Progressive Democrats fire complaint at NRA


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PDALogoThe Rhode Island chapter of the Progressive Democrats of America accused the NRA of violating campaign finance laws by using a national political action committee to fund its local PAC here. The complaint alleges that the local NRA PAC is lying on campaign disclosure forms when it claims to have received at least 1,500 donations of $100 or less.

“We find that highly implausible,” wrote the RIPDA in a press statement released Friday. The Providence Journal filed this story based on the group’s announcement.

“We present very strong evidence that the money actually comes from the NRA’s national PAC,” said the release. “Not only is it illegal for national PACs to donate to a Rhode Island PAC (or candidate), but it is also illegal for any PAC to donate more than $1000 per annum to any other PAC.  The NRA, we believe, violates both laws.”

Here’s a copy of the report that Sam Bell of the RIPDA filed with the state Board of Elections:

To the Rhode Island Board of Elections

I write with concern over what I believe to be a large-scale ongoing violation of Rhode Island’s campaign finance laws by the NRA Political Victory Fund PAC.

The  National Rifle Association of America Political  Victory Fund (hereafter referred to as “NRA-Federal PAC”) is a national committee registered with the Federal Election Commission (ID Number C00053553) as a Separate Segregated Fund located in Fairfax, Virginia. In order to participate in elections in the State of Rhode Island, this organization has also registered  a PAC  with  the Rhode Island  Board of Elections (hereafter referred to as “NRA-RI PAC”).

There is reason to believe that NRA-RI PAC has been circumventing contribution disclosure rules as required by § 17-25-3(3).  Specifically, NRA-RI PAC has failed to disclose any of the required donor information such as the name, address, and place of employment of a contributor as required by § 17-25-11(a)(3)(i).  As such, it is impossible to tell whether  NRA-RI PAC received excessive contributions  of  $1000 or more per annum from any individual or organization, as prohibited by § 17-25-10.1(a). NRA-RI PAC maintains a balance of $0 cash-on-hand at the end of each report.

It appears to raise precisely the amount that it spends each reporting period. Moreover, NRA-Federal PAC reports making the same exact contributions to candidates in Rhode Island that NRA-RI PAC does.  It is therefore reasonable to question whether the funds that end up in the accounts of candidates in Rhode Island are derived directly from the national committee, NRA-Federal PAC, which is a source that is not permissible by Rhode Island law.

The strong evidence suggesting that these contributions are directly from NRAFederal PAC has several implications, the most important of which is the aforementioned issue that no donor information is disclosed to the public.  Because federal law requires that only contributors aggregating over $200 (twice the Rhode Island threshold of $100) be disclosed, it is certain that many contributors required by RI law to be disclosed to the public never are, yet their contribution dollars influence the outcomes of elections in RI.

Moreover, because it is unclear which contributors to  NRA-Federal PAC are subsequently earmarked for RI elections, it is impossible to know whether such contributions 1) exceed contribution limits (federal contribution limits are over twice as high as RI) and 2) are otherwise impermissible under RI law (federal law allows PACs to receive contributions from unregistered committees and organizations in amounts not exceeding $1000).

At the very least, this matter is worthy of further investigation by the RI Board of Elections.  Never has the potential for large, national interests to disproportionately influence the outcomes of local elections been more prevalent.  For that reason, it is necessary for the Board of Elections to be as unambiguous as possible in its execution of its campaign finance regulations.

As an example of the behavior described above, I have attached the reports from the first and second quarters of 2013 for NRA-RI PAC and a list of the associated NRAFederal PAC contributions.  However, these practices appear to have persisted since at least the first quarter of  2002, the most recent report available in the online ERTS

In order to participate in elections in the State of Rhode Island, this reporting system.  I have attached a summary of the contributions over this period from the ERTS system.

Under pain and penalty of perjury, I attest that the above statements are, to the best of my knowledge, fully accurate.  Please feel free to contact me with any questions.

Sincerely,

Samuel Wade Bell

What Trayvon Martin says about guns, gender, race


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Matt AllenThe verdict in the Trayvon Martin killing resonates because it perfectly encapsulates the right-left political divide over the contentious issues of race, gender and guns. For those interested in preserving gun rights, particularly conceal/carry permits and stand your ground laws, Zimmerman’s acquittal is a high profile demonstration that these laws are not harmful to our society.

Trayvon’s death becomes an accident, a cost of doing business. Just as we accept, on the whole, an occasional death by car or train in exchange for the awesome utility of easy transportation, so should we accept the occasional violent death of an innocent boy due to the utility of concealed guns and vigilante justice.

Having removed the question of guns from the equation, conservative pundits next move onto race, which in our post-racial, Obama is President society, no longer exists. Race, they say, has nothing to do with this, never mind the fact that Zimmerman profiled, hunted, and shot an unharmed boy entirely because he stood out as a hoodied black youth in a gated community that was predominantly white. Suggestions that our reactions to this (non) crime would be entirely different if Zimmerman had stalked and killed a white youth are dismissed as the kind of “what if” scenarios no serious thinker takes seriously.

Some of the same people outraged by the acquittal of OJ Simpson now demand that everyone silently respect the verdict of the Florida jury and have faith in the system. This is easy for white, conservative people to say from the comfort of their air-conditioned offices and minivans, but there is a different world at work for the urban, ethnic poor, who are often, hell, always profiled as potential threats to white safety.

It’s no coincidence that Florida, the state with the oldest population (17.6% are over the age of 65, the highest in the country) has passed stand your ground. As men age, they invariably lose a step. As they age, they slowly find themselves in a world full of younger, stronger men, and their sense of power and machismo is threatened. Guns and conceal/carry permits can make up for this loss of potency. Think of it as social viagra. No longer is that group of young punks capable of making an older man nervous, because if push comes to shove, he can equal the odds with a bullet.

Never mind that this is all fantasy, a man’s sense of machismo is always rooted in fantasy.

The trouble is, that under long established legal precedent, if there’s a dangerous situation, and you have the capacity to escape it, you have a legal duty to try.

What good is the gun between my legs in my pocket if I have a legal (and moral) duty to run away like a whipped puppy whenever the bad guys look at me funny? Shouldn’t I have the right to forcibly defend myself? Why do I have to behave like a coward, or worse, call in the police to defend me as if I’m a woman or a child?

What would Dirty Harry do? Why can’t I be a man like him?

DSCF1047
So we have vigilantes like Zimmerman ignoring the advice of experts and engaging with Trayvon Martin until the event escalates into a situation where Zimmerman just HAD to shoot the boy in the heart, because that’s what any real man would do. Zimmerman was part of a neighborhood watch. He was citizen police, practically a real cop, deputized by the community to defend it against any and all predations by the lower classes.

This sense of guns and stand your ground laws as a means to bolster the flagging machismo of an aging generation of baby boomers is why Marissa Alexander, also in Florida, received a twenty year sentence for firing warning shots at her abusive husband.  Alexander challenged the sanctity of marriage, and undermined her husband’s sense of self. What kind of man, after all, is afraid of his own wife? Alexander, being a woman, should have run away from her abusive husband, not stand her ground. These laws are made by men and for men. Women need not apply.

Repealing these stupid, misogynist, racist and violent gun laws is a must if we want to prevent future miscarriages of justice. Here in Rhode Island, we need to take a hard look at our own gun laws, and elect representatives to the General Assembly who don’t have their lips firmly affixed to the ass of the NRA.

Maybe then Trayvon can rest in peace.

March for Aynis Vargas, victim of gun violence

Aynis Vargas
12 year old Aynis Vargas

For some reason, we’re not calling it a mass shooting. A shooter, wearing a black mask and camouflage pants opened fire on a party on Hartford Ave, wounding three women and killing Aynis Vargas, a 12 year old girl. Vargas was shot in the back, and died on the scene. As of this writing, police are still searching for suspects.

On Saturday, June 29th, from 6-8pm there is going to be a Peace March and Prayer Vigil held in honor of Aynis Vargas. The march will start at 220 Hartford Ave and end on Bodell Ave, where the prayer vigil will be held. It would wonderful if Representatives and Senators from Rhode Island’s General Assembly could be bothered to attend this event.

