Why Evolution is True is a blog written by Jerry Coyne, centered on evolution and biology but also dealing with diverse topics like politics, culture, and cats.
Here’s something that appeared on my Facebook feed: a tw**t by Fox Business and a response by someone pointing out the flaws. There’s one more difference between trucks, and guns, though. Trucks are not designedor built with the aim of hurting people, while assault weapons are. If we banned trucks, everything would come to a standstill. If we banned guns except for the police, we wouldn’t see much of a difference.
I’m sad because I already hear the calls for gun control dying out. They’re stimulated by mass murders, and then, after nothing happens, people go on to other things. We will not see meaningful gun control in America during my lifetime.
Finally, why haven’t they banned the sale of those devices that easily convert semiautomatic rifles into fully automatic ones (“bumps”, I think they call them). If the sale of new automatic weapons is illegal, which it is, why is it legal to sell devices that convert legal guns into illegal ones.
Here’s a bump (part of a gunstock) ordered legally for $99 from Bump Fire Systems; see how easy it is to install?
Reader Arno called my attention to an article in A Plus reporting the sequel of Georgia (along with ten other U.S. states) having passed a law allowing “concealed carry” of handguns on college campuses. It’s lunacy, but that’s America, folks.
This sign may be apocryphal, but it’s still funny:
. . . Such legislation is what reportedly prompted one person at the University of Georgia to post a sign highlighting the ridiculousness of the law. Said sign, which quickly gained popularity on Reddit earlier this week, is reportedly posted on the door to a science lab, and, although A Plus was not able to verify its location by press time, the debate it sparked is itself worth of report.
Yes, sandals are prohibited in many labs, as there’s a chance of spilling dangerous stuff on your feet or dropping something on them. I don’t know any lab that prohibits skirts or shorts, but that may well be the case in some places.
On the National Rifle Association’s (NRA’s) Facebook page. you can see their latest video, which has just gone up on YouTube. I’ve put it below (if it disappears, see it here). Listen to the rancor of NRA spokeswoman and conservative talk radio host Dana Loesch:
“They use their media to assassinate real news. They use their schools to teach children that their president is another Hitler. They use their movie stars and singers and comedy shows and award shows to repeat their narrative over and over again. And then they use their ex-president to endorse the resistance.
“All to make them march, make them protest, make them scream racism and sexism and xenophobia and homophobia. To smash windows, burn cars, shut down interstates and airports, bully and terrorize the law-abiding — until the only option left is for the police to do their jobs and stop the madness.
“And when that happens, they’ll use it as an excuse for their outrage. The only way we stop this, the only way we save our country and our freedom, is to fight this violence of lies with the clenched fist of truth. I’m the National Rifle Association of America, and I’m freedom’s safest place.”
Who are “they”? Apparently liberals, demonstrators (read: black people), and those who don’t like “President” Trump. What should we do about their actions? Shoot the bloody hell out of them! For “the clenched fist of truth” surely represents guns, though even the NRA dares not say, “Shoot those liberals and black people demonstrating in the streets.” I find the ad, as I said, bigoted, divisive, and almost an incitement to violence. It’s surely an incitement to join the NRA and BUY MORE GUNS.
As for Obama “endorsing the resistance,” all he’s done is say that Trump’s new policies are misguided, which they are. If that’s “resistance,” so be it.
And as Business Insider reports, liberals were predictably enraged, but so were some conservatives:
The conservative columnist Anne Applebaum also denounced the ad, saying it called on Americans “to arm themselves to fight liberals. Violence is coming.”
Loesch doubled down in a Periscope video posted on Wednesday night, saying that “the language of the left is violence” and calling “these people … the dullest crayons in the box.”
The ad’s language echoes what NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre said at the Conservative Political Action Conference in February.
“Right now, we face a gathering of forces that are willing to use violence against us,” he said, citing “the leftist radical plan to tax capitalism to collapse” and “the ISIS dream of a worldwide caliphate.”
