 2007, over 31,000 people died from being shot, the majority being
suicides – which still leaves about 11,000 gun-related homicides in the U.S. in
any given year. Meanwhile, another 75,000+ are injured by guns, either
deliberately or accidentally. By comparison, between 10,000 and 11,000 people
die in car accidents caused by drunk drivers in the U.S. each year. Where’s the
MADD-style public awareness campaign about the dangers of guns in the wrong
hands?
Which brings me to what should be an obvious point: When
I have a cold and want to buy too large a box of cold medicine, someone at the
drug store takes down my personal information. They do this so that, if I go
across town and try to buy another economy-size box of Sudafed, law enforcement
will know about it. Ok, I have a “right” to buy a legal and regulated product,
but thanks to the meth labs of the world I can no longer do so in unlimited
quantities. I have to wear a seatbelt. But no one keeps track of how many
bullets you buy online (like the Aurora shooter did). If I buy a beer for a
20-and-three-quarters year-old, I go to jail; if I buy an assault rifle for a
10-year-old, I’m cool.
Even in a free society, we take for granted that there
are stupid, sometimes even evil people in the world and we have to work around
them as best we can. Except when it comes to guns. Too many people are making
too much money making gun ownership and use a “culture war” issue for us to be
able to rely on our political leadership to ever tell us what we need to hear,
vs. what we want to hear.
And I put the blame for that on the NRA, which today
unleashed its “meaningful contribution” to the debate: putting armed guards in
all schools pronto. (Oh, okay. We spent five years debating the 1994 assault
weapons ban, but we should rush armed guards into kindergarten next week.) Never
mind that an armed, trained guard at Columbine High barely slowed up those
shooters. Never mind that communities across the U.S. can barely maintain the
police forces they already have. Who’s going to pay for this isn’t the NRA’s
concern. They haven’t been about policy, or about advocating for actual gun
owners, for some time. Take a look at the donors to the NRA’s foundation. They
exist to convince people to buy more guns and bullets, that’s all.
If the NRA actually cared about sustaining the tradition
of responsible gun ownership in this country, they’d be doing everything
possible to distance Adam Lanza and his ilk from the rural hunter who takes his
kids out twice a year. They’d take a hard look at what happened to the tobaccoindustry, who dug in their heels until public opinion turned so violently
against them that the largest companies were forced to pay hundreds of millions
into a fund that, among other things, pays for those annoying “don’t smoke or
you’ll die” TV commercials. It’s not going to take too many more days like last
Friday to convince a critical mass of Americans that guns run amok are a public
health issue.
Because the one thing that I haven’t heard said in the
last week is this: while the mass shootings get the press because they’re so
indiscriminate (the “it could happen to you” factor”), something like 80 Americans
are killed by guns each day on average. That’s more than three Sandy Hooks
every day. You just don’t hear about them.
So I have something to say to all the gun owners out
there. You know who you are. You’re the ones whose instinctive response when
you learn about 20 6-year-olds being mown down in their classroom is to run to
Facebook to remind us that “guns don’t kill people! People kill people!!” If
you want to make sure that your kids and grandkids can buy handguns or shotguns
if they want, then it’s up to you to figure this out. Right now you’re not drawing
any distinction between military-style guns and “cop-killer” bullets and that
shotgun in my dad’s closet. There are weapons that civilians should have access
to, and those that they shouldn’t.
So y’all figure this out. National registration database?
Limit on bullet purchases? Close the gun-show loophole on background checks?
Required training to buy weapons over a certain firing capacity? Annual
licensure? It’s up to you at this point. But right now most Americans see you
as the people who put your hobby above the lives of American children, and that
means that your window to police your own community is closing. If you all don’t
come up with a solution, then people who know less about your tools and how you
use them will gladly do so – and you most likely won’t like the result.
What happened last week doesn’t happen outside America,
at least not with the regularity it does here. We will always have disturbed,
inadequate types who will lash out at others. But they don’t always have to
have such easy access to weapons, any more than a meth cooker has unfettered access
to cold meds. A change is coming, and the people who think of themselves as the
good guys need to be leading the way – not fighting for the right of the next
Lanza to kill.