Is America crazy?

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Please read with an open mind. Thank you.




By Leonard Pitts Jr.
The Miami Herald
Sept, 20, 2013



Is America crazy?

Twelve people killed at a secure naval installation virtually on the front porch of the federal government, eight others hurt, the shooter shot to death, and it’s just another manic Monday, another day in the life of a nation under the gun. So yes, maybe it’s time we acknowledged that gorilla in the back seat, time we asked the painfully obvious.

Is America crazy?

You know, don’t you, that Muslims watched this unfold with a prayer on their lips: “Don’t let him be a Muslim. Don’t let him be a Muslim. Please don’t let him be a Muslim.” Because they know — the last 12 years have forcefully taught them — how the actions of a lone madman can be used to tar an entire cause, religion or people.

In the end, almost as if in refutation of our ready-made narratives and practiced outrage, the shooter turns out to be a black Buddhist from Texas. It is a uniquely American amalgam that defies our love of easy, simplistic categories.

As we are thus deprived of ready-made cultural blame, the story will likely fall now into a well-worn groove. Someone will disinter Wayne LaPierre of the NRA from whatever crypt they keep him in between tragedies and he will say what he always does about how this could have been avoided if only more people in this secure military facility had been armed. And we will have the argument we always have about a constitutional amendment written in an era when muskets were state of the art and citizen militias guarded the frontier. And politicians will say the things they always say and nothing will change.

Is America crazy?

Infoplease.com, the online version of the old Information Please almanac, maintains a list of school shootings and mass shootings internationally since 1996. Peruse it and one thing leaps out. Though such tragedies have touched places as far-flung as Carmen de Patagones, Argentina, and Erfurt, Germany, the list is absolutely dominated by American towns: Tucson, Memphis, Cold Spring, Red Lake, Tacoma, Jacksonville, Aurora, Oakland, Newtown. No other country even comes close.

In 1968, when Robert Kennedy became the victim of the fifth political assassination in five years, the historian Arthur Schlesinger famously asked a question: “What sort of people are we, we Americans? Today, we are the most frightening people on this planet.”

Forty-five years later, we may or may not still be the most frightening. But we are surely among the most frightened.

Indeed, for all our historical courage, we are in many ways a terrified people. Scared of the face at the window, the rattle at the door, the Other who wants to take our stuff. Scared of the overthrow of one of the most stable governments on Earth.

So we arm ourselves to the tune of a reported 300 million guns in a nation of 316 million souls — no other country has more guns per capita. Americans, you see, don’t just like and use guns. We worship guns, mythologize guns, fetishize guns. Cannot conceive of ourselves without guns.

Thus, the idea of restricting access to them threatens something fundamental. Apparently, we’d rather endure these tragedies that repeat themselves that repeat themselves that repeat themselves as if on some diabolical loop, than explore reasonable solutions.

Is that a quantifiable malady, a treatable disorder?

Last week, the Des Moines Register reported that the state of Iowa issues gun carry permits to blind people. And people began debating this on grounds of constitutionality and equal access as if the very idea were not absurd on its face.

Is America crazy?

Look at those people fleeing the Navy Yard, look at the Senate on lockdown, look at the blind man packing. Ask yourself:

Does that look like sanity to you?

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for The Miami Herald. Contact him via e-mail at [email protected].
 

xiggi

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
My honest conclusion, more people there should have been armed.

Sent from my Fisher Price ABC-123.
 

xiggi

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
And mass killings will still happen if no ones armed.

Sent from my Fisher Price ABC-123.
 

davekc

Senior Moderator
Staff member
Fleet Owner
We as a people create the circumstances we have. It goes to who we elect because we are too stupid to know any better, we vote for looks/pizazz rather than substance, the breakdown of the family, greed in the wrong places, and a government that primarily exists only for its own gratification.
That creates the environment that we currently have. Guns are only a small piece of a much bigger problem.
 

