Guns and poses.
Rumor has it that the assault weapons ban is all but dead. There's a surprise. It has, after all, been more than a stretch of weeks since the Newtown CT children's massacre, so all of the will has drained out of our ever-reliable legislators. The rabid voices of reaction have once again gained the foreground and are pulling out all of the stops to keep open their option on tactical nuclear arms ... or whatever military weapon system will next be successfully marketed to bullet-headed Americans. We knew we had a problem after Newtown, but I don't think we realized just how deep that problem is.
Assault weapons, high-capacity ammunition magazines, and a lack of regulatory oversight over who can purchase a gun and who can't - these are all crucial components of this national crisis. But they are not the core of the problem. Our problem is far broader than our persistent gun lust - it is the easy resort to violence for which we Americans are best known. This takes many forms, from the epidemic of domestic abuse to retail gang violence in Chicago and other cities. We fetishize anger and violence, honor it, respect it. And we have little trust for our neighbors and the people beyond our immediate circles of acquaintance.
My home region was struck by gun violence over the past week and a half - the kind that gets you into the national headlines for a day or two. Some older guy, out of work, out of money, grabbed a shotgun and started shooting people seemingly at random in a barber shop and a car wash he frequented. He was eventually shot by the police, but not before he killed several, sent others to the hospital, and blew away a police dog. No, he didn't have an assault rifle ... but that right up the street from where he committed his heinous acts is a major manufacturing plant that produces AR-15 style rifles, including Bushmasters like the one the Newtown shooter used.
This guy's simple solution was to kill at random, and plants like Remington Arms feed the national addiction to violence. Put those two pieces together and you have a recipe for the types of atrocities we see all too often in this country.
Next week: Iraq, ten years later.
luv u,
jp
Assault weapons, high-capacity ammunition magazines, and a lack of regulatory oversight over who can purchase a gun and who can't - these are all crucial components of this national crisis. But they are not the core of the problem. Our problem is far broader than our persistent gun lust - it is the easy resort to violence for which we Americans are best known. This takes many forms, from the epidemic of domestic abuse to retail gang violence in Chicago and other cities. We fetishize anger and violence, honor it, respect it. And we have little trust for our neighbors and the people beyond our immediate circles of acquaintance.
My home region was struck by gun violence over the past week and a half - the kind that gets you into the national headlines for a day or two. Some older guy, out of work, out of money, grabbed a shotgun and started shooting people seemingly at random in a barber shop and a car wash he frequented. He was eventually shot by the police, but not before he killed several, sent others to the hospital, and blew away a police dog. No, he didn't have an assault rifle ... but that right up the street from where he committed his heinous acts is a major manufacturing plant that produces AR-15 style rifles, including Bushmasters like the one the Newtown shooter used.
This guy's simple solution was to kill at random, and plants like Remington Arms feed the national addiction to violence. Put those two pieces together and you have a recipe for the types of atrocities we see all too often in this country.
Next week: Iraq, ten years later.
luv u,
jp
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