Tuesday, October 03, 2017

Without Changes to America's Gun Laws, "Thoughts and Prayers" Are a Fraud


Each time America witnesses another mass shooting with it seems an ever growing number of people murdered, we hear the same bloviating about "thoughts and prayers" for the dead and their traumatized families and friends. This nauseating refrain comes most often from politicians - especially Republicans - who could reduce future carnage if they but had the balls to say "no" to the gun manufacturer lobby and its front organization, the NRA.   Tellingly, as The Hill is reporting, here in Virginia where we have state wide elections next month, the NRA has delayed running its $1 million political ad campaign attacking Democrats who support gun control and supporting the Republican ticket that wants even looser and more irresponsible gun legislation in Virginia:
The National Rifle Association (NRA) has delayed political advertisements in Virginia in the wake of a mass shooting in Las Vegas that left at least 59 people dead and more than 520 injured.
The nation’s largest gun rights organization had originally booked $32,000 in cable television advertising to begin Tuesday, according to Advertising Analytics, a nonpartisan ad-buying firm that keeps tabs on the television market. 
Now, those advertisements will begin on Oct. 10. At the same time, the NRA will devote just more than $1 million to ads airing on broadcast networks in markets around Virginia.  
I propose any easy litmus test for who is sincere in their mealy mouthed statements about "thoughts and prayers" for the dead and their families:  are they accepting money from the NRA or allowing themselves to be backed by the NRA?  If the answer is "yes." then you know that they do not mean a word of their disingenuous statements.  A column in the Chicago Sun Times sums the situation well.  Here are highlights:
Did you see the video? Did you see country music singer Jason Aldean, his guitar slung over shoulders, standing front and center when the gunfire began? He knew that sound, that staccato rip of mass-produced death. He fled for the safety of the back of the stage, and the crowd screamed and people were hit and bled and died, and nobody could be sure where the gunfire was coming from. At last check, 59 people were dead from the bullets that flew during a country music show in Las Vegas. Five-hundred-plus more were injured. By the time you read this, more likely will have died. [W]e know that sound, that ripping of bullets from a single indefensible weapon designed for nothing else. Not for hunting. Not for defending our homes. Not for target practice.
Automatic and semi-automatic guns are designed to kill people by the bunches — and this one on this night did its job superbly.
We are so damn sad. We can’t begin to express our sorrow for all the people who were killed in Las Vegas, even as we slept so soundly in our beds in the Midwest. We are beginning to hear their names, see photos of their faces, and they could be any of us — they are any of us. Nice folks out for a night of music, our brothers and sisters, sons and daughters, friends and neighbors. Dead now. Do we feel survivor’s guilt? We should.
The president offers his condolences. For what it’s worth. And there will be prayers and funeral services. For what they’re worth.
And politicians in the pocket of the gun lobby, tons of them, will stand on the floor of the House and the Senate and say how tragic this shooting was and how something must be done — but don’t punish the law-abiding gun owner because guns are American freedom, guns are apple pie, guns are the flag, guns are the national anthem.
And they won’t tell you that every honest opinion poll for a generation in this country shows Americans are sick to death of the carnage.
The National Rifle Association hates those polls. Guns are money for them. Gun-makers make them rich.
[W]e have called for saner gun laws time and again, only for the gun nuts to twist the message: The crazy liberal media wants to take your guns!
So let’s make two points clear:
• Most of America, to judge by the polls, wants to take illegally obtained guns away from bad people — the drug-dealers and the gang-bangers. Not legally obtained guns from decent people, but illegally obtained guns from bad people. And that means better licensing of gun stores and a ban on the easy sale of weapons at gun shows and garage sales. Seriously: people buy guns in many parts of America, legally, at garage sales.
• Most of America also wants to ban access to semi-automatic and automatic weapons.
The guns that killed in Aurora and at Virginia Tech and Newtown and Umpqua College and San Bernardino and . . .
In June, the Washington Post did the arithmetic and reported that 889 men, women and children have been killed in mass shootings in the United States since Aug. 1, 1966. . . .
 After 50 years, we are closing in on 1,000 deaths from mass shootings. The Las Vegas tally gets us almost there.
Are we properly horrified yet? Will we do something finally? Will we honor the dead in Las Vegas by, at long last, demanding gun sanity?  If we continue to do nothing, all our tears [and thoughts and prayers] are a fraud.

A piece in the Washington Post looks at some of the dead.  Take a good look at the faces and brief bios of those who died.  Then grasp the realize that every politician who has opposed sane gun control laws and a ban on assault weapons played a role in this carnage and has blood on their hands. 

1 comment:

EdA said...

"I thought I'd pray that nobody expects me to actually DO anything that would interfere with my cash flow."

Cong. Scalise asserted that his getting shot himself and the Las Vegas mass murders only fortified his support for the Second Amendment as it stands.

http://www.joemygod.com/2017/10/03/shooting-victim-steve-scalise-massacre-las-vegas-fortified-opposition-gun-control-video/

I don't think that he was asked whether he supports eliminating the current ban on silencers, the use of which would have allowed the sicko who shot him to have shot even more Republiscum.