The Gun Idolatry in Current American Culture

GlennBeckGotGun2

Original source: The New American Empire

“We are devoted to creating an America free from gun violence, where all Americans are safe at home, at school, at work, and in our communities. As the Brady Campaign, we work to enact and enforce sensible gun laws, regulations, and public policies through grassroots activism, electing public officials who support gun laws, and increasing public awareness of gun violence.”

Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, Mission statement

Is the real American motto of the current American generation “In Guns We Trust”? This could surely be the impression one gets from the unfolding of recent events.

There exists currently in the United States an unhealthy obsession with guns, —a form of idolatry of the gun as a useful tool to settle differences between individuals. Increasingly, it seems, when someone feels slighted in any way, the reaction is often to rely on the gun to settle things. Instances of appalling gun-related incidents seem to multiply and to be occurring on a daily basis in the current American cultural climate.

A disgruntled employee is let go; the upset person goes home, takes a gun and comes back to the work site to set the score straight, killing many people in a shooting rampage. A deranged political extremist campaigns against a candidate who is nevertheless elected; the disappointed individual takes his easily available gun and shots at the politician and kills half a dozen other people. A devout religious fanatic feels that somehow his religion and its adepts are not well considered; he takes his gun and he assassinates at random everybody around. Frustrated students fail at school or are ostracized somewhat by classmates; they go home, take their parents' gun and kill teachers and scores of fellow students.

Even some disturbed ten-year olds now resort to the gun and turn it against their mother or father when they have been scolded, the gun being conveniently stashed in their room. It's a far cry from the commandment “Honor Thy Mother and Father”!

There would appear to be a firearms-related homicide crisis in the United States, but the idea that guns are required in the daily life of individuals is so well entrenched and propagated that a state of collective denial persists. Two hundred years ago, the vast majority of people lived on farms. Understandably, guns were then a necessity for hunting and for protection in a still wild and relatively lawless environment. Nowadays, the vast majority of people live in large urban areas where no hunting is allowed. What is then the need for large and small firearms, if not to shoot other people?

There is, of course, the persistent myth that Americans have the “right” to amass large quantity of firearms and to use them. Here again this seems to be a relic of bygone times when the young American republic was threatened by its former British masters and could lose its recently acquired independence through a British invasion. At that time, there was a perceived need to constitute rapidly a militia to defend the homeland, and armed farmers could provide such an instant army. That is the logical interpretation that can be given to the second amendment of the U.S Constitution of 1789 that says: “A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.”

The most logical implication here is that some convenient precautions can be taken to defend the state with “well regulated” armed militias, at a time when the U.S. federal government was perceived to be weak and incapable of mounting a federal military response to an outside invasion or to a domestic armed uprising, and that it should not prevent the states from raising militias to maintain order. Such was the constitutional climate at the time. —This provision in the U.S. Constitution was hardly designed to be an open license for each and every individual to arm oneself, to use such arms at will, and to constitute a “non-regulated” one-man militia if he chooses to do so.

Such a wide and extravagant interpretation in a modern urban environment would seem to be a sure recipe for social and political anarchy. Moreover, nowadays, the U.S. federal government is in full control of a powerful U.S. military organization and has no need whatsoever of private militias to defend the territory. Also, today, the state national guards have de facto taken the place that quickly enrolled private militias could have occupied in the past. There is no need today for readily available private armed militias to defend the territory.

Nevertheless, some American judges have ruled, and some American politicians have agreed, that the centuries-old right to form “well regulated” militias and to carry arms to defend the homeland really means that anybody, in the current modern environment, has an absolute individual right to own dangerous firearms of the nature and quantity he chooses, including sophisticated assault weapons, and to use them, and that no elected government can interfere.

The most recent case on this issue has been the ruling on Parker v District of Columbia, in which the District of Columbia Circuit court of appeals ruled on March 9, 2007 that a D.C. ban on handgun ownership without a license violated individual rights under the U. S. Second Amendment. —And that's where things stand today... and the killing continues.

How many tragedies will be needed before mentalities change?

Photo: Right-wing TV/radio personality Glenn Beck in makeup, packing pistols, taking aim at people he disagrees with politically.

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  • I must say that this article is fraught with every false meme I can ever recall having heard about firearms and those who possess, carry, and on occasion use them.

    It might interest the author (though perhaps not) to note that the rates of violent crime in the United States have been steadily dropping since the late 1980s when state after state adopted their concealed carry systems. It should be of similar interest to anyone concerned about the truth to also note that those states with the freest access to guns and the ability to exercise one's right to bear arms also happen to be the ones with the lowest rates of crime.

    Thirty-seven states now have "shall issue" laws on their books, meaning that any applicant whose background check returns no history of criminality or mental disease must be issued a permit to carry. Eleven more are "may issue" states such as California, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and so forth.

    Most may-issue states are highly restrictive in their issue policies. MA and NJ are effectively gun-ban states by virtue of the fact that they grant very few permits to mere civilians, those so granted usually being extremely wealthy - "insiders" of one form or another. These highly restrictive may-issue states have significantly higher rates of violent crime than their more liberal counterparts such as Connecticut.

    I have carried a gun every day of my life for many years in the various states in which I have resided, including WA, OR, CA, AZ, NY, NJ, FL, WV, and TX. I have been acquainted with many hundreds of others who carry on a daily basis as well. In not a single instance have any of those people ever been called upon to open fire on another person, as has been the case in my own life.

