All decent people feel sorrow and righteous fury about
the latest slaughter of innocents, in California. Law enforcement and
intelligence agencies are searching for motivations, including the vital
question of how the murderers might have been connected to international
terrorism. That is right and proper.
But motives do not matter to the dead in California, nor
did they in Colorado, Oregon, South Carolina, Virginia, Connecticut and far too
many other places. The attention and anger of Americans should also be directed
at the elected leaders whose job is to keep us safe but who place a higher
premium on the money and political power of an industry dedicated to profiting
from the unfettered spread of ever more powerful firearms.
It is a moral outrage and a national
disgrace that civilians can legally purchase weapons designed specifically to
kill people with brutal speed and efficiency. These are weapons of war, barely
modified and deliberately marketed as tools of macho vigilantism and even
insurrection. America’s elected leaders offer prayers for gun victims and then,
callously and without fear of consequence, reject the most basic restrictions
on weapons of mass killing, as they did on Thursday. They distract us with
arguments about the word terrorism. Let’s be clear: These spree killings are
all, in their own ways, acts of terrorism.
Opponents of gun control are saying,
as they do after every killing, that no law can unfailingly forestall a
specific criminal. That is true. They are talking, many with sincerity, about
the constitutional challenges to effective gun regulation. Those challenges
exist. They point out that determined killers obtained weapons illegally in
places like France, England and Norway that have strict gun laws. Yes, they
did.
But at least those countries are
trying. The United States is not. Worse, politicians abet would-be killers by
creating gun markets for them, and voters allow those politicians to keep their
jobs. It is past time to stop talking about halting the spread of firearms, and
instead to reduce their number drastically — eliminating some large categories
of weapons and ammunition.
It is not necessary to debate the
peculiar wording of the Second Amendment. No right is unlimited and immune from
reasonable regulation.
Certain kinds of weapons, like the
slightly modified combat rifles used in California, and certain kinds of
ammunition, must be outlawed for civilian ownership. It is possible to define
those guns in a clear and effective way and, yes, it would require Americans
who own those kinds of weapons to give them up for the good of their fellow
citizens.
What better time than during a presidential
election to show, at long last, that our nation has retained its sense of
decency?
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