“A lot of people, for a lot of reasons, want to blow it all up and tear the whole thing down,” LaPierre said. “The left’s message is absolutely clear. They want revenge. You have to be punished. They say you are what is wrong with America and now you have to be purged.”
I can think of few organizations—besides those like the Klan or other white supremacist groups—that are as hateful as the NRA. But the NRA is even worse, for, by perpetuating America’s violent culture of guns, it’s immensely dangerous.
_______
UPDATE: Reader Pliny the in Between produced this cartoon called “I think this is another NRA PSA”:
The BBC has a new piece on “How Japan has almost eradicated gun crime“, which seems relevant to the problem of gun violence in the U.S., but of course many will dissent.
Let’s first look at the statistics given on gun deaths per capita. Note how the US leads the listed countries by a long shot, with over 10 deaths per 100,000 people. In 2014, Japan had six gun deaths, which, if my calculations are correct, amounts to 0.004 deaths per 100,000 people (Japan has 127 million people). That means that the US has a gun homicide rate about 2800 times that of Japan
Now one can argue about the reasons: a different culture, stricter gun control in Japan, and so on, but I’d to at least float the idea that gun control has something to do with it. Canada, which arguably has a culture similar to that of the U.S., has a much lower homicide rate, and of course stricter gun control laws. And Canada lacks the U.S.’s Second Amendment to the Constitution permitting citizens to “keep and bear arms.” While I argue strenuously that that Amendment deals with its specified intent of permitting a “well regulated militia,” the Supreme Court has interpreted that to mean that private citizens can own guns for their personal use, including handguns. A 2012 Congressional report estimated that Americans owned 300 million firearms, which exceeded the entire population of the US at that time. And that doesn’t include illegal firearms. In Japan, there were only 0.6 guns per 100 people in 2007, compared to 89 in the US in the same year.
Gun ownership in America has increased, and gun manufacture is rising steadily; here are two plots from the Washington Post article reporting the data above:
I haven’t looked for a correlation between severity of gun-control laws and homicide deaths, but readers can inform me if there is one (and I realize that correlation isn’t necessarily causation).
Nevertheless, here are some facts about Japan from the BBC piece:
Buying a gun in Japan requires an all-day class, a written exam, a shooting-range test, and a check of your mental health record, drug usage, criminal background, and even checks of your relatives and your colleagues at work.
Handguns are banned outright. The only guns a Japanese can own are shotguns and air rifles.
The number of gun shops per prefecture is restricted (no more than three in each of the country’s 40 prefectures).
You can buy fresh ammo (cartridges) only by returning the cartridges you bought the last time.
You have to tell the police where your guns and ammo are stored, and they have to be stored separately under lock and key. The police inspect your guns yearly.
A gun license is good for only three years, and then you have to take the course again and pass all the tests.
As for the Japanese police, they fired only six shots–total!–in 2015. The cops can’t take their guns with them when they’re off duty, and they’re all trained in judo to the black-belt level. One police officer who committed suicide with his gun was in fact posthumously charged with a crime, probably to set an example. Yes, there is a problem with Japanese gangs having guns, but even gang-related gun crimes have fallen sharply.
I know the arguments against gun control in the U.S.: the Second Amendment, the fact that good guys need guns to defend themselves against the bad guys with illegal guns. Against that we have the high number of gun deaths that are accidents (exceeding “justifiable homicides by a long shot”), the dubious interpretation of the Second Amendment, the fact that many illegally owned guns were stolen from rightful owners, and the fact that everyone with a gun, including cops, has become far more trigger-happy than they were a few decades ago. If you doubt that the toll of private gun ownership exceeds its defensive utility, read this report by the Violence Policy Center, which concludes (my emphasis):
Guns are rarely used to kill criminals or stop crimes. In 2012, across the nation there were only 259 justifiable homicides1 involving a private citizen using a firearm reported to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program as detailed in its Supplementary Homicide Report (SHR).2 That same year, there were 8,342 criminal gun homicides tallied in the SHR. In 2012, for every justifiable homicide in the United States involving a gun, guns were used in 32 criminal homicides. 3 And this ratio, of course, does not take into account the tens of thousands of lives ended in gun suicides or unintentional shootings that year
Even as we speak, the Florida legislature is considering a bill to allow guns to be carried in government buildings, college campuses, and airports—places where they were previously forbidden. That’s ironic given the shootings on Friday in the Fort Lauderdale Airport.
