Back in the
days when the United States was 13 colonies of religious fanatics huddled on
the East Coast of America facing a dangerous wilderness and hostile natives
wanting their land back -- and rightly so -- it was understandable why the
pioneers needed guns.
Guns
fed them. Guns protected them.
A
hundred or so years later those same pioneers fought a revolutionary war
against the greatest empire on earth – and defying all odds – were victorious.
Once again, the key was guns. Then it came time to create a country with a
sacred document to guide it into an uncertain future. Is it any wonder that the
Second Amendment to the American Constitution was the right to bear arms?
But
this is where things started to go off the rails.
The
Second Amendment was intended to provide the fledgling country with a citizens’
militia because the New Republic still faced many enemies, not the least of
which were the imperialist British still smarting from their unexpected defeat,
Spain, which possessed a great empire of its own, Mexico, part of the Spanish
Empire to the south and the misnamed North American Indian, who still
controlled the western half of the continent and had great leaders of its own
like Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse.
But
the Americans persevered and eventually defeated all of their enemies and
became the Greatest Empire in the history of the world, bestriding the earth
like a giant colossus, albeit a colossus with a fatal flaw – a love of guns.
Any kind of gun from an AR-15, the semi-automatic weapon that killed 20
innocent school children in Newtown, Connecticut last week, to a Glock hand gun
concealed in a pocket to the hundreds of drones killing children in Afghanistan
and Pakistan. (When a gun doesn’t work, you get a better weapon – and praise
the Lord – the killing can continue.)
We’re
talking about a sick country here. Sick, sick, sick! The gun culture is
ingrained into the very fiber of American DNA. And ironically the only person
that may be able to reverse this atavistic disease is one who has played a
major role in continuing it – President Barack Obama.
Yes,
I’m talking about that president, the
one who was elected more than four years ago saying he would fight for tougher
gun laws and did nothing. The one who gave the order for the extra-judicial
murder of Osama bin Laden (in his bed surrounded by his wives and children)
instead of bringing him to American
justice and legally executing him like a truly civilized country would do. And,
oh yes, the president who expanded the Drone War in the tribal lands of Pakistan and Afghanistan, killing hundreds
of innocent civilians including dozens of women and children. No public tears
shed for them. Then again, sitting in their stone houses and hovels in the
Steppes of Asia, they represent great threats to American “security.” Yeah,
right.
I
know this is harsh, but I defy anyone to tell me it isn’t the truth.
Yet,
despite the foregoing, I’m actually daring to believe that maybe this time it’s
different. Obama’s tears looked genuine on TV. This time he’s pledged to act on
gun control and put Vice President Biden in charge of a special task force to
come up with concrete proposals for new gun laws within weeks. Referring to the
Newtown massacre where teachers tried to shield students with their bodies, he
said it’s time for Americans to show “one tiny iota of
courage those teachers in Newtown summoned on Friday."
Pray to God, I hope Americans start doing that. This,
after all, is the country where sales of children’s body armor and
bullet-proof backpacks soared after the
Newtown tragedy and where some politicians have seriously suggested arming all
teachers to keep students from being killed.
But now there are signs that real change may be in the
air. It took three days for the National Rifle Association to respond to the
killing fields of Newtown and the NRA responded in a gracious manner with no
mention at all of Americans inalienable right to gun each other down. Even some
senators and congressmen, who have strongly supported the gun lobby in the
past, are showing signs of a change of heart. Given this, Obama has a golden
opportunity to forge a legacy of being the president that restored peace to the
public square, made school children safe in their seats and created a kinder,
less violent America.
Gerry
Warner is a retired journalist and Cranbrook City Councillor. His opinions are
his own.
No comments:
Post a Comment