12-26-2012 10:43 AM
(CNN) -- The National Rifle Association's Friday press event has received almost uniformly negative reviews. Yet the speech by NRA chief Wayne LaPierre had this merit: It pulled into daylight for all to see the foundational assumption of modern American gun culture.
LaPierre argued that our society is stalked by unknown numbers of monsters, potential mass murders like Adam Lanza. Then he said this: Even if we could somehow identify future Adam Lanzas, "that wouldn't even begin to ad...
The "criminal class" sentence is key. In LaPierre's mind, the world is divided between law-abiding citizens and dangerous criminals. Citizens and criminals form two separate and discrete categories. The criminals pose a threat; if the citizens do not go armed against the threat, they will be victimized by the threat.
I know people who carry handguns with them wherever they go, and for just the reason described by LaPierre.
Now let's take a look at the real world of American gun ownership. The following incident occurred in August:
"A man was shot in the face 9 p.m. Friday in an altercation with a neighbor over barking dogs on Atlas Street," Troy Police said.
"Police arrested David George Keats, 73, of Troy [Michigan] and charged him with attempted murder in the incident," according to a media release from the Troy Police Department.
"According to police, witnesses stated that the altercation began when Keats let his three dogs outside and the dogs began to bark. According to the media release, Keats' 52-year-old next door neighbor yelled at the dogs to be quiet and kicked the fence. Keats then ran up to the victim, yelled, 'Don't tell my dogs to shut up,' and began shooting at the victim.
"One bullet hit the man in the face, piercing both cheeks, and four more shots were fired at the victim as he was running away," according to the report.
The encounter between Keats and his neighbor ended nonlethally only by good luck. A shot in the face is a shot to kill.
Nor was this encounter aberrational. There's solid research to show that most so-called defensive gun uses are not really defensive at all.
In the late 1990s, teams of researchers at the Harvard school of public health interviewed dozens of people who had wielded a gun for self-defense. (In many cases, the guns were not fired, but were simply brandished.) The researchers pressed for the fullest description of exactly what happened. They then presented the descriptions to five criminal court judges from three states.
"The judges were told to assume that the respondent had a permit to own and carry the gun and had described the event honestly from his/her own perspective. The judges were then asked to give their best guess whether, based on the respondent's description of the incident, the respondent's use of the gun was very likely legal, likely legal, as likely as not legal, unlikely legal, or very unlikely legal."
Even on those two highly favorable (and not very realistic) assumptions, the judges rated the majority of the self-defensive gun uses as falling into one of the two illegal categories.
The researchers concluded:
"Guns are used to threaten and intimidate far more often than they are used in self-defense. Most self-reported self-defense gun uses may well be illegal and against the interests of society."
That certainly describes the Keats shooting. With a little Google searching, you can pull up dozens of similar incidents.
Here's a story from just this past week, December 22.
"Longview, Washington -- A man shot and killed his uncle during an argument at their apartment complex late Friday night. ...'We heard a big bang,' said Ron Nelson, who lives a few apartments down...Nelson said the men were fighting over a hat and a cell phone."
Now that so many Americans carry weapons when they go out of the home, shooting incidents can occur anywhere, including very commonly the road. Another recent incident: In Pensacola, Florida, in October a man in a Jeep Cherokee cut off another car. A roadway confrontation followed, the two cars stopped, and the Jeep owner emerged to shoot the other driver in the knee. He was arrested this past week.
In these cases, and thousands like them each and every year, it is not so clear who is the "good guy" exercising responsible self-protection and who is the "bad guy" who can only be deterred by an armed citizen.
But the guns in their hands protected exactly nobody. They turned ordinary altercations into murderous exchanges of fire. They brought wounds, death and criminal prosecution where otherwise there would likely only have been angry words or at worst, black eyes.
LaPierre's offers a vision of American society as one unending replay of the worst scenes in Charles Bronson's 1974 vigilante classic, "Death Wish."
The people most victimized by this nightmare vision end up being the people who believe it -- and who carry the weapons that kill or maim their neighbors, their relatives, their spouses, and random passersby.
http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/24/opinion/frum-nra-nightmare-vision/index.html
12-26-2012 01:43 PM
Guns are like a high performance car…..they can either be used with common sense and safety….or they can be used for road rage. Even at that….sometimes some road rage is understandable.
In the ‘west’ people have given themselves over to others. We allow others to control virtually every aspect of our lives…..even our safety….and when those who are suppose to fill that role are incompetent in doing their jobs….the individual pays for it.
When it comes to firearms what would solve the problem….is take away all guns from everyone….but it’s too far gone now and it’s not going to happen for many, many reasons. The reality of life, even in a society is ….in the end everyone has to take care of themselves. Even if the stats show that there are more criminal murders than defensive murders, people still have a natural right to defend themselves.
12-27-2012 04:16 PM
Everyone should be allowed to own a gun....
In the U.S.A., it is your right to bare arms....
Homeland security has purchased close to 500 million rounds...
Wonder what theys gonna shoot at?
12-27-2012 08:58 PM
In the U.S.A., it is your right to bare arms....
I'm wearing a T-shirt - does that make me an American.
It is the Americans' right to bear arms that has put them into the position they are in today.
12-27-2012 10:17 PM
12-27-2012 10:37 PM
rather than cherry pick it for just the words that work for the agenda.
OMG-- if thats not the pot/kettle LOL
In 2008 and 2010, the Supreme Court issued two landmark decisions concerning the Second Amendment. In District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008), the Court ruled that the Second Amendment protects an individual's right to possess a firearm, unconnected to service in a militia[1][2] and to use that arm for traditionally lawful purposes, such as self-defense within the home. In dicta, the Court listed many longstanding prohibitions and restrictions on firearms possession as being consistent with the Second Amendment
12-27-2012 10:47 PM
I know mikey that the Supreme Court supported it. Did you just learn that?
Does that make them right? Judges who are probably gun owners themselves and who are elected as judges by the citizens in the US and appointed to the Supreme court by politicians who want to keep their jobs and who have friends who are gun owners and gun manufacturers and gun lobby groups who are contributors to their political campaigns. The answer is ……no.
If you think the Supreme Court is an infallible group blessed with supreme intelligence by some higher power……you would be wrong…..again.
12-28-2012 11:16 AM
autos kill lots of people too, each and every single day.....
Darn time we ban all cars and trucks...
bike power....save the env.
send copper..need bullets....
Yo AL...bring the Tommie
12-28-2012 12:13 PM