Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Gun Control is Not Enough


Gabrielle Giffords
     Today is the 2nd Anniversary of the deadly shooting near Tuscon, Arizona that left Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords severely injured; six dead, including Federal Judge John Roll; and thirteen others injured. Since then, there have been at least eleven other mass shootings in the United States. Most recently in Newtown, Connecticut, at Sandy Hook elementary school, which left twenty children and six adults dead. Also during that time, nothing significant has been done to prevent access to handguns or otherwise prevent similar incidents. 
     Today Gabby Giffords and her husband, astronaut Mark Kelly, announced the formation of a group they hope will change that, Americans for Responsible Solutions. The group plans to act as a counter lobby to the NRA, and force Congress to make responsible changes to gun laws to prevent these, and so many other, gun violence tragedies. 
     Ms. Giffords was not a gun control advocate during her six years in Congress. She and Mr. Kelly made clear that they are gun owners themselves, and enjoy sport shooting and hunting.  They're not looking to disarm the American public. Instead, they seek laws that will effectively prevent guns from getting to those that shouldn't have them, most notably known criminals and the mentally ill. Despite these statements, I'm sure they'll be met with fierce opposition to their mission, despite its reasonableness. 

     But gun control will not be enough. We need a comprehensive approach to solving the problem of gun violence in the United States. It should include gun ownership restrictions; enhanced background checks, including checks for mental illness; background checks for private sales of guns; improved community mental health care; removing unlicensed, unregistered guns from the streets, reducing the quantity of guns nationwide; and maybe even consider more closely examining the role violent video games, movies and television play in violence among young people. 
     But even if all those things could happen tomorrow, it isn't enough. There are two irrational beliefs that must also change. They seem to be unique to America, perhaps explaining why gun violence is so much higher here than in other countries with similar access to guns. 
    Americans have an irrational belief that we need guns to be safe. That without them, we're big, bright targets for criminals of all stripes, criminals that are lurking in every corner of every street, just waiting to get us all. This is not true. At all
     In 2009, Americans were only 0.005% likely to be a victim of homicide; only 0.4% likely to be victims of violent crime. Even when US crime rates were the highest in recent history, in 1991, the chances of being a homicide victim were only 0.01%; a violent crime victim 0.8%. Hardly compelling evidence to support the need to have a gun at the ready. 
     The second irrational belief is that having a gun will ensure safety. It won't. Evidence of that are the police officers killed every year by violent offenders. If a gun ensured safety, one would think someone who carries one and has been extensively trained in its use would be among the safest people in the world. Yet police officers are killed too often by armed assailants, and worse, sometimes by their own guns taken by their killers. More evidence of this is that a gun in the home is more likely to be used for a homicide, suicide, or accidental shooting than for self defense. Every time a gun is used for self defense, it is used eleven times for suicide or attempted suicide; seven times in criminal assaults and homicides; and four times in unintentional shooting deaths or injuries.
     Guns will not ensure your safety. Just waiving a gun at someone will not always scare them off. Shooting someone will not automatically neutralize the threat. And believing otherwise is more dangerous than being unarmed.  

     If we could change these two fallacies about guns, we could move forward towards taking reasonable steps to reduce gun violence. Until then, we'll be talking in circles with people whose reasoning is based on myths, whose reality is derived from movies, and whose concept of reality is skewed by the power they feel with a gun in their hand






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Friday, January 4, 2013

Enough With the Violence


     Today while checking my Facebook feed I saw a picture of a beautiful young woman, child really, being released from a hospital after being shot in the head and neck by religious fanatics. Her "crime"? She was an activist for women's rights, particularly rights to education. She was fifteen, did I mention that? 

     Malala Yousafzai lived in Pakistan. She has played a prominent role in the women's rights movement in Pakistan for several years. She wrote a blog for the BBC when she was just eleven and twelve years old, using a pseudonym of course. She has won awards for working towards peace, and was featured in a New York Times documentary for her efforts. 
     In October 2012, her hard work towards women's rights, which mostly focused on a teen-aged girl's ability to attend school, got her shot in the head and neck by the Taliban. Apparently, this child was a threat to the stability and way of life of an entire group of strong, hardened men who had god on their side. They are leaders of religion and governments in several countries, and have supporters in even more. But the words and actions of one fifteen year old girl was a threat. They had to act. And they did. 

     We sometimes take for granted the freedoms we enjoy in the United States, and that so many enjoy in the rest of the world. Maybe I shouldn't apply our standards to everyone; it's relative, right? 
     Wrong. In this case, it couldn't be more wrong.


     Malala was shot three months ago. But I saw it today and felt compelled to write. Not just about her, but about the violence. Malala, the rape and murder of a young woman in India, ongoing war, the murder of twenty-five people at Sandy Hook elementary school, the gang rape of an unconscious drugged up sixteen year old girl by high school football players (and the attempt by the community to cover it up, while the boys posted a video on You Tube bragging about it), and the thousands of nameless people assaulted, raped, and killed all over the world every year. 
     America, a world superpower and one of the richest countries in the world, has a higher rate of gun violence, murder, and prison population that we should. Our actions seem to say we don't have a problem with that. We spend more than the rest of the world combined on the military. A large portion of our population supports the right to possess automatic weapons and high capacity magazines. There is such a need for prisons that private corporations are getting in on building and running them, for a profit, of course. 

    I can't possibly be the first to think this, to be angry, or even to post on the Internet about it. But it needs to be said, again and again and again, until it stops: Enough with the violence already! 
    It has to stop. Not just in the United States, but all over the world. We can not live in peace in a country free from the threat of violence if it exists elsewhere. 
     It has to stop, even if it means giving up some of our guns. 
     It has to stop, even if it means no more cheap oil.
     It has to stop, even if it means legalizing, or at least decriminalizing, some aspects of drug use (illegal drugs and imprisoning non-violent drug offenders has arguably shown to do nothing towards reducing drug use and addiction problems; prohibition of alcohol caused more problems that it was worth, why not consider the same is possible with drugs?). 
     It has to stop, even if it means drastically increasing money spent on education.
     It has to stop, even if it means drastically increasing money spent on mental health care (the lack of understanding of mental illness and lack of mental health care in the United States is embarrassing). 
     It has to stop, even if it means we share some of our vast resources with the rest of the world and help (it isn't expensive, comparatively; or impossible, look at the work of the Gates Foundation, Partners in Health, or Kiva; all nonprofits working to keep people safe, healthy, employed, in hopes that it will improve lives and, as a result reduce violence). 

     I don't have solutions to the worldwide violence problem, merely suggestions. But it is time to act more meaningfully and on a grander scale than ever before. It starts in every home, school, and community, and ends in world peace.