Pilgrim

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Maybe we need to take a look at our pop culture, and the way the MSM functions to shape it. Some nut case decides he's unhappy about something; the best way for him to make a statement is to kill a whole lot of innocent people regardless of the method. The MSM will carry on his cause to the extreme with their coverage, and he will become a household name. They will rationalize his maniacal behavior by claiming he was a victim of his environment, or his childhood upbringing - whatever. There is no stigma any more for being a scumbag or a homicidal maniac - the MSM and the liberals just take the easy way out and blame it all on guns; but they don't seem to blame the increasing number of teenage deaths on their access to cars. We have a cultural problem with which our current liberal political leadership is not concerned. Neither is the MSM - they're more absorbed with the type of tacky outfit that an ugly teenager like Myley Cyrus is wearing on any certain day. Guns, bombs or any other weapon are not the basic problem - it's the deterioration of our culture.
 

cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
"Rationalize his behavior"? "There is no stigma to being a scumbag or a homicidal maniac anymore"?
Where ARE you reading such tripe?!
I'd agree that the mainstream media contributes to the problem by giving the killers the attention they want, but when anyone complains they [the corporate owners] say they're simply giving people what they want. It's like the chicken/egg: they justify it because people read/watch it, but people read/watch it because it's what's there.
I wonder if the saturation isn't at least partly due to the fact that it doesn't risk offending a single [or potential] advertiser.....
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
This navy yard shooter is dead! No stigma, not receiving much attention.... Same with the Newton shooter..either one isn't getting the attention. With or without guns on base the shooter would have killed someone....probably just not as many....
 

LDB

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Is America crazy? Part of it. Part of it believes inanimate objects can affect and create behavior. Part of it believes it can legislate against inanimate objects and bring about a change in human's and their behavior. Part of it believes incredibly harsh consequences for incredibly bad/wrong behavior aren't appropriate. Yes, part of America is crazy.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
I read the article with an open mind, same as I do when I read most of Leonard Pitts Jr.'s articles. He's a columnist for the Miami Herald, but is nationally syndicated. Pitts is an excellent writer, perhaps even a great writer (he has, after all, won a Pulitzer for Commentary). He writes on a wide variety of subjects, including race, politics and culture. What he does best, and one of his writing goals in writing, is to deconstruct public issues and perceptions, often yielding results that surprise even him. As he once said in an interview, "Most people think whatever they think, but a lot of times it's unexamined. I examine it. I try to intrigue one reader, which is me. I learn a lot that way. The best stuff I've ever read were not written for the reader, but for the writer." He often writes of those issues that are really closest to us emotionally, often reaching conclusions that challenge commonly held beliefs of those on both ends of the political spectrum. Agree or not with his conclusions, and I often do not agree at all, you can't read his columns without coming away a little smarter for the effort, because he makes you think.

So, after reading this column with an open mind, I offer these comments.

I disagree that we as Americans worship, mythologize and fetishize guns. Some do, of course, but when you look at it realistically, we don't as a culture worship, mythologize or fetishize guns any more than we do any other natural right. We worship, mythologize and fetishize bacon. But bacon is just one of many foods, the same as guns is just one one many ways to defend ourselves. Being allowed to keep and bear food is a natural right, same as is being allowed to defend oneself.

Because of that, I do agree with him that we Americans cannot conceive of ourselves without guns. Trying to imagine an America without guns is like trying to imagine an America without bacon. Good luck with that.

Pitts thinks the very idea of issuing gun carry permits to blind people is absurd. I, on the other hand, think the very idea of issuing a permit granting a natural right is absurd on the face of it. He's missing the point. The idea of issuing a permit allowing one to keep and bear bacon is absurd.

Clearly, something needs to be done to stop these mass shootings. No one wants them. But there is no quick and easy fix. He concludes that Americans would rather endure these tragedies than restrict access to guns, because we don't want to put forth and explore reasonable solutions. That implies a reasonable solution is to restrict access to guns. But that's not a reasonable solution. It is a reasonable solution for another culture with a different history, but it is quite impossible to un-ring the bell of the natural right of 300 million guns. He and others think the quick and easy fix is to eliminate guns, first by restricting them and eventually getting rid of them. If that could be done it certainly would eliminate mass shootings, but it cannot be done.

American isn't perfect, but no, America isn't crazy. Neither is the world crazy for wanting to have what we have nor for wanting to live here.


Incidentally, for those who are not familiar with Leonard Pitts Jr.'s work, read here what he wrote the morning after 9/11. It's a remarkable piece of work.
Sept. 12, 2001: We'll go forward from this moment - Leonard Pitts Jr. - MiamiHerald.com
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
This navy yard shooter is dead! No stigma, not receiving much attention.... Same with the Newton shooter..either one isn't getting the attention. With or without guns on base the shooter would have killed someone....probably just not as many....

How can you say probably not as many? That statement makes no sense. There are PLENTY of ways to kill an equal, or greater amount, of people using readily available, legal items, than a shotgun. Just look at the labels on common house hold chemicals for a start. It is VERY easy to go to a fireworks store, buy all kinds of class one explosives, with NO back ground check of ANY kind, and make a very effective bomb that could have killed hundreds.
 
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