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The American Civic Association on Front Street
in Binghamton, New York,
where 13 people died at the hands of a lone gunman April 3, 2009.
High
Noon
Where Laws Have Failed
By Hal
Crowther
It’s springtime in
America
, with birds and flowers, when soft breezes blow and mass killers come out
of hibernation. This week it was
Binghamton
,
New York
, not far from where I lived once, where my parents used to teach. On the
strength of 98 pistol rounds and 13 deaths,
Binghamton
stole the media spotlight from
Carthage
,
North Carolina
, where earlier in the week another deranged gunman murdered seven senior
citizens and a nurse.
Carthage
is just down the road from the hotel where my wife and I celebrated our
first anniversary. By now nearly everyone must have a personal connection
to one of these massacre sites -- this was America’s fifth mass shooting
in less than a month, with 38 victims dead and more gravely wounded. If we
stick a pin in the map everywhere an armed lunatic has committed multiple
murders, the map of
America
has a distinctly porcupine appearance.
For gross irony and nausea,
I thought it would be hard to upstage the
North Carolina
gunman who opened fire in a nursing home and killed a group of helpless
people whose ages ranged up to 98 years. But in some ways the
Binghamton
slaughter was even more grotesque. The killer blasted his way into an
immigration services center and murdered resident aliens and refugees who
were studying to become to become American citizens. For the survivors, it
was a lesson in American citizenship they will never forget. Send me your
tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free -- but for
god’s sake tell them to keep their heads down.
And avoid public places. The
current crop of psychotic gunmen seems to seek what the military would
call “target-rich” environments, where large groups of potential
victims are preoccupied and stationary. Primary sites are classrooms,
offices, workplaces. Theaters have a lot of potential and the nursing home
was a logical innovation. Churches are a particularly vulnerable
environment, dramatized in
Maryville
,
Illinois
last month when a gunman strolled down the center aisle of the
First
Baptist
Church
and assassinated the Rev. Fred Winters while he was delivering his Sunday
sermon. A chilling detail was that Rev. Winters deflected the first of
four rounds with his bible, which disintegrated into confetti as his
killer kept firing.
"No
force on earth or in heaven can protect us from America’s staggering
private arsenal -- now conservatively estimated at 290,000,000 firearms..."
So much for divine
intervention. No force on
earth or in heaven can protect us from America’s staggering private
arsenal -- now conservatively estimated at 290,000,000 firearms, virtually
one for every man, woman and child -- and the mentally unstable Americans
who seem to own a disproportionate share of it. Certainly not the police,
who are losing a desperate battle to protect themselves. The day after the
Binghamton
massacre, three officers were murdered in
Pittsburgh
, ambushed by a white supremacist with
an AK-47 assault rifle. This maniac, who also owned a .357 Magnum and
other high-caliber pistols, was said to be enraged because he thought
President Obama was scheming to confiscate his guns. (This rumor has
triggered an unprecedented boom in the pistol market.) Last week in
Oakland
four policemen were killed when a routine traffic stop set off a
trigger-happy parole violator. Cops know they sign on for a dangerous
life, but it’s not supposed to be like
Afghanistan
.
In a Palm Sunday service at
St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church, a lay reader prayed for the families of
the victims in
Carthage
, as indicated in our programs, and ad-libbed an extra prayer for the
survivors in
Binghamton
. If she had read the morning paper, she could have added the
policemen’s widows in
Pittsburgh
. Not even our prayers can keep up with the carnage. I feel that I’ve
written these paragraphs, or ones much like them, many times
before…Columbine, Virginia Tech,
Northern Illinois
… the cities, the details fade but not the helpless unreality of living
in a ballistic republic. Forged in “the rockets’ red glare, the bombs
bursting in air,” the
United States
is dissolving in a hail of bullets, bullets of our own manufacture and
discharge. There is nothing like it anywhere.
It might be hard to prove
that Americans are crazier than everyone else, that homicidal violence is
programmed into our DNA or absorbed with our mothers’ milk. Strictly
speaking, some of the most efficient mass murderers have not been
American, at least not native-born. The killer in
Binghamton
was a naturalized Vietnamese immigrant; the Virginia Tech gunman was a
Korean exchange student. In my wife’s hometown of
Grundy
,
Virginia
, it was an African graduate student who opened fire in the Appalachian
School of Law and murdered the dean, among others. Unstable people looking
for a better education and a better life come to
America
, where they’re often disappointed. But here in the somewhat faded
Land
of
Opportunity
there’s one equal opportunity they’re never denied -- the opportunity
to acquire lethal firearms and to use them.