How can we stop the madness? That surely won’t happen during a Trump administration, or even if Republicans control the Congress, as they will for some time. But there must be a way to go back. The issue is of course that legislators, indebted to and pressured by the National Rifle Association, won’t let it happen. Talks of bans are out: right now we’re just arguing about whether people can own assault rifles!
This is one problem with no easy solution, which is to ratchet back legal guns at the same time that people have them illegally. Readers are welcome to offer their solution. All I know is that it can’t be “more of the same.”
*******
Here is a related article in The Atlantic from 2012, and you can read some counterarguments about Why America Can’t be Like Japan here. I find this sentence grimly amusing:
In short, while many persons may admire Japan’s near prohibition of gun ownership, it is not necessarily true that other nations, such as the United States, could easily replicate the Japanese model. Japan’s gun laws grow out of a culture premised on voluntary submission to authority, a cultural norm that is not necessarily replicated in Western democracies.
Yesterday President Obama held a press conference in Warsaw, where he’s attending the NATO summit. I saw a bit of it on the news last night, and listened to a lot more of it this morning on YouTube, where the hour-long conference has been posted (full video below). I want to mention and react to three issues that Obama brought up about the shootings in Dallas and Minnesota, the reactions of Americans, and what we should do about the issue of terrorism and gun violence.
But first let me state that Obama was measured, thoughtful, and, well, Presidential. This is the kind of demeanor and mentality that I want in a president, and can’t imagine Donald Trump giving a press conference that comes close to this one, as opposed to his usual unhinged brain-dump.
That said, I want to take issue with two things that Obama said, and to praise another. The part I’m discussing is Obama’s statement about Dallas from 0:28-7:57, and his response to reporter Kathleen Hennessey of the AP when she asked about the shootings (16:00-25:26).
Is America divided? Obama went to great pains to argue that the unrest we’ve seen in the last week does not denote some fundamental division in our country. That, of course, is pretty much what he has to do to preserve the peace and pretend to the rest of the world that everything is okay. Here’s what he said:
“As painful as this week has been, I firmly believe America is not as divided as [some people claim]… There is sorrow. There is anger. There is confusion about next steps. But there is unity in recognizing this is not how we want our communities to operate. This is not who we want to be as Americans.”
But of course, this is not true. First, America is divided—profoundly so—in at least three ways. First, along racial lines. Many blacks don’t trust whites, or white police officers, and this fear is not unjustified. At a recent meeting (video here) a woman asked a seated crowd of white people this question: “I want every white person in this room who would be happy to be treated as this society in general treats our black citizens—if you as a white person would be happy to receive the same treatment that our black citizens do in this society—please stand.”
Nobody stood up. Would you? I wouldn’t. And until everyone would stand, things won’t be right in our country. I haven’t seen so much racial division in the U.S. since the 1992 race riots in Los Angeles following the acquittal of four police officers for beating Rodney King, or since the bimodal reaction—divided among racial lines—to O. J. Simpson’s acquittal for murder three years later. Yes, that division is far from superficial.
We’re horribly divided along political lines as well. Never in my life have I seen such a stalemate between Republicans and Democrats—to the point that Congress has been frozen into inactivity. Republicans hate liberals and they hate Obama, while Democrats (more rightly, I think) see Republicans as regressive and selfish, with policies determined to keep minorities and women as second-class citizens. Neither side has a spirit of bipartisanship. Unless Congress becomes Democratic this fall, this is going to continue. So after Hillary Clinton is elected, as I think she will be, we’ll see the same lack of progress that we’re used to.
