We Are Sick About Guns.

It's difficult to find the words that adequately describe our feelings on first learning of the massacre of 19 children and two teachers in Texas last week. Shock, fear, even nausea, and then disgust at the realisation that this nightmare was playing out again. The next day's papers were filled with graphs and charts showing how many mass shootings, school massacres, and gun homicides we've had, and how many guns are owned by civilians (400,000,000+). Bottom line: We own more guns and have a higher per-capita murder rate and mass causality events annually-by far-than any other country on earth.

No matter how many outrages we endure, we know in our hearts that nothing will be done. We are resigned to live with fear, knowing the nightmare will return. We are a sick country. Our debates on gun violence are deranged and pathetic. Republicans and some Democrats, fearful of the gun lobby's crosshairs, refuse to act, arguing that the unfettered right to own weapons is sacred. The solution to gun violence, they argue, is more guns. With legislation to ban assault weapons or place limits on gun purchases routinely defeated, Democrats have either given up or been reduced to offering weak proposals. The result: Each new tragedy gives birth to short-lived horror, some finger-pointing, a half-hearted attempt to pass some limited reforms, and then failure. The reality is deeper than policies or legislation, beyond the sophistication of our guns or their sheer number. The root problem is our sick 'gun culture.'

My generation grew up playing 'cowboys and Indians' or 'cops and robbers.' If we didn't have cap pistols or toy rifles, we improvised with a pointed finger, a thumb trigger, and 'pow, pow, you're dead.' My grandchildren act out more fanciful tales of fantasy futuristic heroes, possessing more potent weapons, but will make do, when needed, with sticks or fingers as weapons possessed of all sorts of destructive powers. The video games and movies they watch and play are largely based on killing-so much so that it has become normalised. From cradle to grave we're fed a steady diet of guns and violence. From cartoons and video games to cop shows and Quentin Tarantino's 'bullet and blood fests,' guns and killing...

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