There is a nice little article this morning that questions why mentally ill people are allowed to carry guns. It seems to be a fair question in wake of the Tucson shooting. There seems to be laws restricting it but here is a prime example of a law(s) that either don't work in reality or to which people don't seem to heed.
The gun rights folks are all over this today in something of a concerted effort to make sure that we all realize that guns don't kill people. It is a distinction without a difference. One proponent actually went so far as to suggest that if people on line to see the Congresswoman were armed there could have been a draw and shoot gunfight and less people would have been wounded or dead. Hmmm.
It is no small comfort to me that we in the United States are 50% more likely to own a gun than the average citizen of Yemen (2007 stats) and that our death by gun rate is above 14 per 100,000 - roughly the same as hypertension as a killer.
I'm also fairly ticked by persons hiding behind the 2nd Amendment and the careful nurturing of the Amendment through the courts, the all power of the NRA, and the general level of argument that surrounds the debate. It seems like something we can't talk about. We just have to endure it and those of us who don't believe in the almighty gun as the great debate winner frankly live in fear of those who do. I shouldn't have to go to a political rally and stand in a crowd with a guy with a gun strapped to his hip. It makes me nervous. I never have any assurance that he won't suddenly go loony and draw it and someone else will draw theirs and it will be the OK Corral immediately.
More then anything, people shouldn't be put in the position of throwing themselves in front of loved ones to shield them from bullets. I would of course. We all would. If anything like that threatened my wife or my kids or their kids I would gladly do that without blinking an eye. And I think that is the point on this Monday when we wake up to the cold fact that we need to talk rationally about this issue.
The problem and there is a problem is chronic and we aren't addressing it. It makes us less of a nation and it kills far too many people, injures too many more and makes many of us feel unsafe.
The gun rights folks are all over this today in something of a concerted effort to make sure that we all realize that guns don't kill people. It is a distinction without a difference. One proponent actually went so far as to suggest that if people on line to see the Congresswoman were armed there could have been a draw and shoot gunfight and less people would have been wounded or dead. Hmmm.
It is no small comfort to me that we in the United States are 50% more likely to own a gun than the average citizen of Yemen (2007 stats) and that our death by gun rate is above 14 per 100,000 - roughly the same as hypertension as a killer.
I'm also fairly ticked by persons hiding behind the 2nd Amendment and the careful nurturing of the Amendment through the courts, the all power of the NRA, and the general level of argument that surrounds the debate. It seems like something we can't talk about. We just have to endure it and those of us who don't believe in the almighty gun as the great debate winner frankly live in fear of those who do. I shouldn't have to go to a political rally and stand in a crowd with a guy with a gun strapped to his hip. It makes me nervous. I never have any assurance that he won't suddenly go loony and draw it and someone else will draw theirs and it will be the OK Corral immediately.
More then anything, people shouldn't be put in the position of throwing themselves in front of loved ones to shield them from bullets. I would of course. We all would. If anything like that threatened my wife or my kids or their kids I would gladly do that without blinking an eye. And I think that is the point on this Monday when we wake up to the cold fact that we need to talk rationally about this issue.
The problem and there is a problem is chronic and we aren't addressing it. It makes us less of a nation and it kills far too many people, injures too many more and makes many of us feel unsafe.
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