Neil Macdonald: Self-preservation in gunned up America
By Neil Macdonald, CBC News
Posted: Jan 14, 2013 5:02 AM ET
Last Updated: Jan 14, 2013 9:14 AM ET
It's actually difficult to type this with my expatriate Canadian fingers, but a lot of what the National Rifle Association is saying these days makes objective sense.
Granted, it only makes sense in the context of the American gun lunacy the NRA itself has worked so successfully to create.
But that's America's reality, and in that sense, the NRA is eminently realistic. Putting armed police into schools, at this stage, is probably prudent.
Congress has estimated that, as of 2009, there were about 310 million firearms in the United States. That's a gun for every person in this country.
Millions of these are assault-style weapons, like the Bushmaster, or that brand's many commercial competitors. Adam Lanza took one to Sandy Hook elementary school last month.
They're copies of the rifles carried by modern soldiers, and they fire high-velocity bullets from large magazines as often as you can pull the trigger. (The military versions differ only in that they are capable of firing a steady stream of bullets with one pull.)
These rifles are designed to kill people, not deer. Quite simply, they are weapons of war, which makes them a popular pick for homicidal maniacs.
Bushmaster Christmas
Now, the sane thing, which I've written about before, would be a mass seizure of such weapons. Period. Lots of Americans feel the same way.
But that's just not going to happen. Assault-style weapons are realities on the American ground.
In fact, in many American homes, as Atlantic magazine pointed out recently, it was a Bushmaster Christmas, part of a gun-buying spree that began shortly after Obama first came to power and picked up sharply again after the shootings in Connecticut.
Gun sales picked up sharply after the school shooting in Connecticut last month, in anticipation gun control laws might be brought in. So did demonstrations, almost right across the country, against that possibility. (Reuters)The non-partisan Violence Policy Centre says firearms manufacturers are concentrating on marketing assault-style weapons as a priority.
Seizing them, or forcing people to sell them to the government, as Australia did after the Port Arthur massacre there in 1996, would be politically, if not legally impossible in the U.S.
In fact, the Obama administration is not even seriously talking about reinstating the restrictions on newly purchased assault weapons that proved so useless during the 10 years between 1994 and 2004 when such a ban was in effect. (The manufacturers simply altered their technical specifications to evade the law.)
The president does seem determined to do something — Vice-President Joe Biden has been meeting with the NRA and video-game makers, and is heading a task force that is to make recommendations as early as tomorrow.
But the legal and political walls are so thick around America and its guns that it is hard to imagine any kind of serious breakthrough.
Even Gabrielle Giffords, the former Arizona congresswoman who was shot in the head by a psychotic two years ago and has now launched a national campaign for responsible gun control, won’t give up her Glock.
Gunned up
In this debate, assault-style rifles are hardly the only problem. Let's not forget that the Virginia Tech shooter, who slew 32 young university students in 2007, didn't need a Bushmaster. He did it all with two handguns.
Further complicating matters, firearms don't go stale like cheese; they are made to last for a very long time, and do.
The bleak fact is that America is gunned up, locked and loaded, and it's going to stay that way for the foreseeable future.
The Supreme Court has explicitly ruled Americans have the constitutional right to bear arms for self-defence (Attempts by D.C. and Illinois to restrict gun ownership were struck down.)
What’s more, gun laws have in fact slackened on Obama's watch.
His administration is hinting it might issue an executive order trimming gun makers at the margins, or demanding more stringent background checks to keep them out of the hands of the mentally deranged. But the basic reality won't change.
Adam Lanza, remember, simply stole his mother's legally obtained weapons.
Given this reality, who can really argue with the Pennsylvania and New Jersey school districts that recently took the NRA's advice and hired armed, retired police officers to roam their school hallways?
As the NRA points out, politicians are guarded by armed security. So are VIPs. So are most federal buildings. So are political and sporting events here.
So what's the matter with affording children the same protection?
They live in the same heavily-armed American society that seems to worship violence, if movies and video games are any indication.
Cop in the schoolyard
Perhaps it's because I lived in Jerusalem, where my kids, and those of my diplomat friends, were ferried to school in armoured vehicles, but if I lived in a heavily armed state like Texas or Virginia or Oklahoma, I'd have no objection whatever to seeing a cop in the schoolyard.
Vice-President Joe Biden has been meeting interest groups and quick-marching a task force looking at possible gun control options. He is expected to report to the president this week. (Reuters)For that matter, how do you argue with a law-abiding American who happens to live in a high-crime area — in an era when police services are being cut back in the name of austerity — and decides to obtain a weapon and proper training?
I know, I know: Arming yourself, or hiring police in schools, amounts to attacking the symptom, not the disease.
But this is America, and the disease appears to be inoperable. The NRA has helped see to that.
I'm not even sure an armed cop in the school could actually stop a determined mass killer. The deputy sheriff on duty at Columbine High School in 1999 engaged the two young killers and missed.
But it is probably a better option than a courageous principal flinging herself at a shooter and dying in the act.
Frankly, those schools that goodheartedly post signs proclaiming themselves to be "gun-free zones" might as well, given the American reality, put up a sign saying "target-rich environment."
I wish I could say the NRA's violent logic makes no sense at all. But I live here, and I know that this can be a terribly violent place.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Ford ally says mayor told to limit comments on alleged crack video
- Legal advice may be behind Toronto Mayor Rob Ford's decision to stay silent in the wake of allegations he was recorded smoking what appears to be crack cocaine. more »
- Oklahoma residents begin to return home after deadly tornado
- Rescue workers raced to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of nine children. more »
- Wednesdays with @Kady: Senate expenses questions continue
- As Ottawa waits to see whether Prime Minister Stephen Harper takes questions on the Senate expenses scandal in Peru this afternoon, CBC Politics blogger Kady O'Malley is available to answer your questions on the latest controversial developments. more »
- 'You will see him again in heaven,' Sharlene Bosma tells daughter
- Sharlene Bosma told more than 1,000 people at the public memorial service for her slain husband, Tim Bosma, about the love they shared. more »
Must Watch
Latest World News Headlines
- Oklahoma residents begin to return home after deadly tornado
- Rescue workers raced to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of nine children. more »
- Man shot dead during FBI interview for Boston bombing probe
- The FBI says a man being questioned by authorities in the Boston bombing probe was fatally shot after he initiated a violent confrontation during an interview with officers in Orlando, Fla. more »
- Jodi Arias asks for 'second chance' during jail interview
- In a surprise jailhouse interview just hours after a jury began deliberating her fate, Jodi Arias spoke out Tuesday about her murder trial, her many fights with her legal team and her belief that she 'deserves a second chance at freedom someday.' more »
- Iran's Ahmadinejad denounces election decision
- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Wednesday that a decision by election overseers to disqualify his top aide from next month's presidential race is an act of "oppression" and that he will take the case to the country's supreme leader. more »
The National
The Current
- Director James Cameron on deep-sea exploration May. 22, 2013 1:58 PM Film director and deep sea explorer James Cameron on piloting submarines, finding new species and experiencing mechanical trouble 11 kilometres under water.
- 'You will see him again in heaven,' Sharlene Bosma tells daughter
- Video forensics: How easy would it be to fake a Rob Ford video?
- Over 1 million Montrealers face boil water advisory
- Man shot dead during FBI interview for Boston bombing probe
- Jodi Arias asks for 'second chance' during jail interview
- Hamilton police make 2nd arrest in Tim Bosma slaying
- Plumber's car explodes near Vancouver apartments
- Oklahoma residents begin to return home after deadly tornado
- Children's mouths allegedly taped shut at N.S. school