Finally, we’re divided on the issue of gun control. Many Americans cling to their weapons, while many more—a majority—want stricter gun control. Few Americans go as far as I do, asking for seriously stringent gun control along the lines of Australia and the UK. I see no rational reason—and screw the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Second Amendment—to allow people virtually unlimited access to guns. Many of the same Americans who love their guns also refuse to blame guns as a factor in American mass shootings and gun violence, mouthing the old and ridiculous trope of “Guns don’t kill people, people do.” (To which an appropriate response is “Guns don’t die from gun violence, people do.”)
Those who want no change in the gun laws aren’t offering meaningful solutions to the problem of gun violence, save the ineffectual claim that we need better treatment for mental illness. In their hearts, I think, they want things to remain the same as they have been in America. By that I don’t mean that gun lovers want these mass killings to continue, nor that they don’t care about the victims, but simply that they’re willing to tolerate those killings as the necessary price we pay to keep our beloved guns.
But more on that in a minute.
Was the Dallas shooter mentally ill? Micah Xavier Johnson killed five police officers and wounded nine other people before an explosive-laden robot killed him. Immediately after the massacre, as with other shootings, people began characterizing Johnson as mentally ill. President Obama agreed: in the video above you’ll see him say that Johnson was “demented,” had a “troubled mind,” was a “troubled individual”, and he calls other similar killers “madmen.”
This is confusing and unproductive, in several ways. First, it’s simply tautological to characterize every mass shooter as mentally ill simply because of his actions. Many of them would not have been judged “demented” or “mentally ill” before they committed their acts. Anders Breivik, the Norwegian who killed 70 people, was first exculpated by a team of forensic psychiatrists because they deemed him mentally ill. The public reaction was so strong against this that the court convened yet another team of psychiatrists, who duly found him sane and in the grip of an extremist ideology. He was found guilty and sentenced to 21 years in jail.
The “insanity” clause thus causes repeated problems for our legal system, because of course there’s no objective line between “sane” and “mentally ill.” My own solution to this is simply to have a judge or jury determine if the accused did the crime, and then have a panel of experts decide what kind of treatment/incarceration would be best for the individual and for society. In such a case we can dispense with the “insanity” defense.
Further, the easy resort to calling someone like Johnson a “madman” allows people to neglect the possibility that ideological factors and not insanity motivated murders, whether those factors be white supremacy, a hatred of whites, or an anti-Western Islamist theology. If we’re to prevent these acts, or at least treat those who commit them, we need a fuller understanding of what makes people act as they do. I’m convinced, for instance (though others are not), that radical Islamism plays a large role in many acts of terrorism. Obama said this:
“I think the danger is that we somehow suggest that the act of a troubled individual speaks to some larger political statement across the country. It doesn’t… The demented individual who carried out the attacks in Dallas is no more representative of African Americans than the shooter in Charleston was representative of white Americans or the shooters in Orlando or San Bernardino were representative of muslims. They don’t speak for us.”
He’s right that these shooters aren’t representative of the racial, religious, or national groups to which they belong. But they may be representative of strains of Islam, or strains of racism and bigotry, that promote violence. While Obama meant well when he made that statement, it serves to efface (deliberately) any political, racial, or religious motivations for mass murder.
The oversimplification [imputing mass shootings to severe mental illness], experts say, is perpetuated by the gun industry and a society that assumes that the mentally ill are the only ones capable of deadly rampages. Now, with the White House and Congress prioritizing an overhaul of the mental-health system to try to curtail mass shootings and gun violence, critics say the country is chasing an expensive and potentially counterproductive cure on the basis of the wrong diagnosis.
“It would be ridiculous to hope that doing something about the mental-health system will stop these mass murders,” said Michael Stone, a forensic psychiatrist at the Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons and author of “The Anatomy of Evil,” which examines the personalities of brutal killers. “It’s really folly.”
The rehabilitation of these people, once arrested, could of course use psychiatric techniques or treatment, but that doesn’t presume that the killers are mentally ill. (How many readers have had therapy? Are all of you as mentally ill as shooters are said to be? I didn’t think so.)