It’s not our people who
are hopelessly insane. It’s our laws. While they were carrying out the
corpses in
Binghamton
, I turned confidently to Fox News for the best writhing and
rationalizing. “What can we do?” asked one reporter, with a properly
tortured expression. He didn’t try to answer -- this is called
hand-wringing with one hand -- because the only obvious, sane answer is
“Try to pry some of this terrifying firepower out of the hands of
private citizens.” And this answer is not politically permissible, on
Fox News or in
Binghamton
, where a local official said “There’s not much we can do if a crazy
person decides to start shooting.” There’s not much anyone can do as
long as the National Rifle Association maintains an impassable road block
between
America
and its brain, its common sense and its self-respect.
The gun lobby’s basic
mission is to guarantee that every American, not excluding the desperate
and the deranged, can purchase all the firepower his feverish heart
desires. In principle they’d prefer to disarm psychotics but how, they
ask, could we identify the mad -- among the healthy population of
patriotic, law-abiding marksmen -- when most of them have no criminal
records and no previous history of violence? Of course this question
decisively undermines every argument against gun control. Mental illness
is a constant, lethal weapons are ostensibly a variable. But the NRA
doesn’t appear to grasp that, or grasps it and doesn’t care. Though
they’ve never won an argument (or ever presented one that would sway an
11-year-old), the NRA rarely loses an election, or a legislative battle
where gun control is the issue.
America
’s firearms policies, dominated by an uncompromising gun cult, amount
first of all to a bloody war on logic. Does the NRA have a solution for
the escalating body count from lunatics with guns? Yes, it does -- a
solution that even Americans from sparsely-armed blue states regard with
slack-jawed disbelief. Share it with a foreigner and he’ll assume
you’re raving mad, hallucinating. Negative publicity from
America
’s round-robin of domestic massacres never softens the NRA’s stand
against gun control. Instead, they recommend arming all potential victims
-- putting handguns in every student backpack, concealing them under Rev.
Winters’ surplice, under the bathrobes, shawls and lap blankets of
octogenarians watching television. A pistol under every secretary’s
keyboard, under every teacher’s desk. They advocate arming patrons in
bars and restaurants, as well, so no one will be caught without a fighting
chance when that gunman kicks in the door. Since the Virginia Tech
bloodbath, the astonishing proposal to arm college campuses has been
backed by legislative initiatives in 18 states, most recently in
Texas
, where NRA flunkies are asking students, “Do you want to be a sitting
duck?”
In
Austin
a relevant response came from John Woods, now a graduate student at the
University
of
Texas
. Two years ago tomorrow (April 16, 2007), when he was an undergraduate at
Virginia Tech, his girlfriend was one of 32 people shot to death by
Seung-Hui Cho, still the most lethal lone gunman in American history. He
thought of buying a gun, Woods said, “Then I learned pretty fast that
wouldn’t solve anything. The idea that somebody could stop a school
shooting with a gun is impossible, It’s reactive, not preventative.“
“Let’s
just make carrying a concealed weapon mandatory for all law-abiding
citizens,” a man proposes in a letter to the local newspaper..."
Tell it to the NRA. Besides
the armed-campus bills, its immediate response to Virginia Tech included
the defeat of legislation, initiated by Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, to rein
in unlicensed gun dealers and prohibit concealed weapons in bars. In
Congress, the gun lobby maneuvered to eliminate handgun restrictions and
an assault-rifle ban in the
District of Columbia
, one of the most dangerous cities in the
USA
(is it wrong to wish that these Congressional hypocrites could come
face-to-barrel with the results of their cowardice?). In
North Carolina
, while those senior citizens were still laid out in the
Carthage
funeral parlors, gun-loving legislators were pushing a bill to eliminate
the licensing of handguns. Insanity is involved, but also cynicism, since
the NRA is funded by arms merchants and manufacturers who make their
profits from the same paranoia they encourage -- and unfortunately
justify. Money and fear are an irresistible All-American combination; once
reason has fled the field there’s no limit to the craziness we may
encounter. “Let’s just make carrying a concealed weapon mandatory for
all law-abiding citizens,” a man proposes in a letter to the local
newspaper, leaving me trying to decide whether he’s a satirist or
someone who should be locked in a cage. Gun freaks don’t shy from open
threats of armed violence. “If only 3 percent of gun owners actively
resist new anti-Constitutional gun laws,” one snarls in this morning’s
paper, “the result will be violence on a scale never seen.”
