Reflections
on Riflery
There’s been another assault rifle shooting at an Atlanta-area elementary
school, but thankfully nobody was killed. This may seem like an odd time to
reflect positively on my relationship with guns but it’s time for some serious
reflection.
I got my first BB gun when I was about 10 and my
father gave me my first real rifle when I was 12. It was a Marlin .22 caliber
semi-automatic Model 60 with a 14-round tubular magazine. My dad would take me
target shooting and I would go “plinking” at cans and bottles in the woods with
my friends. In the fall, my brother and I would go squirrel hunting in the Blue
Ridge. That rifle brought me a great deal of enjoyment. I spent several summers
of my adolescence teaching NRA sponsored riflery courses as a camp counselor,
and I took great pride in teaching my campers important safety practices, basic
gun knowledge and good marksmanship. Like many reasonable Americans, I like
guns and I enjoy shooting.
Since those days however, I have noticed an unfortunate trend in our national
relationship with guns in which Americans have become less informed and
consequently more afraid of guns than ever before. Over that same time, I have
also noticed a national drift towards the far right during which the 2nd
Amendment has been aggressively promoted and irrational fears of government gun
confiscation have increased. While I am a firm believer in the 2nd Amendment
and the right of self-defense, today’s conversation about guns has taken on a
disturbing tone, especially since the Newtown massacre.
Though widely criticized, the NRA’s suggestion of armed security personnel at
schools seems reasonable to me. I grew up with school security guards in
Northern Virginia and never once found them to be threatening. But let’s not
forget that the school security guards at Columbine were impotent to prevent
that slaughter. Background checks would not have stopped the Newtown massacre
and they won’t stop those who purchase guns from the trunk of a car. Nearly
every “solution” suggested has been shown to be insufficient in one case or
another. But are these good reasons to oppose the passage of reasonable gun
laws? No.
Because of the speed of the mass shootings, magazine capacity has naturally
become a focus of discussion, but if you can’t hit your target with 10 shots,
you probably shouldn’t even own a gun – or at least you need some serious
target practice. As for those who read the 2nd Amendment as a
protection against a tyrannous government, they should reconsider whether a
whole closet full of assault rifles could stand a chance against the massive
arsenal of any government. Fully
automatic weaponry and much heavier arms are not doing the job for the Syrian
resistance for example. And if we think we can rely on the protection of
those with “concealed carry” permits, unless they are required to pass a
stringent yearly marksmanship test, their engagement with a mass shooter is
more likely to increase the bloodshed rather than drop the killer. Precise
accuracy with a pistol is a difficult skill to master requiring regular
practice.
According to political scientist Robert Spitzer,
it wasn’t until the 1970’s that the NRA became so aggressively focused on
lobbying and ritually evoking the boogeyman of government gun confiscation.
There is even video evidence of LaPierre doing a flip-flop on the issue of
background checks that the NRA once favored. The NRA’s nefarious and inordinate
influence was obvious when the GOP Senate (along with some skulking blue-dog
Dems) demonstrated their submission in rejecting a reasonable expansion of
background checks for gun purchases.
Perhaps it was their political fear of the NRA or maybe they were really
convinced by the NRA’s disinformation campaigns such as their claim that “80%
of police say background checks will have no effect on violent crime” a claim
which has since been challenged by police and academics alike. The NRA relies a
bit too heavily on the logical fallacy of the “slippery slope” thus scaring
many gun owners into blind opposition to common sense gun law reform.
So as a gun enthusiast,
I’ve had mixed feelings about the gun debate – that is, until I heard a pro-gun
heckler interrupt Neil Heslin as he spoke about his son
Jesse’s death at Newtown. As Heslin reviewed the heart-wrenching experience,
someone shouted “the 2nd Amendment shall not be infringed...my rights” and the
first word that popped into my mind was “nutcase.” Of course, “insensitive,” or
“ignorant,” “uncivil” or even “unbalanced” could apply, but nutcase seems to
fit the best. When I heard this, I found myself asking: what kind of person would do that to a
grieving father?
This was not a patriotic outcry, it
was a selfish and paranoid incivility.
The NRA might want to reconsider pressing for mental health checks when their
promotion of paranoia about gun confiscation and a “Big Brother” tyranny might
actually disqualify them from gun ownership. This paranoia takes a chilling
turn if you look at the dozens of YouTube videos about the Newtown shooting “hoax”
that was meant to initiate mass gun confiscation. That’s a dangerous level of
irrationality and conspiracy paranoia.
In fact, the exact wording of the recently rejected bill specifically disallows
any such confiscation. And, can we really take such hysterical claims seriously
when our Supreme Court has unequivocally affirmed an individual
right to bear arms? President Obama has repeatedly affirmed the 2nd
Amendment and gun owners can and do openly carry and even attend political rallies with their rifles shouldered. Fearing a
repeal of the 2nd Amendment in this context reveals the depth of paranoia in
the minds of some gun owners.
The biggest threat here
may not be the random mass shooting, but rather the minority of fanatical,
gullible gun owners who resist facts, believe NRA disinformation and
belligerently refuse compromise, who selfishly shout about their rights as
parents grieve the slaughter of their children, and who seem willing to believe
almost anything to justify their paranoia.
Perhaps it’s time for
the majority of reasonable NRA members to exercise
some real courage and leave the NRA
to form a new, more respectable gun organization:
the Rational Rifle Association.
the Rational Rifle Association.
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