The shooting of Aynis Vargas occurred even as the General Assembly seems intent on punting on a raft of gun legislation that would seek to limit the availability of illegal handguns throughout our state. Reading about the Vargas’s death reminded me of the May 1st gun legislation hearings held at the State House by the House Judiciary Committee. Hundreds of NRA members showed up to rally outside the State House before testimony began. Representative Doreen Costa (representing the NRA and the Tea Party) spoke to the crowd, and later, during the testimony, spoke often and knowledgeably about guns, a bright smile covering her face when she spoke about a legislative outing that included lessons on how to fire guns.

After the testimony of Commissioner Paré, the following exchange took place. You can access the entire hearings here. Time codes are included after the speakers names.

Doreen Costa [128:30]: I just want to make one quick comment, Commissioner Paré. You did make a statement that you confiscated around a hundred guns, correct?

Commissioner Paré: Correct.

Costa: And you did also say that they were illegal guns, correct?

Paré: That’s correct.

Costa: And that’s my point because these bills would hurt law abiding citizens and we keep talking about the City of Providence… the City of Providence does need a lot of help and, oh my gosh, I hear every day what’s going on in the City of Providence. I think, um, Commissioner, I mean, Providence does need help, but we have cities and towns like Exeter and let’s say West Greenwich, East Greenwich, Warwick, Newport- We don’t hear half of what we hear about the City of Providence, so, the package before us would affect every single community, unfortunately, because we have the City of Providence. It seems that everybody uses it as an example and I just don’t think that’s right. Thank you.

What Costa appears to be saying is that the problems of Providence in regards to crime, shootings, the availability of handguns and the deaths of children is not a problem that the entire state needs to be addressing. The problems of Providence are Providence’s to deal with alone, and no one from Exeter is all that interested in the kind of common sense gun regulation that might help limit violence and save the lives of schoolchildren. To his credit, Paré answered Costa well:

Paré: Providence is experiencing what New York City did twenty years ago, and New York City took action, and so you don’t carry a weapon in the City of New York today without serious consequences. When I said that we need help, yeah, we need help. We need help from this body and we need the right tools, because we’re finding too many young kids and young adults on the streets of Providence with access to hand guns. Now these guns are made legally, by manufacturers in the US, and they’re sold legally as well. They’re getting into the hands of criminals and we need to put our heads together and stop that. The leader talked about banning guns. Look, I’m not interested in banning guns at all. You can have as many guns as you wish. This is America. But you have a responsibility to the community if you want to own 87 guns, that those guns ought to be secured. they can be a part of the solution rather than arguing about what will help and what will not help. What we have now in Providence is not working and we need changes.

Later, after some confusing questioning by Representative Lima, Paré elaborated more:

Paré: Look, if New York did it, the size of a city like New York, we could do it here in Providence and despite the other towns that may not have the experience or the problems that we’re facing in Providence, this is a small state, and your constituents coming from Tiverton and Exeter and North Kingstown are coming into our city so they’re affected as well.

Teny Gross, from the Institute for the Study & Practice of Nonviolence, who works selflessly to reduce the very kinds of violence that ended the life of Aynis Vargas, rightly went after Costa during his testimony.

Teny Gross [214:45]: It’s good to have a hearing on gun violence, gun accidents and gun suicides which is the common denominator as to why America is such an exceptionally violent country because of the amount of guns we have. The “good guys” as the NRA has called its camp- I don’t understand why [the NRA] opposes law enforcement, mayors and doctors- you should be in the forefront, supporting them…

And for you, Representative Costa, who mocks a little bit our city [of Providence], this is not Exeter, we choose to live in Providence, and at least 40% of people who live in America buy guns without having to be checked. So you contribute to an environment, in cities, that is deadly, and our kids, who often don’t make good decisions, and might have easy access to weapons, or they are now getting weapons to protect themselves because there’s an arms race. Again, if the NRA were a truthful organization, you would help make sure there is no black market, that 100% of people are checked and registered so our kids wouldn’t do it.

Costa was having none of that. Not only did she defend herself against Gross’s accusation, she went after Gross personally, because he’s an immigrant, an American by choice, not birth, and therefore, I suppose, his opinion is less valid and his facts are questionable. Costa was angry, and let her Tea Party xenophobia show.

Doreen [218:00]: Real quick. Sir, I wasn’t mocking the City of Providence. Colonel [sic.] Paré said that there was a hundred crimes committed in, a hundred shootings, and I stated the case that Providence was a problem, never mocked Providence and you keep saying how America…

Gross: Rep Costa, is this a question?

Doreen: It is. [Costa pokes her finger at Gross accusingly] You chose to make the United States your country, but yet you sit here and you tell us how violent it is. Thank you.

Gross: It’s a fact.

Maybe this is the reason inner city gun violence seems to be of no real interest to many members of the General Assembly. Aynis Vargas has the kind of name, lives in the kind of place, and has the kind of family that seems, to some people, to be of less importance. Just as Teny Gross is, in the eyes of Doreen Costa, less entitled to his opinion due to his status as an immigrant, perhaps the life of Providence native Aynis Vargas was less important to some in the General Assembly than the putative gun rights of NRA members who live in Exeter.

Keep Rhode Island campuses gun free

 

Still before the Rage released at the Board of Education meeting on May 23, 2013.

On April 4, 2013, the University of Rhode Island campus was locked down for hours after, as the Providence Journal reported, “people in a lecture hall said they heard someone say they had a gun. Police found no gun or a shooter.” In response to this event, a URI committee proposed arming the campus police.

At their May 23, 2013 meeting, the Board of Education is expected to voted to allow URI, Rhode Island College and the Community College of Rhode Island, to arm their campus police. URI President, David M. Dooley, endorses the introduction of guns on campus. This and the decision to move URI commencement exercises indoors for security reasons are all symptoms of a society that has lost its way in blind fear, and appoints its university presidents to groups of no academic consequence such as the Homeland Security Academic Advisory Council.[1]

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 30,000 gun related deaths occur in the US each year, while approximately 100,000 Americans are physical victims of gun violence. How do we even begin to quantify the grief caused by guns in this relentless slaughter in our midst?

A decision to introduce more guns fails to acknowledge that fear on the part of armed police leads to the shooting of unarmed people, often people of color. A tragic incident at Hofstra University, just days ago, confirms this pattern.[3] The introduction of more guns ignores the fact that the UK has a mostly unarmed police force and a fire arm fatality rate that is 40 times lower per capita than in the US. A review of the shooting incidents on college campuses shows that armed police responding with weapons of deadly force failed to protect these communities. Arming campus police may, in many, create the illusion of safety but reality belies this perception. The experiment has been done globally, and the results are in: more guns spells more violence, more victims and more fatalities.

We are alarmed by the prospect of armed police on campus with yet more guns to be introduced into our hyper-violent society with the sociopaths it creates in its image. Since the mass killing in Newtown in December of 2013, there have been more than 4,000 gun fatalities in the US[2] This statistic has not penetrated our national awareness. As a society, we pay attention to spectacular events, but we fail to notice the frightening reality of the numbers of fatalities due to violence, and racial, economic and environmental injustice.

In particular against this backdrop, it is an essential function of our educational system to teach non-violent conflict resolution. Arming campus police is fundamentally inconsistent with this critical function of education.

References

  1. URI President appointed by Secretary Napolitano to new to new Homeland Security council
  2. How many people have been killed by guns since Newtown?
  3. Hofstra University student shot and killed by police trying to save her. A Hofstra University student was accidentally killed by a police officer on Friday during a home invasion and robbery, according to reports.

Arming URI Campus Police: Bullet Points

On April 4, the URI campus was locked down for a couple of hours after, as the Providence Journal states it “people in a lecture hall said they heard someone say they had a gun. Police found no gun or a shooter.”

