Re: Nice Planet, Part 2: A-holes on parade
Ah, I got you. Good question.
If I had to take a guess, I would say that we collectively have more to say about the Trayvon Martin case because it ultimately revolves around an issue that we can understand, wrap our minds around and easily envision a solution to (the merits of "Stand Your Ground" laws), whereas the numerous issues in poor neighborhoods around the country (particularly in Chicago's south side) relate to an issue that we really have no idea how to fairly combat (inner city gangs and poverty).
Let's try to be real, for once, shall we? The "issue" in the Trayvon Martin case is race. His and George Zimmerman's. White guy killing a black guy. Discussion of "stand your ground" is a distraction. POTUS didn't jump into this case (nor the Revs) because of "stand your ground." They got involved because a white guy shot and killed a black guy. If both had been white, or black, or their races reversed, not a single one of us not living in Florida would have heard of the case, much less engaged in strenuous debate about it.
I have mentioned the continuing violence in Chicago because it isn't just gang thugs who are victims. Innocent children and grandparents are also killed. Without being too much of a demagogue, is the life of an adorable black 6-year old sitting on her stoop, shot to death by a gang thug who missed, less valuable than an adorable white 6-year old gunned down by Adam Lanza? In terms of loss of life, Chicago has the equivalent of a Newtown every month! The circumstances are clearly different, the killings in Chicago occur seriatum, not all at once. Still, it seems like we are inured to the slaughter of these black children and grand parents. And race must be considered part of the reason.
I mention the shooting in Chicago because no executive order, no proposed legislation, is likely to have any measurable impact on these crimes. Most big cities already have very tough gun control ordinances. Chicago's was so restrictive, the Supreme Court overturned it. Yet the killings continue. Young people carry and use guns at the drop of a hat. Like yesterday, at a high school basketball game! You read about these crimes every day, and yet we tend to look the other way. After all, "they" are only killing each other. 93% of black murder victims are killed by other blacks. And blacks represent a hugely disproportionate share of our murder victims. I'm not convinced that any anti-gun proposals will have an impact on a culture where teenagers carry guns and are prepared to shoot and kill other teenagers at a basketball game. I also believe a big part of the problem is the absense of appropriate male role models. Fathers, preferably. I've mentioned riding with Omaha's Mad Dads, which puts black men on the street to simply meet and talk with teenagers, hoping to show them a better way.
As a result of Newtown we've begun our customary crisis mongering. The NRA attacking Obama because his girls are given legally required protection. Suggesting their nitwit proposal to put cops in every one of our 100K schools is a "solution." Obama, staging "gun control theatre" hiding behind little kids. Are we to believe the next Adam Lanza is going to be deterred by a limit on the number of rounds in a magazine? This is a person who shot all of his victims multiple times. One child was struck 11 times! From personal experience, I can tell you that replacing one magazine with another is no BFD. Especially if you're on a psychotic murder rampage.
The Obama approach is a classic bait and switch: talk about the obscenity in Newtown and offer "solutions" which have approximately zero likelihood of stopping the next massacre. If Congress wants to ban "assault" weapons go right ahead, I don't care. But this is a meaningless distinction, based on aesthetics, not capabilities.
We previously banned these weapons. And the ban was allowed to expire. One would have expected crime to decline while the ban was in effect and increase after it expired. Neither happened. More children die every year in this country from gun accidents than all the children who have ever been shot in one of these school massacres.
Yet we continue with this gun Kabuki. I am so sick and tired of both sides in this argument, I'm unable to express it. The NRA exploring new vistas of reactionary paranoid hysteria. The POTUS and Vice POTUS playing to their base, repeatedly trotting out one of the dumbest of all cliches: "If it only saves one life." What a crock. I'm pretty convinced that as a nation we are simply unable to have a serious discussion about the various gun problems, each of which requires a different, more nuanced approach. And when this spasm of crisis mongering has ended, we will or won't have some new gun control laws, and the NRA will or won't be able to punish some congressmen for voting the "wrong" way, but we will be no safer. Neither will our children.