Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Buffalo And Uvalde - What To Do? My Take, Part I

 (Note.  I have written various posts dealing the subject of guns.  A detailed discussion was done in the 1/12/13 post.  There was additional discussion in the 12/5/15 post, the 3/4/18 post and the recent post of 4/10/22.  All are still up on the blog.)

When I heard about the racist, antisemitic bastard shooting and killing black people who were just out shopping in the supermarket, I was furious.  I knew little about the shooter, but I wanted to see a public execution.  Then, we learned about an evil shooter killing children in an elementary school in Uvalde.  How anyone could shoot ten year old's was simply incomprehensible.  I alternated between extreme anger and sadness/tears.  But, unlike others (commentators and people telling me to write about guns), my anger was directed at the perpetrators, not at guns.  

I suggested that the issue was far more complicated than "guns."  After all, I thought there were issues of school safety and security, social media, violent video games and realistically violent movies and TV shows, dysfunctional families, fatherless families, young alienated loner males, mental health, and a weakening of religious upbringing and involvement in churches and synagogues.  But the mainstream media, and some readers, told me the only real issue was guns. 

A word about the Second Amendment.  I will not debate the meaning of the Second Amendment here.  However, I do acknowledge that no right in the Constitution is absolute.  Not even the First Amendment right to speech.  Also, it would be impossible for me to cover each of the issues set forth in the above paragraph, in this post.  So I will touch on a few, before getting to guns.

Mental health.  There was an interesting article on NBC online on 5/28/22.  They quoted the Harvard Review of Psychiatry as follows:  "The assumption that mass shootings are driven solely or even primarily by diagnosable psychopathology stretches the limits of mental health expertise."  They also state that many of these shooters do share symptoms with others who never become shooters.  Symptoms such as "depression, isolation from family and classmates, narcissism, paranoia and suspicion...(and) feeling easily threatened or insulted by others."  That does not instill confidence in being able to screen for mental illness.

Social media.  On 5/28/22, CNN reported that the "Uvalde gunman threatened rapes and school shootings on social media app Yubo in (the) weeks leading up to the massacre, users say."  The problem is, 99% of the estimated 60 million users of Yubo are age 25 and under.  None of them took the threats with sufficient seriousness to make a report.  CNN indicates that Yubo began in 2015 and is based in Paris.  So it would appear that both users of the site, and the site itself, failed to alert authorities about the threat from the Uvalde gunman.  

School safety and security.  The Western Journal (5/30/22) had an interesting piece about school security in Israel.  The Israelis are famous for being leaders in security, given the threats that they face on a daily basis.  According to the Journal, Israel has a "complex, multi-layered approach" to school security.  It includes behavioral profiling, monitoring people's social media profiles, having metal detectors going into schools and having to sign in, and having one entrance and one exit.  The head of security knows everyone coming in and leaving.  And they have a "spotter" 50 meters out from the school patrolling the area.  They have security fencing and numerous cameras, and there are barricades that prevent cars from driving onto the campus.  Does all that cost a lot?  I am sure that it does.  But we are spending multiple trillions of dollars a year at the federal level already.  Can't we spend some of that for school safety?  

Declining religious involvement.  Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson (the Rebbe) is widely regarded as being the most influential Rabbi in the 20th century.  Rabbi Schneerson was the head of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement.  (Disclosure.  I have attended religious services at Chabad for years.)  The Rebbe was a big believer in school prayer.  However, he was well aware that many of his fellow Jews feared that Christian prayers would dominate the schools.  Therefore, he advocated for a non-denominational prayer that would acknowledge the existence of G-d.  He said that all people needed to know that "the world in which they live is not a jungle, where brute force, cunning, and unbridled passion rule supreme, but that it has a (Supreme Being) Who...takes a 'personal interest' in the affairs of each and every individual, and to Him everyone is accountable for (his or her) daily conduct."  Are we, as a society, better off without school prayer?  I certainly don't thinks so.  

And the Rebbe made this very astute observation:  "If in a previous generation there were people who doubted the need of Divine authority for common morality and ethics, (and who believed instead) that human reason is sufficient authority for morality and ethics, our present generation has, unfortunately, in a most devastating and tragic way, refuted this mistaken notion.  For it is precisely the nation which had excelled itself in the exact sciences, the humanities, and even in philosophy and ethics, that turned out to be the most depraved nation in the world..."  The Rebbe was referring, of course, to Nazi Germany.