Today, there was a forum at URI about arming campus police. In his invitation to the event President David Dooley wrote:

Chafee Hall under siege, April 4, 2013

Our desire is to have an informed dialogue about the issue on May 8. Our goal is NOT to attempt to reach consensus, but to assist our community in developing a thorough understanding of the issue and its implications. If additional forums are needed to foster broader dialogue about approaches, strategies, or potential improvements, we will arrange for such meetings.

Does that not sound a little condescending? The timing is a tad unsettling too: this is a time when students are taking finals and faculty are desperately trying to wrap up the semester. Oh, cranky old me, I must be just having a really bad day! However that may be, I attended the forum and made the following points:

  • I am concerned about the preliminary report about an individual who allegedly had a gun in URI’s Chafee Social Science Center on April 4, 2013.
  • Why am I concerned?
    • Here is the essence of the report: police entered Chafee with a five-minute delay caused by the fact that campus police is unarmed and had to wait for armed assistance.
    • To solve this “problem” URI will spend $300,000 per year to arm campus police.
  • I am concerned because the report provides little more than violence- and fear-enhancing recommendations.
  • The report fails to acknowledge that fear on the part of armed police leads to the shooting of unarmed people, often people of color.
  • The report ignores that the UK has an unarmed police force and a fire arm fatality rate that is 40 times lower per capita than in the US.
  • Campus security should be based on nonviolent conflict resolution. Not a dime in the proposal for that approach. Why were the experts of our own Center for Nonviolence & Peace Studies at URI not consulted? [Here is a link to Paul Bueno de Mesquita’s, the center’s director, input for this forum.]
  • Do we really need to spend $300,000 per year just to avoid a five minute delay?  A delay is often good; it allows for a considered response rather than one dictated by panic.
  • I am concerned about the proposed solutions; they are symptomatic of a hysterical, hyper-violent society.
  • I am concerned about solutions that seem to come straight from the Homeland Security Academic Advisory Council of which President Dooley is a member. [What I did not mention at the forum is that Chancellor Linda Katehi was on this very same council when she infamously had Occupy UC Davis students pepper sprayed in the fall of 2011.]
  • This proposal is an agenda looking for an opportunity, all in the spirit of never letting a good crisis go to waste.

More was said at the forum, but not much time was left after two URI administrators had claimed fifteen minutes “developing a thorough understanding of the issue and its implications,” leaving the rest of the hour for Jane and John Campus Public.

Also the Board of Education has been talking about arming campus police. The board had as one of agenda items of today’s meeting: “Establish a Policy Enabling URI, RIC and CCRI to Make Individual Institutional Decisions to Arm Campus Police.”  See also House Bill Number 6005, which is on tomorrow’s agenda of the House Committee on Judiciary.

The NRA, Bilbo Baggins, URI and Teny Oded Gross


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Teny Oded Gross sounds off to State House reporters. (Photos by Ryan T. Conaty.
Teny Oded Gross sounds off to State House reporters. (Photo by Ryan T. Conaty.

Just like it did in Congress, it looks like the NRA will beat back stricter gun laws at the Rhode Island State House as well, reports Sam Bell of the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats.

“Rhode Islanders favor an assault weapons ban by a margin of 64% to 27%, but we aren’t hearing from them,” Rep. Linda Finn told him. “We’re just hearing from the NRA.”

Is anyone surprised by this? Or even think it’s at all newsworthy that the NRA is more politically powerful than the entire progressive left on this issue here in Rhode Island? Of course not!

We live in a culture dominated by violence. Today in Rhode Island we are celebrating the Haymarket riot and tomorrow there is a State House ceremony honoring the burning of the Gaspee. These are two acts of terrorism that we celebrate for their historical significance. The other weekend, to escape the horrible reality of the Boston bombings and subsequent manhunt, I watched a fantasy movie called The Hobbit. It was about magical forest creatures who have been at bloody war with each other for 60 years.

But one of the most tacitly violence-condoning actions in our violence-dominated society is the totally outlandish notion that Americans have a right to a gun just in case anyone wants to wage a war against the government. Teny Oded Gross, of the Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, put it this way to Ian Donnis of RIPR:

“As far as I know [the US] is the first democracy on the planet that is actually saying you should arm yourself against your own citizens. That is actually outlandish. I’m surprised there’s not more outrage about that.”

I really don’t care what constitutional scholars think about the wording of the Second Amendment, I’m pretty certain this is a societal recipe for disaster.

While we may not be able to beat back the NRA at the State House, we can support the Institute for the Study & Practice of Nonviolence out in the real world. In fact, you can do so tonight.

A URI journalism “digital immersion” class has spent the semester making content for the Institute and they will be showing it off tonight at the downtown Providence campus on Washington Street from 6 to 8 p.m. If you plan on being at the State House tonight to testify, please stop by this exhibit. And if you’re going to this exhibit, please go to the State House to testify for stricter gun control in Rhode Island.

Here’s an example of their work, which explains more about what the Institute does:

Here’s more on the event tonight:

digital immersion class

Tell the NRA: not in RI


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The campaign for common-sense gun reform in Rhode Island is in trouble.  Speaker Gordon Fox and Senate President Paiva-Weed both support the strong bills Governor Chafee introduced, but they have described them as a starting point for talks.  And it is not looking good.  State Rep. Linda Finn tells me, “Rhode Islanders favor an assault weapons ban by a margin of 64% to 27%, but we aren’t hearing from them.  We’re just hearing from the NRA.”

Here's what the anti-reform crowd looked like at the Senate Judiciary Hearing last Thursday.
Here’s what the anti-reform crowd looked like at the Senate Judiciary Hearing last Thursday.

The gun lobby is running ads and flooding state legislators with calls and emails.  If we want to keep Rhode Island from becoming yet another NRA victory, we need you to take action.  Here’s what you can do.

Send emails to your state legislators using this link:

http://www.blastroots.com/campaign/RImoms

Use this link to look up your state legislators’ phone numbers, and give them a call:

https://sos.ri.gov/vic/

And join us at the state house tomorrow (Wednesday, May 1) for the House committee hearing.  At the Senate hearing, we were outnumbered ten to one.  The hearing will start around 5:00 and go until around midnight, but we need people starting at noon, so come when you can and leave when you need to.  Our staging area will be Room 7A in the basement.

Gallagher And Gun Control


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Stand-up “comic” Gallagher demonstrates how not to prepare a watermelon for consumption.

Ever tried to pry out a nail with a screwdriver or pave a driveway with plastic resin? No? That’s because you’re smart enough to use the right tool for the right job. Which is why the “hammers, knives and baseball bats kill more people than guns, but they’re not regulated” argument used by Second Amendment absolutists is so ridiculously laughable.

On it’s face, the argument seems plausible. Hammers, knives, and baseball bats are, in fact, used more frequently as weapons in assault and homicide cases, and  are considered deadly weapons, but only when they are used IMPROPERLY. One could also throw cars and most industrial chemicals into the mix with the aforementioned tools, but they are regulated to some degree, and the rights to use them can be rescinded if a person or business is found to be using them improperly.

Guns are deadly weapons when used PROPERLY. In fact, their primary – some might say only – function is the incapacitation and killing of things.

Try slicing a canteloupe with a shotgun. You’ll wind up with a mess that can only be cleaned up by rags or a vacuum cleaner, which, by the way, could also be used as deadly weapons. The wrong tool for fruit preparation does nothing but create a mess. This has been proven ad nauseum by once popular 80’s stand-up/prop comic Gallagher.

Try hammering a nail with a handgun. Chances are the nail will have to be removed with a crowbar (the right tool). I suppose you could use your teeth (the wrong tool), but your orthodontist may advise against this. You might also have to be driven to the hospital after your ‘handgun as hammer’ experiment. I’d suggest that you use an automobile (the right tool) rather than a hot air balloon (the wrong tool).

Try hitting the game winning base hit for your weekend softball game with a gas-powered carbine rifle. You’ll probably wind up with a dribbler down the third base line that will get you picked off before you make it halfway to first. When you decide that your swing needs some work, I’d suggest a trip to the batting cages (right tool) rather than a trip to the deli (wrong tool).