If the outgunned police are
increasingly helpless to halt the carnage, government has been worse than
useless. If your legislator isn’t supporting some restriction on
firearms that the NRA opposes -- and it opposes everything, not only bans
on assault rifles but on armor-piercing (known as “cop-killer”)
bullets -- then you don’t have a legislator, just another broken-down
gun whore, another pistol-whipped, brainwashed eunuch armed America has
purchased out of petty cash. Even though saner gun laws are favored by
two-thirds of the electorate, profiles in NRA-busting courage are
pitifully rare among elected officials. The cop-killing psycho in
Pittsburgh
need not, it seems, have feared the Obama administration or the Democratic
Congress. Attorney General Eric Holder and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi are
both backing away from a fight to reinstate the federal assault-rifle ban,
which Republicans allowed to expire in 2004: “We need to enforce the
laws we have right now,” says Pelosi, parroting gun-lobby rhetoric.
“Basically,” said Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois (with
obvious regret but no fierce indignation), “we reached a point where
there are not many people who will stick their political necks out to vote
for sensible gun control….too big a hassle.” The NRA’s smile is not
fading. Apparently we’ve replaced a government committed to giving them
everything with a government too frightened not to give them plenty.
"The
NRA is
America
’s inoperable tumor. Inoperable in part, I admit, because guns are flesh
of our flesh, a piece of our heritage. "
The NRA is
America
’s inoperable tumor. Inoperable in part, I admit, because guns are flesh
of our flesh, a piece of our heritage. The history of
America
coincides with the history of modern firearms. It’s never been hard for
the gun lords to convince millions of rural conservatives that a
government capable of seizing coke dealers’ Uzis would come after their
deer rifles next. Or to seduce them with the equally implausible Second
Amendment argument that Jefferson and Madison wanted us all to own guns,
it says so in the Constitution -- though by the same logic Tom and Jim
wanted us to own slaves, virtually own women, and regard a colored person
as three-fifths of a human being. The Constitution remains relevant
because it’s a living, evolving document (note the word
“Amendment”), not a dead, embalmed one impervious to history. But the
psychopathology of guns, too exotic to explore here, renders victims
gullible and insight-resistant to an extent I cannot explain.
But now the cancer that
thrives in that inoperable tumor has spread beyond our borders. For years
the American media machine has been shaking its head over the terrifying
violence in Northern Mexico, especially in the border cities of
Ciudad Juarez
and
Tijuana
, where drug cartels rule almost unchallenged, shoot policemen and
journalists like jackrabbits and maintain the highest per capita murder
rate in the hemisphere. In the past 16 months more than 7,000 murders have
been attributed to drug violence, 1,000 in the first eight weeks of 2009
alone. Torture and decapitation is common; the narcos, as drug
traffickers are known in
Mexico
, produce cadavers at such a dreadful rate that coffin-makers have fallen
months behind demand, and one morgue was forced to store 200 corpses in
refrigerators built for 80. This drug-deranged dystopia, this republic of
mere anarchy is centered in districts visible from the city limits of
El Paso
and
San Diego
, and its violence frequently spills over the border.
America
held its nose and tried to seal its borders. Then a few weeks ago it was
acknowledged -- it must have long been known -- that 95 percent of the
guns employed in the Mexican murders were purchased in the
United States
. Ninety percent of all firearms owned by the drug cartels -- assault
rifles are their efficient weapon of choice -- were sold by American
dealers, often through “straw buyers” to conceal the transactions.
Another statistic is even more stunning: Every day of the week 2,000 of
these weapons are smuggled into
Mexico
from the
United States
.
Though it boasts some of the
most bloodthirsty capitalists on the planet, millionaires and billionaires
who make Bernie Madoff look like Mister Rogers, Mexico turns out to have
sane gun laws. South of the Border, a gun is hard to get. Or would be, if
it weren’t for the crazy Americans. Yes, our dealers arm all the
butchers, torturers, and beheaders of
Ciudad Juarez
. When
Mexico
sends armed forces to the border to try to stop the bloodshed, its
soldiers come under fire from American rifles. “The bloody result,”
wrote columnist Tom Teepen, “is just one more of the prices we pay to
appease our domestic gun lobbies and their political intimidation.”
Where’s the shame? The
NRA, never embarrassed, probably blames
Mexico
’s ruin on limp-wristed liberals, or tequila. But President Obama was
embarrassed enough to send Hillary Clinton to Mexico City to reassure the
Mexican government that we accepted “shared responsibility” and were
ready to cooperate toward some solution. It was not at all clear, however,
that the administration was embarrassed enough to prosecute the dealers in
question, or to live up to its promise to ban assault rifles. The first
legal development in the gun-smuggling scandal was unpromising, but
predictable. A Superior Court judge in
Arizona
infuriated the state’s attorney general by dismissing all charges
against George Iknadosian, a gun dealer charged with using straw buyers to
funnel at least 700 sniper rifles and assault weapons to the Beltran Leyva
drug cartel in
Mexico
. Federal agents had spent two years building up the case against
Iknadosian.
