This is not the post I wanted to write today.
But the 355th mass shooting in the United States this year happened yesterday.
Mind-boggling. Averaging more than one a day.
And that horrible toll is dwarfed by the total number of those killed and wounded by guns in the United States through gang violence, organized crime, domestic violence, road rage, all manner of crimes using guns, hunting accidents, suicide, and at-home accidents, including a heart-breaking number of incidents of children accidentally killing a sibling or friend when they find a loaded weapon in their home.
We need to stop this level of violence.
There needs to be much stricter licensing of guns so that people who use them for hunting or target shooting or other legitimate purposes and who know how to properly store and secure a firearm continue to have access, but people who are violent, mentally unstable, or engaged in criminal activity do not.
Some kinds of weapons and ammunition should not be available at all. Guns designed to only kill people, like assault weapons, high-capacity magazines, and bullets that are designed to inflict extra damage on human victims should be off the market for the general public.
I know that some readers are probably saying, but the second amendment of the US Constitution says that the right to bear arms shall not be infringed. I would ask those people to consider the whole amendment:
A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
The sentence structure isn’t used much in modern English, but it is a translation of the Latin ablative absolute structure, which means that the first clause is the basis for what follows it. At the time it was adopted, the United States did not have a standing army, so the militia was meant to defend the country in case of attack. For this reason, keeping and bearing arms was not to be infringed.
That is not our current situation in this country. We have a large standing military force, as well as National Guard units and local police forces. Gun regulations for the average citizen do not violate the Constitution.
We have restrictions on gun ownership now in place, based on age, criminal record, and other factors. We restrict the types of weapons people may own. No one thinks they have the right to have an anti-aircraft battery in the backyard or a nuclear weapon in the garage, just in case they need it.
It is time – well, past time, but better late than never – for Congress to act to restrict gun violence.
Too many people have already lost their lives. We must not stand by and watch even more killing.
All true, but will never happen. Republicans living in their own private Idaho, so to speak. As a friend said, if they won’t even act after a massacre of white elementary school children, we are doomed.
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Congress can change, though, even with the gerrymandering now in place. We need enough citizens to pressure their members of Congress and make it an important issue in choosing for whom to vote. Meanwhile, voters can work on the state level, too.
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Yes, we can all do something, that’s very true. But the Republican impulse in this country is not going away any time soon I’m afraid. Many young people I know won’t even bother to vote, they say it won’t make any difference. And they are our future.
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One of the things that is hopeful for youth voter turnout is the Bernie Sanders phenomenon. If that energy can be sustained, we may be able to see some turnaround in the pathetic voter turnout, especially among the young adult cohort.
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Just keep saying it. Don’t ever give up on this.
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Thanks for the support.
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I’ve often thought about what you’re saying about the militia—today we’ve got one of the most massive military complexes in the world . . . and yet the 2nd Amendment has actually been expanded by the Roberts court. It’s unbelievable, really. Thanks for your words.
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See? Grammar study is very important! Thank you for your support, Ellen.
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