I am not anti-gun. I think that reasonable, responsible adults should be allowed to own firearms, but reasonable, responsible adults should also support reasonable, responsible gun registration and regulation.

Lost in the disingenous din of debate on gun control is any talk of the responsibility of manufacturers. Reasonable gun control needs to start at the manufacturer level. How’s this for a reasonable gun control law: Firearm retailers may only carry one display/test model of any particular weapon, and if a purchase is made, the gun is only shipped to the dealer when the customer has passed a background check and mental health assessment.

With enough thought and creativity, just about anything can be used as a deadly weapon, but firearms are only useful for one thing: inflicting harm on – or causing the death of – another living thing. Let’s keep this fact in mind when we talk about regulating guns, and stop equating the intended application of firearms with the unintended application of other tools.

Teny Oded Gross’ Unique Look At Gun Violence


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Teny Oded Gross at the State House. (Photos by Ryan T. Conaty – for more, check out his )

Something nefarious happened last week at the State House in regards to reforming the state’s gun control laws, and it wasn’t that an NRA lobbyist came to push his conservative agenda. It’s that Teny Oded Gross was the only member of the public to ask him to take it elsewhere.

‘It’s a deceitful organization,” Oded Gross told me later. “The NRA knows very well that panic and fear is good for business. If you have more deaths, you have more people buying guns.”

Oded Gross is not your typical advocate for greater gun control legislation.

For one, he’s a former Israeli Army sergeant. “I come to liberalism from seeing carnage,” he told me. And for another, he is the executive director of the Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, an organization that works with inner city gang members. “I saw and see a lot of violence,” he added.

Teny Oded Gross at the State House. (Photos by Ryan T. Conaty – for more, check out his )

“We respond to the hospital when someone gets shot,” Oded Gross said. “I work with the people who are the shooters.”

The Institute, he said, responded to more than 150 instances of gun violence last year, and they were involved with all 17 homicides in Rhode Island.

He doesn’t buy the NRA talking point that gun control measures will only affect the legal gun owners. He says many guns get to the streets through otherwise legal channels.

“People who are denying gun availability leads to violence are either disillusion or straight liars,” he said. “The NRA has made it so easy to get them. We need to have a better ability to track down and monitor guns. But for some people this is contentious.

“We are reaching out to the people who invited the NRA. If you don’t want more gun control, come and work with us. Roll up your sleeves and help us reduce the violence.”

Teny Oded Gross sounds off to State House reporters. (Photos by Ryan T. Conaty – for more, check out his )

RI Legislature Should Ignore NRA Lobbyist


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In May 1998, I was driving through east Texas. I pulled off at a restaurant to grab a bite to eat. I grabbed a newspaper to catch the headlines. I turned the folded paper over and received perhaps the biggest shock of my life. Mrs. Kinkel, my high school Spanish teacher in Springfield, Oregon, where I grew up, had been shot by her son, who then went over the town’s other high school, where he killed two students and wounded twenty-five. Today, the killing of two students by gun violence at a high school barely receives any attention. It takes a horrible massacre like Newtown to grab the nation’s attention about gun violence.

So I was more than a little dismayed to hear that Rep. Lisa Baldelli Hunt has invited a National Rifle Association lobbyist to hold “an informational briefing,” i.e. a meeting to shape gun policy, for Rhode Island legislators. Obviously any organization should have the right to make its opinion known, but the NRA holds power far beyond its membership numbers in modern politics, promoting the almost unfettered access to any weapon, no matter the potential for violence or the number of people who die from guns in this country.

Let’s take a step back and actually read the Second Amendment.

“A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”

What does that really mean? Like most of the Constitution, it’s not easy to articulate a clear answer. Applying a document written over 200 years ago to the modern United States creates difficulties. Our society has changed so much since 1787. So have the meanings of words. People interpret the Constitution to fit their own political beliefs, nowhere more so than the Second Amendment.

If you talk to gun advocates, they interpret the Second Amendment as reading “the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.” But that’s not the whole amendment. If every word in the document is sacred, then every word is indeed sacred. How does the “well regulated militia” affect how we should interpret the amendment? In my reading as a U.S. historian, the only clear right it grants to modern Americans is the ability of National Guard members (the equivalent to the state militias) to have a gun. That much is self-evident. More than that is quite open to interpretation.

There’s nothing in there about high-capacity magazines, military-style assault rifles, the numbers of guns one can own, the conditions in which they can and can’t own them (outside of militia members), etc. Americans have interpreted these laws differently over the centuries. There has not been a hard and fast understanding of gun rights in American history. At the very least though, there is clear precedent for significant gun control legislation under the Second Amendment.

In fact, the recent craze for uncontrolled gun legislation is really quite new. Up until the 1970s, the National Rifle Association was a group in favor of responsible gun ownership and had promoted a great deal of gun control legislation. In the 70s, it nearly left its Virginia headquarters to move to Colorado and work only on sportsman’s issues. During the 1960s, conservatives, including Ronald Reagan, were largely for restricting gun rights.  Fearful of the Black Panthers carrying arms publicly, Reagan campaigned on gun control, telling reporters that he saw “no reason why on the street today a citizen should be carrying loaded weapons.”But the 70s was also the decade of white backlash to the Civil Rights Movement and the growth of conservatism. Beginning in 1977, the NRA began using increasingly harsh language about crime and government threats to citizens to transform the organization into what it is today.

So what kind of an organization is Rep. Hunt bringing to Rhode Island to advise legislators on gun control. Until recently, the NRA had a Nixon-style “Enemies List” on its website that included politicians, entertainers, and media figures it considered not pro-gun enough. Rep. Hunt is a Democrat. Does she believe, like the NRA, that President Obama is an “elitist hypocrite?” Does she believe that we should placed armed guards in all of our schools, even though an armed guard was actually at the Columbine shooting in Colorado and was completely ineffective? Rep. Baldelli Hunt says she would need many questions answered before supporting a ban on military-style assault rifles. Why? Can anyone name one good reason why people should own these guns?

Since 26 people died at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut on December 14, at least 2,309 Americans have died from gun violence, as of this writing. For comparison, 2753 people died on 9/11. We don’t have accurate statistics into the types of guns that killed these 2,309, but we do know that the U.S. has far and away the most gun deaths of any developed nation and we know that at least some of these people were killed by high-powered assault rifles.

What we need is for our legislators to listen to rational, responsible gun owner organizations that will help craft a reasonable policy for the people of Rhode Island. The National Rifle Association is not that rational, responsible gun owner organization. I hope the legislature ignores the NRA and passes gun control legislation that will help keep the citizens of this state alive.

Externalities Kill


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I can almost stretch my memory back to the day of Dec. 14, back through the fog of politicized media spin, the miasma of special interests spreading to capitalize on crisis and grief in one way or another. I can almost remember the overwhelming flood of empathy, the consolation, the unconditional love, and the deep soul searching. It played through every news and Twitter feed.

Before debate was pigeonholed into gun control and divided into topics like assault weapon bans, magazine clips, background checks, and good guys with guns on every corner, there were calls for deeper reflection. There was a question that was on everybody’s lips: “What is wrong with us, how do we stop our violent madness?” Where did that conversation go?

Because let’s be really honest with ourselves: Gun control is not going to stop the mass killings, nor the individual ones that tick across the news wire in the background of the television screen. They’ll not be stopped by a lot more good guys with guns either. It’s not about mental illness, bloody video games, violent movies, or poverty, although how we handle all of these may fuel killing.

Can we get back to that original conversation and talk about the black heart of our violence? Can we explore it with that original feeling of empathy guiding us?

We can begin by accepting that we live in a culture of violence. There is a pervasive acceptance that violence can solve a problem, not merely that it can but that it is in fact often preferable to trying to work things out peacefully. From here, we might reasonably conclude that a better way to stop the killing would be to effectively educate people that violence exacerbates more problems than it will ever solve. Let us question the glory of war and encourage the practice of placing ourselves in the shoes of our opposites. We could teach conflict resolution and give people the skills to de-escalate situations that have turned violent or are in danger of doing so. We can build and nurture healthy communities to raise healthy, happy, loving children in. On a large enough scale, I believe we would prevent more killing by these methods. (This is the essence of the proposed Department of Peace.)

