The only remarkable thing about two of the USA’s most long-running and unresolvable “crises” colliding in the same moment is that it is no surprise at all. Incidents of yet another psycho buying an assault rifle one day and killing a dozen people the next and the chaos of migrants piling up at the southern border are as routine features of American life as traffic jams and beer commercials.
In large part this explains why I at least no longer have any outrage to give. I hope you’re different, but I can’t work up the energy any longer to fume and rant to … who? … demanding “they” do something. Based on how the system works today, I know and I suspect you know, nothing of any lasting significance will be done with either crisis.
This isn’t to say the Biden Administration will not make a good faith effort and try. But both guns and migration require resolutions to issues beyond what elected American officials are capable of dealing with.
On the matter of guns, we all know the basic statistics. There are more guns in circulation than there are people in the United States. Citizens of the U.S. own 47% of the world’s privately-owned firearms. Our death-by-gun-violence is double the next worst country, which lately is … Yemen. The highest percentage of household gun ownership is in rural areas and small towns, and in the Midwest and South. The lowest is in large metropolitan areas of the East and West coasts. Whites own more than twice as many guns as non-whites. Older white men, Republicans and self-described conservatives are most likely to own a gun. And the majority say they own a gun, not for “sport” and hunting as we so often hear, but for “protection.”
To help you with the math on that one, based on the 2010 census, 6.7 million Americans owned something in the range of 140 million guns. And that was 10 years ago. Before the pandemic set off another wild buying spree among the same crowd … for reasons of … protection … against?
And — always my favorite statistic — 3% of these self-protecting gun aficionados own, wait for it … half … of the guns in circulation.
Killing the filibuster might … might … allow a bill on universal background checks to pass. That might at least stop flat-out lunatic time bombs like the guys in Atlanta and Boulder from walking out of a gun shop any morning they wanted and start shooting up massage parlors and grocery stores that afternoon. Even Joe Manchin of hard-protectin’ West Virginny is on record saying he supports gun control to that minimum extent. But at the first whisper that background checks are coming, gun sales will spike again. All the aging white guys in rural America convinced that (usually dark-skinned) killers are lining up to bust through their bedroom windows, will add another half dozen “ARs” to their arsenal.
My personal solution to gun “enthusiasts” has long been … ridicule. I’m not a licensed psychologist, nor do I play one on TV, but in my humble experience over lo these many years kicking around rural ‘Murica and wrangling with gun “lovers” on social media, 99% of self-describing “gun rights” advocates come with the distinctive odor of sexual insecurity and inadequacy.
Self defense and the need to “protect my family” doesn’t quite explain why gun ownership, much less multiple gun ownership, is for many if not most of older, white, male, rural, conservative Americans the #1 issue in any political discussion. And why their reaction to any … any … attempt to regulate gun and ammo sales is like they’ve learned Hillary Clinton is coming with a chain saw for their junk.
Me, I’d launch a PSA campaign. (I defer to Mr. Loveland on how best to coordinate this.) Thousands of TV ads, with actual psychologists, celebrities and indisputable statistics laying out the roots of the tortured fantasies of dominance and heroism these “enthusiasts” are forcing us all to labor under. Create an entertaining zeitgeist that turns buffoonish Oath Keeper/Proud Boy machismo into a cultural punch line. It’s often said such people are arming up for a culture war. Well, give it to them, in a way that bullets don’t matter.
In other words, treat fools as the fools they are.
Immigration, often the #2 “crisis” for the same crowd and a regular excuse for adding to their arsenals, requires a response both to climate change and the epic corruption of Banana Republics. The current wave has roots in not one but two hurricanes in a month destroying homes and crops last fall, a crisis that compounded the usual drug-driven gang violence of places like Honduras and Guatemala.
Since I doubt Libertarians like Ted Cruz and Rand Paul are ever going to re-think America’s “war on drugs”, the only viable solution to convincing all these people to stay at home is to pour ungodly amounts of U.S. money into rebuilding homes, infrastructure and farmlands … without losing most of it into the pockets of tin pot dictators and the drug gangs — most armed with cheap American guns — that often keep them in office.
Keeping assault rifles out of the hands of psychos exdecising their precious Second Amendment rights may be the easier of the two.
What is the solution to the boarder crisis?
Charge them more and make them vacuum twice a week.
Hi Brian, This is really good! I hope your fuming days can be resurrected, tho, as we need you. When I resume taping, maybe I could entice you to be a guest on the show and talk about this topic.
On another note, I recently picked up some 3/4 inch tapes from Jodi Sparr, John’s widow, and there were some “Facts” shows in the boxes. Would you like them?
Hang in there!
Mary! How you doing? Yes, I would like “The Facts” tapes. I could pick them up. Thx.
Thank you, Brian. I became active in Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America in the summer of 2019 when we had two mass shootings on two consecutive days (El Paso on a Saturday; Dayton on a Sunday). I decided I didn’t want to live in a country that had two mass shooting on two consecutive days. My oldest daughter was 20 at the time (today is her 22nd birthday), and I realize she had lived under the shadow of gun violence her whole life. I remember being home on maternity leave and watching Columbine on television. At least she had reached voting age, but what was I doing to protect her youngers sisters who were not yet old enough to vote? Moms Demand Action has given me a channel for my angst. Instead of sitting around waiting to get shot, at least I feel like I’m doing something. And something I’ve learned from Moms Demand Action is that most of the daily gun violence in our state is suicide and domestic violence. This is not a partisan issue, nor is it an urban vs. rural issue. Our legislative priorities (background checks on all gun sales and extreme risk protection orders) have broad support from voters of both parties, including gun owners. Shame on our elected officials for making this a partisan issue.
What’s so interesting (and appalling) about guns as an issue, is that the public in general is overwhelmingly in favor of all sorts of gun regulations — including banning assault rifles, which to be fair represent only a fraction of our annual slaughter. Politicians — almost all rural, red state types — live in abject fear of the 10% for whom guns are not just one of the most important political issues, but I would argue THE SINGLE MOST critical issue. Poll after poll shows that for this distinct minority — almost all men — guns are the most powerful motivating factor in who they vote for and how vociferously they respond to political sentiments. You don’t have to be a professional psychologist to figure out what’s going on there.