Monday, May 30, 2022

Buffalo And Uvalde - What To Do? A Few Comments By My Readers

(Note.  Following the shooting in Buffalo, and especially after the shooting of 10 year old's in Uvalde, I have heard from people with various opinions.  Emotions were quite raw.  I found myself with tears multiple times after these shootings.  This post is to allow readers who have contacted me to express their opinions, without comment by me.  As a conservative, and sharing some of the values of classical liberalism, I believe that all voices should be heard.)

"Don't call me to discuss.  I'm too emotional.  A rage.  But, I urge you to immediately write your thoughts and positions on guns, community and school shootings.  Sandy Hook, Parkland, Sylmar, Orlando, Arvada, Buffalo, Columbine, Borderline Bar, San Bernardino, Uvalde, and on and on.  I think that I hate the word 'gun' more than just any other word.  Worst invention ever.  I believe the second amendment should be overturned.  I know you disagree with me and the views of many others on this subject.  But, I think now is the time for you, again, to address these issues.  I had to get this off my chest.  Don't try to rationalize the second amendment or guns to me.  Just write your blog.  Hopefully, tonight."  (Sent 5/24/22)

"Look at the background of all of the shooters.  All loners/lonely.  All angry.  All leaving social media posts of intent.  No one reporting warning signs.  All with poor or no parenting - even the two engineers in NY.  All suffering from mental illness.  When will Mental Health professionals open their eyes and deal with violent behavior?  I am for background checks to pacify the left.  But show me a case where it would have made any difference.  All the guns were legally obtained, even from the stupid parents in Michigan!"   

"It seems like you'll look for every reason NOT to regulate guns.  It certainly can't be the Second Amendment which does not prohibit all regulation of guns.  Your prior blog about guns, which I thought was your worst, has not aged well.  Yes, there are other things we can and should do.  But gun regulation should be an EASY beginning.  There's the lead for your blog.  To acknowledge that evil exists gets us nowhere." 

To paraphrase a retired police officer friend who spoke to me:  I am furious at those cowards who stood outside and did not go in.  I refuse to call them fellow cops - they are cowards!  If you don't ever want to face danger, then don't put on the badge and don't carry a gun.  But if you put on a badge and carry a gun, do your damn job!  I've been in firefights.  I've been shot.  It's the risk we take by doing the job.

"Move the eligible age for purchasing a firearm up to 21?  What if someone gets married at 18 - do they need to wait three years to be able to defend their person, loved ones and home?  Should they move the age for marriage?  Up or down?  Age for driving?  Age for drinking?  Age for smoking marijuana?  Age for a non-emergency abortion?  Age for receiving 'transexual-ed' in school?"

"The vast number of shootings and murders are the result of gang violence.  No 'assault weapons' are involved.  Stop gang violence and the murder rate will plummet.  Knives kill many more than AR rifles.  Drug overdoses killed 108,000 kids last year, supplied by Mexican Cartels and the CCP.  This is all just a political game to shore (up) democrat polling losses.  We have a mental health crisis, a failure of faith and family cohesion, with politicians and the media sowing division within socioeconomic segments of American culture."  

"The most common form of death by firearm is suicide.  But a close second is related to drug warfare.  Like the alcohol-fueled wars in the days of Prohibition, the huge amount of money involved in the drug trade leads to continued armed skirmishes in both our cities and our rural areas.  In addition to the gun violence the drug trade creates, it has single-handedly created thousands and thousands of opioid overdose deaths.  Drug-fueled gang warfare in Central America is the main impetus to illegal immigration from South and Central America...Gang-related deaths, the opioid crisis, illegal immigration, corruption of law enforcement - does any other problem in our country create a comparable list of crises?  What is the solution?  GET THE MONEY OUT OF DRUGS!!  If it wasn't for US drug users paying them, these drug gangs and armies would no longer be funded...Decriminalizing drugs and provision of supervised free use and treatment centers, would cut the heart out of the economic fuel for drug deaths - whether by gun or by overdose."