I want to have an even deeper discussion than that though. I want to get to a point where the impulse to violence against one another is thwarted altogether. We can begin by accepting that such violence is unnatural. The most terrifying thing to experience whether as aggressor or defender is human violence. As proof, I offer the amount of training it takes to convince a person to go to war and the number of people it mentally breaks in the process. Like nearly every animal on the planet, we humans avoid killing our own kind by nature.

From here, we might reasonably conclude that there is something unnatural about our culture that nullifies our peaceful nature, and that it is more prevalent in the United States. Military theory and history teach us that in order to inspire men (and women) to kill other men and women who are no different in reality from their own brothers, sisters, parents, and children is to dehumanize them until they are truly inhuman, nullifying the natural revulsion to killing people. So, what makes it so easy for us to dehumanize each other in the U.S.?

Oversimplified as it may be, my theory is that it’s basically our overdeveloped sense of separateness. The environment we callously and infamously regard as an external repository of resources for our insatiable consumption. The universe is other, and we have the scientific and religious research to prove it. This belief in the superiority of humanity above nature is not uniquely American, but we do seem to have taken it to a new level, a level where the individual is superior to society.

Our individuality is legendary and prideful. We operate as though we are in competition from birth until death to see who can end up at the right hand of Jesus, Yahweh, or Allah, and the only way we can measure our place in the competition is through the acquisition of wealth. We suffer from a bad case of materialism, deeming one another to be human resources, objects to be manipulated for our personal benefit.

My theory says however there is no competition. It’s all illusion. We are not separate; not from each other, not even from the environment. We have better measures than accumulated wealth or earning power to value ourselves, if that’s truly our concern. One of those measures could be awareness of how interconnected this universe and our shared experience of it really is.

I am not alone. You are not alone. We are not alone. We are human, and we are all one. Let’s stop the killing.

What’s your theory?

(this post appeared first on Huffington Post)

Rally Saturday For Greater Gun Control Legislation


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The effort to make our kids and communities safer comes to the State House tomorrow afternoon as a coalition against gun violence is holding a rally at the State House from noon to 1:30.

According to a Facebook invite:

Gun violence is EPIDEMIC in the US – and has become not only a major public health and safety issue, but SO sadly, has become NORMALIZED and ROUTINE

Please join us. At Saturday’s rally we will be hearing from victims of gun violence, advocating for common sense reform of gun policy and supporting stronger state and federal regulation of military-grade weaponry – changes that WILL help protect our families and communities from future gun violence.

This is the Moment – Let us Speak! Let us Act!

Brought to you by:

Mothers & Others Against Gun Violence, MoveOn.org, RI Progressive Democrats, One Million Moms for Gun Control, The Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, The Institute for Nov-Violence

 

What Will Obama Gun Regulation Accomplish?


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Recent controversy over which actual weapons were used at Sandy Hook, including MSNBC’s report as to whether an assault weapon was used at all, is likely to have no impact on the government response moving forward.

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Similarly, the fact that the government told us 9/11 was perpetrated by Saudi citizens trained in Afghanistan, that didn’t get in the way of an Iraqi invasion.  As Gen. Colin Powell basically testified at the UN: Iraq basically deserved an invasion on their own merit.  Stepping away from the causal link between Sandy Hook and forthcoming reactions, let us take a look at likely results:

The 18th Executive Order signed by President Obama is to provide incentives (and funding) for schools to have police oversee the children.  This will create results.  Of all the other items concerning background checks and manufacturing specifics for future guns, there is no clear indication that there will be any tangible differences.  Gun violence will continue with the 300 million guns in America, and millions more throughout the world.  Some people who legally bought guns and have no criminal record or mental health issues will lose their mind and commit a crime.  Whether we consider this an acceptable number or not depends as much on the media frenzy as on actual statistics.

School police, known as “Resource Officers” (perhaps for easier digestion) have been key builders of the School to Prison Pipeline.  The fistfights and the joint in the bathroom do not result in detention or suspension anymore: now they are imprisonment, expulsion, and an often insurmountable mountain to climb towards any “normal” adult lifestyle.  A 2011 report by Justice Police Institute, Education Under Arrest: The Case Against Police In Our Schools,  would lead one to believe that the overall damage to a community is not justified by the vague possibility that the school is safer.  In fact, there are indications that the police actually lead to increased violence in schools.

Fortunately, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the Advancement Project, and others aremounting a campaign to let the President know what he is doing.

President Obama would like to spend $4 billion to put 150,000 more cops on the street, further transferring public safety from the traditional role of states to the federal government.  These cops are not likely to be deployed in Newtown, Aurora, Littleton, Blacksburg, Red Lake, Killeen, San Ysidoro, or any locations similar to past massacres.  Nor will they be deployed in such white collar businesses and institutions that have been the site of these tragedies.  Instead, they will likely be patrolling the public housing areas of urban centers, looking for drugs among mostly Black and Latino boys.  Just as in NYC, where an officer’s job is justified by how many Stops, Questions, and Frisks they conduct, any new officers will be under the same pressures to “produce.”

Prison Expenditures will Rise

Children have been the fastest growing segment in the industry of prisoners.  They are a commodity justifying the building of a prison and hiring those who will guard them- even those who would try to teach them in these environments so non-conducive to learning.  Industries do not deal well with stagnation or reduction.  Thus, an ever growing number of children and young adults are needed to continue fueling an industry that has yet to be reduced in all the history of American prisons.

More cops requires more prosecutors to process the cases, along with more public defenders, judges, sheriffs, stenographers, interpreters, clerks, and everything else that happens after an arrest.  All on the taxpayer dime at a time when most “American” corporations are multinational and manage to avoid taxes around the globe.  These budgets are already bursting.

Putting police in our schools, and 150,000 police in low income communities of color, will certainly increase the front end of this industry during an era when states have been struggling to make reductions.  Spurred by the Bush Administration’s Second Chance Act, a secondary industry of “Rehabilitation” has expanded to attempt a reduction of prisoners on the back end.  One roadblock to this latter attempt is public perception, and media frenzy, (at times instigated by prison guards themselves) against “coddling criminals” or the perceived dangers of releasing someone who committed a violent crime decades ago.

The Future Economy

President Obama certainly knows that we currently have an economy of excess labor.  Several decades after outsourcing and technology eliminated our manufacturing base, people in Obama’s shoes are tasked with the dilemma of what to do with tens of millions of unnecessary people in our economy.  There is no indication that this trend will be reversed (not to say that it cannot be, but I have yet to hear any proposal that involves a massive new sector requiring human labor at Living Wages).  In the short term, the Prison Solution provides a small consolation, albeit with considerable human cost.

Once labeled as “Criminal,” there can be no moral demand for living wage jobs, education, and affordable housing- at least not in our current culture, where those making such demands represent an increasingly vocal minority.  Those who are labeled are often shut down with the phrase, “You should have thought about that before you became a criminal.”  Yet we are labeling them before they are even old enough to drive a car, vote, serve in the military, or sign a valid contract.  Furthermore, our society cannot even respond to similar demands by non-labeled people.

Non-labeled people from the lower classes can join the ranks of half-a-million prison guards, and twice that in the overall Prison industry.  As the labeled are released from prison, they are expected to have lower expectations, to be happy with a GED and a job that pays $8 per hour.  If we can create a nation where 10 million people are satisfied earning that pay, another 10 million are incarcerated, and another 10 million are watching over them… we may create some stability in our economy.  It will require a relentless Drug War and a massive tolerance for racially imbalanced outcomes.  Such a dystopia will likely require a repeal of the Civil Rights Act.

As a chess player it is important to think many moves ahead for yourself and your opponent.  Naturally, a chess player expects their opponent to think several moves ahead, perhaps five or six, at least.  Sometimes even if you think 20 moves ahead correctly, you still cannot see the victory; you may only see that all the pieces are dead except for the King… but you still must make a move.