"...the
huge fortunes that the drug cartels defend with their assault rifles and
private armies of assassins were all built on the insatiable drug habits
of the American people."
As well as turning schools
and nursing homes into combat zones with lockdown drills, America’s
failure to stand up to its gun bullies has now destabilized a foreign
nation. Maybe we’re just too stoned to care. The hulking irony that
stalked Hillary Clinton on her mission in
Mexico City
was that every aspect of
Mexico
’s tragedy is American-made. As
Clinton
acknowledged, the huge fortunes that the drug cartels defend with their
assault rifles and private armies of assassins were all built on the
insatiable drug habits of the American people. Ninety percent of all the
cocaine Americans absorb in a year, an estimate of 350 tons, is purchased
from Mexican cartels. Their
marijuana enterprise is so vast it’s hard to calculate: So far, cartel
growing operations have been discovered on at least 700 sites in
America
’s national parks and forests. Chemicals these growers employ have
polluted huge stretches of once-pristine American forestland. Last year
agents uprooted five million of their plants in
California
, and a half million in
Kentucky
. Eighty bales of the finished
product were recently seized in
Asheboro
,
North Carolina
. The cartels’ tentacles have long since extended to my home state.
Charlotte
, where seizures of Mexican “black tar” heroin are up 233 percent
since 2005, is known to be one of 230 American cities where the narcos maintain
distribution centers for heroin, marijuana and cocaine. One year of good
business in
America
is worth approximately $25 billion to the Mexican cartels.
It’s a creepy symbiosis
between violent neighbors; the guns go south and the drugs come north, and
this criminal version of NAFTA keeps the coroners busy on both sides of
the border. The link between the drug cartels and our gun cartel is a
revelation; even a comparison is worth weighing. They both use fear and
deep pockets to expand businesses that prey on human weakness and
irrational behavior. They’re equally unscrupulous and relentless and
seem to scare everyone, even the presidents of the
United States
and
Mexico
. Each exerts influence way out of proportion to its numbers or its merit
in the great scheme of things, which in each case is nonexistent. Each
disrupts and dishonors the social contract and creates thousands of
unnecessary deaths, thousands of widows and orphans. When it comes to
recruiting politicians, there’s a wide moral gap between the narco
who threatens -- not idly -- to kill you and your children and the NRA
hitman who only swears to crush you in the next election. But the
Arizona
gun dealer who knowingly sells military weapons to the world’s most
murderous drug gangs is a greater menace to society, and a better
candidate for eternal damnation, than the coke dealer who merely exploits
a mean addiction.
If the shoe fits, or the
huarache…. Of course this moral balance sheet doesn’t apply to every
rank-and-file gun owner, however gullible\ -- but Satan is waiting with
open arms for those bastards who lobby Congress for their constitutional
right to sell AK-47s and cop-killer bullets to the furious and the mad.
“Inside
Washington
’s bubble,” complains The New York Times in its lead editorial,
“it’s as if the shootings in
Binghamton
and elsewhere never took place. The NRA’s ability to intimidate grown
men and women remains undiminished.”
Meanwhile the body bags keep
filling. Optimists believe there’s a point where ordinary people, the
abused and the terrified, will rise up and say “Enough is enough.”
I’m not an optimist, and I keep an eye on
Mexico
. I’ve just finished reading 2666, by the late, celebrated
Chilean novelist Roberto Bolano. Section Four, “The Part About the
Crimes,” is a 300-page chronicle -- corpse by corpse, autopsy by autopsy
-- of the rape, mutilation and murder of some 400 women whose bodies have
been dumped in the desert near
Ciudad Juarez
since 1993. (One theory is that the narcos have a sideline in
pornographic “snuff” movies featuring real torture and death.)
Bolano’s graphic version is nearly documentary, and I don’t recommend
it. It will steal your sleep. Clearly the author’s strategy is to hammer
his readers with horror until they’re desensitized and nearly
dehumanized, to make a point about the effect of these crimes on the
Mexican policemen and journalists who actually witnessed them. When the
unspeakable becomes routine it becomes almost acceptable, and then it’s
too late.
Syndicated columnist Hal Crowther is a former columnist and film
and drama critic for the Buffalo News, staff writer for TIME
and media critic for NEWSWEEK. His essay "High Noon",
which is reprinted here with permission from the author, originally
appeared in The Progressive Populist. He is the author of "Unarmed
But Dangerous," "Cathedrals of Kudzu", and most
recently, a collection of essays titled "Gather at the
River", a National Book Award nominee.
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