Colorado Shooter |
One of the most striking things
about shooting incidents in America…is how common they are. Another
striking thing is how often the media fails to note the previous point,
or to explore what that means—or what might be done about it.
Late Thursday night, a gunman walked into a movie theater in a Denver suburb, killed 12 and injured 50. Two days earlier a gunman opened fire outside a bar in Tuscaloosa, Alabama in an incident in which at least 17 were hurt.These were not really so exceptional. Every year, about 100,000 Americans are victims of gun violence, and every week, people calmly enter our schools, our workplaces, our leisure gathering spots and open fire on innocent bystanders.
Whenever we tweet or
post about these, often the only people we hear from are those who say
we need more guns not less. “If I had been there with my gun….” The
problem, of course, is the public at large is being asked to arm
everyone and trust that, while the rest of us cower, “the right people”
will quickly dispatch “the wrong people” in the modern equivalent of the
Shootout at the OK Corral. No mention of whether the teacher is
supposed to be armed…when a nut walks into a preschool and starts firing
away.
Meanwhile, the media
doesn’t have any answers at all. Each time such an incident occurs, they
primarily evince a morbid interest in the grotesque details of the
incident and the psycho of the day. In this case, early indications were
that the suspect in custody, James Holmes, said to be a dropout from a
medical school, had some kind of imagined association with the film
being shown, the Batman movie “The Dark Knight Rises.” READ MORE
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