This article originally appeared in Unprison.

Commonsense Gun Laws


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The horrific images from the shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School are still seared into our minds – of six-year olds fleeing from danger, law enforcement officers overwhelmed with emotion, and parents grieving for loved ones taken from them forever.

President Obama’s powerful words after the shooting spoke directly to the soul of a nation searching for answers following another in a long line of gun-related massacres.

During my time as Mayor of Providence, one of the most difficult responsibilities I had was to meet with mothers and fathers whose children were victims of deadly gun violence. No words of mine could ever match the excruciating pain they felt.

Following this tragedy, I hosted a meeting on Capitol Hill, along with the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence and met with families whose lives have been devastated by gun violence. These were families who lost loved ones in brutal attacks at Columbine, Aurora, and Virginia Tech. I thanked them for their courage and willingness to push now for commonsense policy changes – stronger limits on assault weapons, tighter restrictions on sales of ammunition, and more thorough background checks on gun sales. But for many of the families I met with there was a larger concern – each of them have experienced the pain of not only losing a loved one, but also watching in vain as our leaders in Washington failed to take action to ensure these tragedies never happened again.

And, unfortunately, this apathy seems to be the rule rather than the exception in recent years.

Our national lawmakers have refused to act on the issue of gun safety even after every mass shooting that has taken place in recent years. There has been no serious push to reinstate the assault weapons ban that expired in 2004 or to require tougher background checks on all gun sales. And there has been no real effort in recent years to strengthen background check requirements to keep guns from ending up in the hands of criminals or individuals suffering with serious mental illness.

The tragedy in Newtown is, unfortunately, only the most recent of a long series of violent killings involving guns, but it is especially horrific because it involved the slaughter of 20 innocent children and their teachers.

It is my hope that it will mark a turning point in the debate over commonsense gun safety laws.

The response of the leaders of the National Rifle Association to the horrors of gun violence and in particular to the devastation at Sandy Hook Elementary School was to argue for more guns in schools and to use this occasion to re-state their strong opposition to any commonsense gun safety legislation.

We should move ahead to protect our children and communities from the dangers of gun violence despite strong opposition from the powerful gun lobby. While there is no perfect solution that will eliminate all gun crimes, there are many things we can do to significantly reduce the danger of guns getting into the hands of criminals and those that are seriously mentally ill, as well as restricting the sale of particularly deadly weapons and ammunition.

The fact is, we don’t need to wait for new proposals to be put forward – there are already a number of bills that I and many gun safety advocates have already co-sponsored that would provide significant changes to existing laws.

  • The Fix Gun Checks Act would ensure that anyone who should not be allowed to have a gun is listed in the national instant criminal background check system and require a background check for every firearm sale.
  • The Gun Show Loophole Closing would require background checks on any firearms sales that take place at a gun show.
  • The Stop Online Ammunition Sales Act would require in person purchases of ammunition, licensing of ammunition dealers, and reporting regarding bulk purchases of ammunition.
  • We can ban the types of devices typically used in mass shootings by passing the Large Capacity Ammunition Feeding Device Act which would achieve this and also re-enact the Assault Weapons Ban.
  • And the Fire Sale Loophole Closing Act to end the practice by which gun dealers who lose their license can convert their inventory into a “personal collection” and sell them privately.

The time for action is now. Enough is enough! We owe it to the families of all those who have lost loved ones to gun violence to do all that we can to end this human carnage. We have many good proposals pending in Congress right now. Let’s honor the memories of those who were murdered at the Sandy Hook Elementary School by taking strong action immediately.

They deserve nothing less.

**This blog was originally featured on The Huffington Post

A Brief Word On Guns


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We all need to realize that allowing people to purchase and own AR-15s is just as much social engineering as not allowing them. Either way creates a certain sort of society, which is pretty much the definition of social engineering.

The problem is not pro-gun per se. The problem is that the current manifestation of the pro-gun position is absolutist. They will not even allow the most common-sensical of restrictions. In their current view, any restrictions at all are intolerable.

That sort of absolutism is foolish. No right is absolute. Freedom of speech can be restricted in certain circumstances. And that is the first amendment, which probably indicates it’s the one deemed most necessary by the authors.

What does a” well-regulated militia” imply? That the militia should be regulated. Which means restricted. And restrictions = laws restricting ownership of guns in certain circumstances. That’s what the Second Amendment states. Yes, the Supreme Court recently ruled that this guarantees the rights of individuals to own guns. But the Supreme Court also ruled that “separate but equal” was perfectly fine, and that fugitive slaves had to be returned to their owners even if that meant forcible removal from a free state (i.e., Dred Scott).

The fact is, in states like RI, you are more apt to be shot by a stranger. In a state with very liberal gun laws like TX or LA (the latter leading the US in gun deaths, btw) you are more apt to be shot by someone you know. Since one generally spends more time among people you know, your chance of being shot goes up when you are surrounded by gun owners.

That’s pretty straightforward. Also, gun owners are 4.5 more times likely to be shot, and 4.2 times more likely to be killed by a gun than a non-owner.

The sum of these two facts means that guns do not make you safer. Rather the opposite, in fact.

In addition, allowing the ownership of assault-style weapons and large capacity magazines increases the odds that a shooter will kill more people in a rampage. So why allow them? Give the kid in Newtown a revolver or even two instead of an assault-style weapon, and suddenly, the ability to kill 26 people plummets.

Yes, there are bad people out there. Yes, they have guns. Why do they have guns? Because they’re easy to get. Background checks can be circumvented easily. One can buy most anything at a gun show. The guy who just set the fire and shot the two fire fighters was a felon, who should not have been able to own a gun. Yet, he had (or got) one. How did he do that? Because guns are easy to get. Why are they easy to get? Because the pro-gun lobby refuses to consider even the slightest of restrictions.

Look, I grew up with guns, in a time and a place where not having guns in the house was the aberration. I understand their legitimate uses. Which means I understand their non-legitimate uses as well. Being able to pump out 50 rounds of high-velocity bullets is not a legitimate use for anyone who is not in the military, or in certain cases for the police.

Let someone own their semi-automatic pistol. Fine. If it makes him feel safer, even though the evidence points in the other direction, fine. It’s the SUV fallacy: just because it feels safer doesn’t mean it is.

But let’s also face facts: too much of gun ownership is not about ‘safety’; it’s about being macho. I trust everyone has seen this ad by now, but just in case…

http://letfreedomrain.blogspot.com/2012/12/bushmaster-ad-consider-your-man-card.html

When I first saw this, I thought it might be a liberal mock-up. Turns out it’s real.

Excuse me, I have to go puke.

 

Four Reasons the NRA is a Red Herring


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In the wake of another tragedy, calls for gun regulation rises again.  Many citizens do not tend to “wait and see” what the politicians will do, and many expect a little saber-rattling and then see their elected officials bow down to the powerful pro-gun lobbyNational Rifle Association.  People have already begun targeting the NRA as a pressure point for the problem of gun violence.  There are four key factors to consider when going after the NRA.

1.  The NRA provides political cover for profiteers.

The NRA is designed to absorb public pressure.  As a member-based public relations group, they routinely deal with all manner of the public, can rally “card carrying members,” and have a sit-down with any politician they like.  The NRA has many members who served this country, who died for this country, and currently serve in a law enforcement or political capacity.  The Second Amendment is a fundamental principle of America, and open to debate as to how far we extend the right to own a gun.  Those who believe it is only for hunting are neglecting the concern our Founding Fathers had of a federal government that disarms the citizenry.

Many Americans have no problem with the vast majority of guns the 2nd Amendment protects.  Although most pistols are now semi-automatic with about 15-round clips, the greatest outrage is against the semi-automatic assault rifles such as the Bushmaster AR-15.  Bushmaster, by the way, operates in relative obscurity- free of criticism, protest, and public pressure.  They provide jobs at their factory in upstate New York.  They do not even provide a public statement when one of their weapons is used in a massacre of elementary school children.