    To claim that people are employing firearms to settle petty issues, or any issues unjustifiably for that matter, is unforgivably ignorant at best, intentionally disingenuous and blatantly dishonest at worst.

    Any unjustifiable shooting is alway regrettable and often tragic, but when considering the numbers one need to do so with some honesty and actual capability. When properly viewed in statistical terms, the rates of violence in the USA are extremely low and are falling steadily.

    That notwithstanding, basic human rights cannot be authoritatively denied regardless of the circumstances under which such denial would be ostensibly justified. Were this not so, then rights would not be rights, which are just claims, but privileges. The only way rights can be violated is through violence and the threat thereof by one group against another; usually "government" against "the people". There can never be justification of such violations. This is impossible by definition and, therefore, and violation is inherently criminal and therefore evil in its very fabric.

    If I assume that Mr. Tremblay is not dishonest in his opinions, then I must conclude that he writing from a standpoint of profound ignorance with respect to not only the gun, but those who take them seriously as tools on a daily basis. This in itself is not a sin, provided he takes steps to correct his seriously misinformed point of view and cease offering them as fact. Failure to make such corrections could only lead those who know better to conclude that his personal agenda is something less than honorable.

    An analog to the gun issue in terms of how people behave might be found in that of the status of the homosexual. I feel confident in assuming that Mr. Tremblay would not suggest that homosexuality become a banned orientation. To those who are profoundly offended by homosexuality as an openly lived and legally accepted lifestyle, those who honestly believe that homosexuality is dangerous and harmful to "society", does anyone suggest a ban? No. The general consensus is that those who disagree with the gay lifestyle are constrained to tolerate it, regardless of how they may feel about it or that they believe it is harmful.

    By precisely the same principle onus lies with those who disagree with the keeping and bearing of arms to tolerate it in those who see fit to so keep and bear them.

    We either live by principle or we live in the chaos of the arbitrary and capricious whim of one person or group against the rest. There is nothing in between, regardless of how strongly one's illusions of how their preferences might be more right than those of others may speak to them. This is a central lesson of human history that has repeated itself over and over, yet the race has mainly failed to learn from it, thereby allowing for the rise of the Stalins, Maos, and all the other mass butchers and tyrants that have graced the lives of humanity since before history existed.

    Posted by Just A Regular Guy, 04/24/2011 1:35pm (13 years ago)

  • You claim to be Marxists, yet you're willing to give the ruling class a monopoly on deadly force? This article, like so many other breathless "ain't it awful" stories about the evils of guns in private hands, only focuses on the cost side of the equation, never glancing at the benefits. In a world where Glenn Beck and Barack Obama, have guns, I want one too.

    The right to self-defense is not a left-right issue. It's a human rights issue.

    Posted by Chris Knox, 03/08/2011 2:12pm (13 years ago)


  • This is the same position as the Ruling Class. They want too disarm workers too. This just goes along with the CP's long history of selling out to the Democratic Party. Mike

    Posted by mike, 01/24/2011 4:56pm (13 years ago)

  • Agreeing whole heartedly,with this piece,let's not take this issue out of the fascistically political context in which it exist.
    The "blood libel" fascist words of Palin bring us to this reality and danger.
    States'"legislators" are sprewing anti-Communist,anti-union,anti-worker,misogynist,anti-immigrant,(not only in Arizona,but virtually everywhere the rabid fascist right made inroads in Nov 2010,or so their demented minds think)racist vomit all over our democracy.
    The centerpiece of all we do in celebrating the stellar,diametrically opposite,democratic,inclusive,peace, jobs,and justice for all,in accordance with the 13th,14th,15th and 19th amendments to the U.S. Constitution law,advocated in the non-violent massive,international struggle campaigns of Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King Junior,should be a denunciation of the fascism we see and continued massive,direct action struggle against the so called Tea-Party,the massive stolen loot of the finance capitalists,which is behind this fascism(loot stolen from the working people and the working poor)and converting this loot to the use of the whole united working people,in organized government to protect the working peoples' well being.
    We need this stolen largess,to promote and finance peace,find alternatives to gun violence and gun idolotry,conversion,jobs,infrastructure and housing development,environmental and ecological sustainability,food,water,and health safety,real public safety and fire and police non-violent protection technologies.
    All law abiding and serious minded,rational Americans need to unite and fight for peace and these needs,in order to save American and human civilization, in line with the legacy of M L K,today.

    Posted by E.E.W. Clay, 01/13/2011 11:15am (13 years ago)

  • @Jon How many times have you used a gun to defend your family? This ain't the wild west.

    But even that isn't the real issue. Isn't it reasonable to create a system in which people who've had run-ins with the law - especially for serious problems like psychological trouble (like the Virginia Tech shooter) – to be excluded from gun ownership? Isn't it reasonable to ban devices that allow a shooter to massacre large numbers of people in a short period of time?

    Posted by Hank, 01/13/2011 10:08am (13 years ago)

  • I live in a city with police protection. I was a police officer for 10 years. I own guns for the defense of my family and me. You can own them, or not, its up to you. I saw this on a bumper sticker, but I also lived it: When you have seconds to live, the police are only minutes away.

    Posted by Jon, 01/13/2011 8:46am (13 years ago)

  • @Gary ...except maybe you should try reading the Constitution too. It has more than just the 2nd Amendment in it. Give a try. You may be surprised.

    Posted by Rose, 01/12/2011 12:23pm (13 years ago)

  • A communist quoting the US Constitution...I have now seen/read it all!

    Posted by Gary, 01/12/2011 11:59am (13 years ago)

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