Saturday, August 29, 2015

The Hypocritical Gun Rhetoric

     I am taking a moment and offering my condolences to the families of the slain journalists of WDBJ news station in Roanoke, Virginia. I will not attempt to make a political case for/against guns…but I will make points regarding the gun debate in the United States. Hopefully, within the near future we will finally have a grip on the reduction of gun violence in America.
     President Obama continues to push for more common sense gun legislation during his time in the White House. He signed legislation allowing guns to be carried in National Parks, which the NRA never addresses. He advocates for the second amendment. His support for Congress to act on gun control by passing legislation to expand background checks is gaining support. Even within the circles of the NRA, 74% of members support background checks (this is according to the Washington Post and an overall 89% of Americans support the idea as well). I always consider background checks to be an essential part of gun ownership as it serves as a sort of liability insurance for the owner of their gun – and it serves the best interest for both the owner and the general public respectively (example – it protects the gun owner financially in the case of being criminally negligent regarding homicides if their gun is used and it benefits the victim’s family regarding funeral costs). If it is stolen or used illegally, the owner would be fined and would be suspended from buying a gun during a certain amount of time (my personal preference is five years). Better yet, if you own a firearm and it is abused, then you should be fined – it would be called the firearm tax. That would allow responsible gun owners to continue to obey the laws and only hinder those that break the law. This ensures the second amendment is still protected.
     I’ll make another observation: two journalists were killed, Church members in South Carolina were killed, a theatre in Colorado, and a elementary school in Connecticut has children lose their lives due to gun violence…a military recruiting station in Tennessee was a place where four lives were lost due to gun violence. Why is it that the only place that had citizens step up and protect the members of the military? If you want to help the military and veterans, hold members of Congress that vote against their interests like housing and veterans assistance regarding work, education, etc. I don’t recall after any of the other tragedies that citizens got so fed up that they took up arms and started protecting theatres, churches, schools, news stations, or shopping malls. We want to stand up and patrol our [southern] border with guns but we don’t want to stand up and patrol our parts of our communities that benefit everyone within it – unless it’s a military recruitment station? I know we can protect both without being hypocritical – not to mention we can hold members of Congress accountable if they don’t vote in the interests of military members (veteran, active, and reserves), teachers & school personal  (current and retired), emergency services that assist in such tragedies, etc. One final note about those that decided to “protect” the military recruitment stations, the U.S. Army sent memos to all recruitment stations to be on the lookout for these vigilantes and “keep their distance and alert law enforcement of their presence” according to Lt. Gen. Mark Brilakis, the head of Marine Corps Recruiting Command, and also advised troops not to support the "armed citizen" volunteers in any way.
     Some of my ideas seem extreme, but at least I’m talking about the issue head-on and coming up with solutions instead of playing the blame game that occurs whenever a tragedy happens. Common sense gun laws are necessary to ensure the safety of all citizens – just like taking steps to ensure guns don’t get into the hands of those that are not mentally competent operate them. I think it is ludicrous to talk about Gun Control & Mental Health as two separate issues when there have been multiple incidents and a direct correlation can be found.
     I hope at some point the United States will join the rest of the world and reduce its gun-related deaths by at least 20% within the next 50 years. In order to do this, we need to get serious about the issue and determine which one is more important: clinging onto our “guns aren’t the problem” mindset or common sense gun legislation that protects and saves all lives of United States citizens.
           



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