Most Americans are not aware that Bushmaster is one of multiple weapons manufacturers bought up by Cerberus Capitol Management, and merged into a company called Freedom Group.  Cerebrus is a private equity firm that will pool the wealth of those with excess wealth, and make investments they believe will continue to profit.  Therefore, Cerberus believed that Bushmaster, and the AR-15 was a good investment.  In the history of protest and change, businesses are far less “armed” to handle public pressure than ideological groups.

This week Cereberus made the announcement that they will sell Freedom Group.  This underscores the point that markets are only viable to the level that the public permits.  As Cerebrus states:

“Our role is to make investments on behalf of our clients who are comprised of the pension plans of firemen, teachers, policemen and other municipal workers and unions, endowments, and other institutions and individuals.  It is not our role to take positions, or attempt to shape or influence the gun control policy debate. That is the job of our federal and state legislators.”

Part of this statement is misleading, where Wall Street are the largest donors to politicians and the Citizens United ruling held that any firm can make any independent ad to attempt to shape or influence any debate.  Former Vice-President Quayle is a key director at Cerberus.  Whereas weapons manufacturers have played a significant role in the policies being as they now are, Cerberus would like to point the finger at our legislatures alone.

2.  Economic power motivates more politicians than ideological power.

The USA is the top weapons exporter in the world.  Even if we exclude the weapons of mass destruction that are traditionally only sold to governments (or bought with taxpayer funds and then gifted to others), America exports far more small arms than other nations.  Combine that with the amount of guns bought annually per year by Americans, and we have an entire industry at stake.

Those who are insistent upon massive curtailing of arms manufacturing in America are up against the Third Rail: “Jobs.”  Even reductions in crime that reduce the need for prisons have had a difficult time putting a prison guard out of work.  Much of the Military Industrial Complex is about jobs.  This point is not meant to shut down the ideological and moral arguments against manufacturing and selling weapons.  Instead, the point is to recognize the realities of America’s stake in the game.

3.  The NRA is legitimized by the Supreme Court, not campaign contributions.

When the Supreme Court thoroughly argued D.C. v. Heller, and then later held that theSecond Amendment also applied to the state governments, most people would be surprised that the Court took this long to dig down deep into what this right entails.  In 2007, the Heller decision marked the first time in 70 years that this right came up for debate.  In many ways, that is a good thing- because we are deep into our “The Right to Own a Gun” is outmoded, due to technology.  I won’t rehash the debate here, but it is a good one, with multiple perspectives from America’s top jurists.

Those wishing to engage in such a debate about the Second Amendment would be aided in reading all the Opinions, as there may be rationales that sound legitimate, or un-American, or inspire new ideas.  The constitution can be amended, laws can be passed around the edges, and different Courts can have different interpretations on the language.  But a meaningful discussion needs to start somewhere, preferably in our founding principles, if we are to uphold the democracy of America.

4.  Gun control can be a red herring to systemic issues of violence.

It is true that a federal ban on assault weapons was passed in 1994.  In 1996, AEDPAcreated further limitations on weaponry sales (in the wake of the bombing of the Murragh federal building).  The federal ban expired in 2004, and was not considered important enough to renew.  It was a flimsy piece of legislation, easily evaded.  Practically any weapon that would have been banned has a close counterpart that is legal.  Such feel-good legislation is certainly not going to have any practical impacts.

To have a genuine impact on present and future gun ownership, massive prohibitions must be put in place.  Furthermore, the government may need to confiscate high-capacity, high-velocity, high-caliber weapons.  Setting aside the difficulty with such a route, let us assume it is possible…

Gun ownership is an effect.  Violence is an effect.  There are internal and external forces that propel most decisions we make in life, even most reactions we make- as we have been conditioned to react.  Many shooting deaths in America involve drugs: either drug dealers settling disputes or drug users in search of money to get their drugs.  For those people, most guns are gotten from an illicit market among the millions of guns already in America.  Many of their guns are small and cheap, sometimes not working properly.  Regulation is unlikely to have any impact.  The causes are some combination of addiction, desperation, anger, and inability to see (or choose) a more peaceful way to their goal.

The cynic would argue that Americans don’t care about the “street” criminal (insert racial analysis here).  What they care about are the killings that impact White middle-class America.  Columbine, Virginia Tech, Aurora, Newtown are all etched in our conscience, as they should be.  Setting aside the racial and class contexts, the point remains: it isn’t gun ownership that caused the shooters to “go postal” (as we used to say).  There is some validity to “guns don’t kill people, people kill people.”  And it is heartening to know that the Obama Administration has  announced that his Task Force will focus on mental health and education, in addition to gun regulation.  We are not likely to hear such public dislike of teachers as we have in recent years, and it should stay that way (in my opinion).

Perhaps the unfortunate reality is that we have developed a very violent culture in America, built on the foundations of revolution, the Wild West, slavery, and an awkwardly-settled Civil War.  Our movies, books, video games, news and TV shows feed off the mantra “If it Bleeds, it Leads.”  The choice to tear down and destabilize our attempts to help Americans who are struggling with mental health comes with repercussions.  The savings in closing down mental hospitals has helped fuel a costly prison explosion.  The challenge for people getting coverage for mental health treatment also creates other costs.  Until we can look at the savings and costs in a holistic manner, we will continue to be baffled by systemic troubles and occasional travesties.

In a final thought, I hope there are survivors of other tragic events, such as students of Columbine or during Katrina, who have developed tools to share with the kids, parents, teachers, and neighbors of Newtown.  It may not be for a while, but people should prepare for the worst PTSD imaginable.

I have been on all sides of this issue.  My family includes small children, teachers, military, mentally ill people, and gun owners.  Those who kill, including myself, and those who have been killed.  I have worked with mental health and substance abuse professionals, regarding expanding treatment.  I have strategized in achieving political goals.  There are many worthwhile and intelligent opinions on the matter of guns and violence.  My hope here is that discussions are meaningful and vibrant, not just wars of words. 

All Guns Should Be Insured, Just Like Cars


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It’s an old idea that hasn’t gotten a lot of play, but the recent events in Newtown and the seemingly endless impasse in our society over what if any restrictions should be applied to firearms has gotten a few people to start thinking outside the box. Hence Robert Cyran and Reynolds Holding have proposed that Congress should push for mandatory gun insurance.

Given the amount of licensing, regulation and insurance required to drive a car, why should guns be any different? One argument is that the right to bear arms is enshrined in our Constitution whereas the right to drive an automobile is not, but this idea fails when one considers the Ninth Amendment, which says that just because a right is not enumerated in the Constitution, doesn’t mean it is not a right. In other words, you DO have a constitutional right to drive a car. But the government has a compelling interest to regulate that right to prevent people from driving recklessly.

Mandating insurance on guns should be little different from automobiles. Pass a test to prove competency, renew your license every few years, and carry insurance on each weapon owned. Free markets, which everybody loves, “should be efficient at weighing the risks” say the authors, and they provide the following example:

So a shotgun owner who has hunted for years without incident could be charged far less than a first-time owner purchasing a semi-automatic. In other words, people would be financially discouraged from purchasing the most risky firearms and encouraged to attend gun safety classes and use trigger locks. And the insurance could provide some restitution for those hurt by guns.

Taking this a step further, why does this have to a federal law? Don’t states license drivers and register automobiles? Don’t states compel drivers to be insured? What is to prevent the Rhode Island General Assembly from passing some variation of mandatory gun insurance? Licensing and registering a gun should be as easy (or difficult) as a visit to the Department of Motor Vehicles.

The General Assembly might also consider other outside the box ideas. Tort reform might make it easier to sue the owners of guns that fall into the wrong hands, incentivizing gun owners to keep their weapons secure. Heavier taxes on weapons and ammunition could be a way to enrich government coffers.

The first step is banning assault weapons in our state. Let’s face it: throwing stars are technically illegal, but assault weapons aren’t? That’s just dumb. But after that, there is a lot of work to be done, and a compassionate, pioneering General Assembly could point the way towards a safer environment for everyone.

