hearing beyond the comfort zones from which they emerge.
“None of us in the free world would have what we have if it were not for guns,” David Britt, a gun rights advocate, once told me . “It’s about freedom, it’s not about violence.”
So however it looks from the outside, from within America the landscape on which these debates are held — when they are held at all — are more thorny. When it comes to specific remedies Obama’s speaks for the nation.
A Pew poll last month showed that 85 per cent of Americans support background checks for gun shows and private sales, 79 per cent back laws to prevent mentally-ill people form buying guns, 70 per cent are in favour of a federal database to track gun sales and 57 per cent support a ban on assault-style weapons.
But when it comes to the broader issue of gun control, the country is deeply divided. Currently, 50 per cent say it is more important to control gun ownership, while 47 per cent say it is more important to protect gun rights.
That divide parallels the partisan fault line that has created so much dysfunction and stasis from shutting down the government to immigration reform. And while gun rights supporters are marginally outnumbered they are far more motivated as a single-issue pressure group than those who back gun control.
The fact that media attention only turns to the issue after incidents such as this also skews the debate. The overwhelming majority of Americans who are killed by firearms do not die in mass shootings — they kill themselves.
Moreover, over the past 30 years the number of people killed by guns has actually fallen, as has the proportion of Americans who own guns. Meanwhile, the sale of guns has gone up, as those who do own them generally own more of them — on average seven each.
“Whether they’re used in war or for keeping the peace guns are just tools,” wrote the late Chris Kyle, the US navy Seal made globally famous by the movie American Sniper, in American Gun: A History of the US in 10 Firearms. “And like any tool, the way they’re used reflects the society they’re part of.”
He had a point. There is far more to both gun violence in general and mass shootings in particular than just guns . The absence of a universal health care has made the prison system the principle provider of mental health care in America.
The mentally-ill in the US are less likely to be diagnosed, less likely to be treated and more likely to be criminalised than anywhere else in the western world. The presence of mass poverty, significant economic inequality and widespread racial segregation combine to produce desperation, resentment and fear.
Other countries have these problems to lesser or greater degrees. The difference is that no other country has these problems and then a huge stockpile of easily available weapons to virtually anybody who wants them.
And so the requiem continues. A painful elegy for a nation careless enough to lose its innocence on a weekly basis, one which can expend extraordinary resources looking for water on Mars yet is apparently incapable of finding a way to keep its people safe in cinemas, colleges and churches.
Courtesy - The Guardian