Will stopping the proliferation of guns reduce gun violence? This seems self-evident to me: if weapons are easy to get, they’ll be used more often in homicides, suicides, or accidental shootings. But of course gun lovers can’t bring themselves to admit this. “Guns keep us safe,” they say, despite the fact that the U.S. is the First World nation in which you’re most likely to die from gun violence.
So kudos to Obama for saying that guns are a big factor in killings like those in Dallas (and on the part of the police, too, who wouldn’t need to be armed if the citizenry wasn’t). As he said in his response to Kathleen Hennessey:
“With respect to the issue of guns, I am going to keep on talking about the fact that we cannot eliminate all racial tension overnight. We are not going to be able to identify… every madman or troubled individual who might want to do harm against innocent people. But we can make it harder for them to do so.”
. . . We are unique among advanced countries in the scale of violence we experience. I’m not just talking about mass shootings, I’m talking about the hundreds of people already shot this year in my hometown of Chicago — the ones we just consider routine. We may not see that issue as connected to Dallas but part of what’s creating tensions… [is] that police have a really difficult time in communities where they know guns are everywhere. If you care about the safety of our police officers, you can’t set aside the gun issue and pretend that’s irrelevant.”
Only a lame-duck president can get away with saying something like this. Otherwise the NRA will fight hard to defeat you at re-election time.
I was pleased to see Adam Gopnik forthrightly addressing the problem of guns in a new New Yorker piece, “The horrific, predictable result of a widely armed citizenry.” “Predictable” is right, and why I argue above that the gun lovers are willing to tolerate the violence of American society as the price of owning guns. It’s a reprehensible attitude, and one that Gopnik deplores. I’ll finish with an excerpt from his excellent short piece:
A black man with a concealed weapon should be no more liable to be killed than a white man with one. But having a nation of men carrying concealed lethal weapons pretty much guarantees that there will be lethal results, an outcome only made worse by our toxic racial history. Last night’s tragedy was also the grotesque reductio ad absurdum of the claim that it takes a good guy with a gun to stop a bad guy with a gun. There were nothing but good guys and they had nothing but guns, and five died anyway, as helpless as the rest of us.
Once again, the difference in policy views is clear, and can be coolly stated: those who insist on the right to concealed weapons, to the open carrying of firearms, to the availability of military weapons—to the essentially unlimited dissemination of guns—guarantee that the murders will continue. They have no plan to end them, except to return fire, with results we know. The people who don’t want the regulations that we know will help curb (not end) violent acts and help make them rare (not non-existent) have reconciled themselves to the mass murder of police officers, as well as of innocent men and women during traffic stops and of long, ghostly rows of harmless civilians and helpless children. The country is now clearly divided among those who want the killings and violence to stop and those who don’t. In the words of the old activist song, which side are you on?
I’m on the “let’s get rid of guns” side. And I’m always horrified when some readers argue that we must have our weapons. Seriously?
It’s only 5 p.m. on Monday, but so far over the 3-day Memorial Day weekend, Friday until now, 60 people have been shot in Chicago. Five of them were killed, including a 15-year old girl—”collateral damage” from gang violence. I wonder how many people were shot by those claiming self-defense against trespassers or muggers?
More than ever, and especially in Chicago, we have to get guns out of the hands of private citizens.
This clip, which draws a continuum of authoritarianism between the Ammon Bundy Gang and the entitled Demanders at Yale University, aired just yesterday on Bill Maher’s “Real Time” show. It’s one of the better segments I’ve seen lately, and contains two classic lines:
“[This] is what these days they call a “microaggression,” which begs the question: if it is a microaggression, shouldn’t it just make you micro-angry?”
and, even better,
“It’s the government’s job to protect a lot of things, but your feelings ain’t one of them.”
Well, Maher misuses the phrase “begs the question” (he should have said “raises the question”), but that’s okay, for that phrase is almost never used correctly (see here for proper usage).