The Right Needs A Head On A Stick; Erik Loomis’ Will Do


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It’s been a bad end of the year for conservatives. After deluding themselves into thinking they were going to win the presidential election by a landslide, they instead found themselves routed by a president they’d labelled “socialist” and claimed that he “palled around with terrorists.” And then in the wake of a national tragedy which left twenty-eight people dead, among them 20 children and six educators, politicians decided that they were no longer willing to sacrifice the lives of American citizens so that a few people could own assault rifles. Mike Huckabee’s remarks that the removal of Christian worship from public schools was to blame for the Sandy Hook massacre didn’t go over that well.

In the face of these failures, the right wing fell back to the cultural warfare they so successfully waged during the 1980s and 1990s. With Christmastime a few weeks away, it wasn’t hard to resuscitate that narrative. Now, with gun control looking to be increasingly likely, conservatives needed a target. Enter University of Rhode Island professor of labor and environmental history Erik Loomis. A perfect target for the “universities are indoctrinating our children” theme of conservative writing.

Prof. Loomis, known best in left wing circles for his political blog, Lawyers, Guns & Money, tweeted that he wanted Wayne LaPierre’s (CEO of the National Rifle Association) head on a stick and that the NRA should be classified as a terrorist organization (he has since deactivated his twitter account).

In the civilized world, this is what is known as “hyperbole.” In the conservative world, this is calling for Mr. LaPierre’s assassination. Anchor Rising’s Marc Comtois postulated that Prof. Loomis was merely seeking attention. How did Mr. Comtois prevent him from receiving that attention? With a broadside blog post, that was later redistributed and linked to by “traditional” media on their Twitter accounts and websites.

Better people than I have already written in Prof. Loomis’ defense such as Prof. Daniel Nexon at the Duck of Minerva and Prof. Loomis’ colleagues Robert Farley and Scott Lemieux at Lawyers, Guns & Money. The academics who write for Crooked Timber issued a joint statement that went a bit further; they asked readers to contact URI’s Dean Winnie Brownell (winnie@mail.uri.edu), Provost Donald DeHays (ddehayes@uri.edu), and President David Dooley (davedooley@mail.uri.edu) in a polite, civil, and firm manner and tell them to protect free speech.

That’s the right manner of response. The wrong response was URI’s shameful and cowardly statement that played directly into the conservative bullies’ hands, while also elevating what was essentially a story contained to right wing loudmouths and left wing reactions into “real news”.

Let me be clear, the right wing are being bullies here. These are the same people that use hyperbolic language every day. These are the people who claimed that our President assists terrorists and was one himself, that he’s an Islamic Kenyan sleeper agent who hates America, that he’s destroying the nation with his godless socialism, that he’s a fascist fostering a cult of personality so he can end the American Republic forever.

If URI buckles to the demands of these hypocrites it will be a blow against intellectual freedom that will reverberate across the United States; and I do not believe I am being hyperbolic here. No academic’s opinions are safe, regardless of whether they’re left, right, or center. It will prove to the right wing that intimidation works, that no use of hyperbole that the right can portray as offensive anywhere should be protected speech. And tactics that work are often copied. The left will push back in the exact same manner, and then it will be a battle over who can collect more heads.

Universities and colleges need to be centers of academic freedom regardless of political belief, if only because we are all enriched when they can have debates that political discourse is too soundbite-based to have. It’s a near-sighted and hypocritical game the right is playing. And they should be condemned for playing it.

Sign Local Gun Control Petition Here


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How many more must die? We need true gun control now, and our congressional delegation agrees.

Today’s a great day to re-watch “Bowling for Columbine” and you can do so here. It’s a great day to honor the heroism of our educators – any of whom could one day be put in the same situation that the teachers at Sandy Hook were – and you can do that here.

It’s also a great day to take action. And you can do that here:

Please sign this Petition and Pledge.

Sometime in January we will hold an event at the State House at which we submit this petition and pledge, and demand our elected officials to act.

 Petition and Pledge

Dear Governor Chafee, Speaker Fox and President Paiva-Weed:

We, the undersigned, do call upon the elected officials our state and local governments to enact meaningful gun control legislation. At a minimum, we expect he legislation to include the following:

  • No sale of or private ownership of automatic or semi-automatic firearms;
  • No sale of or private ownership of ammunition for such guns, nor any form of ammunition that is armor-piercing;
  • No sales of firearms without a 30-day waiting period and a background criminal check, including at gun shows or other “private sales”;
  • All sales of firearms, weather in a retail or private setting, shall require documentation that is submitted to the appropriate branch of the Rhode Island State Police;
  • Permits for firearm ownership will only be granted with demonstration of legitimate need for the item, including hunting or sport;
  • In addition to current laws, those with permits for firearm ownership shall be required to reapply every two years for their permit.

Please note: the proposal above is much less restrictive than in most democracies; for one example, the United Kingdom does not allow private ownership of almost any form of firearm, and its gun homicide rate is 1/100th that of the US (0.03 per 100,000 vs.  nearly 3 per 100,000).

We additionally pledge the following:

  • We will refuse to vote for or in any way support the candidacies of any person running for office who does not publicly support and work for the enactment of legislation that accomplishes the above; and
  • Will actively seek and support candidates to oppose any elected official who does not publicly support and work for the enactment of legislation that accomplishes the above ; and
  • Will disaffiliate with any party whose leadership does not publicly support and work for the enactment of legislation that accomplishes the above; and
  • We hereby promise to oppose the candidacies of any person seeking office who accepts the endorsement or financial support of the NRA; its affiliates; similar gun-industry or gun-rights organizations; or who in any way publicly expresses support for the positions and goals of said organizations.

In particular, we look to Governor Lincoln Chafee, Speaker of the House Gordon Fox and Senate President M. Teresa Pavia-Weed to ensure legislation meeting the above criteria is enacted in the 2013 legislative session. If such legislation is not enacted, the moral standing of these three leaders will be forever tarnished and their names held in disdain.

In memory of those who died in Newtown, and all those who have suffered and died from the easy access to guns in our nation, we say enough is enough. We demand that the phrase “well regulated’ be the keystone for our understanding of the Second Amendment of the US Constitution.

 

Newtown Tragedy, and the Wages of American Cruelty


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I really don’t know what to say about the events in CT today, so close to where I grew up, at precisely the time my own children were in school. Tragic events like this are, in the end, inexplicable — but much like the 9/11 attacks, to simply describe what happened as a consequence of ‘evil’ is, frankly, a moral cop-out.

We live in a society that lays claim (sometimes a unique claim) to loving our children. But we don’t. Not really. We love our own, yes. But not other people’s children.

Our children will learn and practice love when we provide them with institutions, laws and communities that reflect and reinforce it. We are cruel to the children of the poor, the undocumented, and the incarcerated, more so than any other developed nation. We tolerate — even revel in — breathtaking levels of violence and inequality, giving our young people a sense that using other human beings as a means to our own ends is OK. Its Ok in our foreign policy. Its OK at work. And its OK in our relationships.

Silenced by a patriarchal culture that reproduces and rewards male aggression, and that devalues and denigrates humility, doubt, interdependence and vulnerability, we underfund the treatment of mental illness while living in a society that produces it in great quantities. We continue to allow the free flow and use of firearms, far beyond any reasonable definition of self-defense and constitutional protection, ensuring that our children — especially our poorest children — will grow up experiencing daily stress and insecurity, perpetuating almost everything I’ve described above.

I don’t know what lessons we’re supposed to draw from the events in CT today. But I do know that the cruel and bitter edge of American society, there at its very slave-owning birth as a kind of original sin, seems to have become even sharper in the last two decades. Cruelty is all of a piece, woven together, constricting all of us, even the most privileged and safe. But love is all of a piece, too. And it simply isn’t enough, in the end, for us to hoard it, household by household, like one more zero-sum game we’re trying to win. Once we commit to loving ALL of our children, the society we construct out of that love will finally make this country — finally — a source of great hope in the world.

For more of Mark Santow’s writings, click here.


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