That there is a change in the
air is evident this time. Since the mass school shooting in Parkland,
Florida on February 14, there have been demonstrations by school kids,
their parents and others, confrontations of politicians including the
president, and a general feeling that enough is enough.
The most prominent opposition to gun control, the National Rifle Association (NRA) is not
quite
able to stir up its supporters this time. Its president, Wayne LaPierre, got only a muted response to his frequent line, "the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is with a good guy with a gun."
Donald
Trump's response to the crisis certainly takes that page from
LaPierre's book; Mr. Trump wants to arm school teachers. In this 'Wild
West' scenario, Trump's schools become a battlefield. Guns for
teachers, if they actually agree to them, will be headline news. And
forewarned, prospective shooters are more than likely to wear body armor
(as a previous mass shooter did) to be protected from teachers'
pistols. It also invites the terrible possibility some school teacher, disturbed of course, shoots up her own class.
Look at the United States. With 5 percent of the world's population,it has 31 percent of global mass shooters 42 percent of the world's privately owned guns. the Second Amendment is likely to preclude laws comparable to those enacted in Australia. There remains the slim, very slim, possibility of the courts reviewing the relevance of the Second Amendment in an age of heavy tanks, artillery, even nuclear weapons. Still, more can be done than has been so far at the Federal level.
After Sandy Hook, where a gunman in 2012 killed 20 little children and 6 adults
at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut, protests and outrage
led to attempts to pass laws in Congress. But the NRA lobby was much
too powerful and they were blocked.
If Australia's response stopped mass shootings, what about the U.S.? Since Sandy Hook there have been over 1600 mass shootings
-- a mass killing is defined as a single incident causing the death of
three or more persons. Moreover, these comprise less than 2 percent of
firearm deaths. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates 33,594 gun deaths in 2014 of which 263 were in a mass shooting.
running
at almost one a day, these mass shootings are so common as to mostly go
unreported unless the number of dead are high enough, or the incident
has community impact, or the perpetrator carries a whiff of terrorism
because of his faith.
Meanwhile,
Donald Trump's wet-noodle response, which he characterized as strong
and others might consider risible, will do next to nothing ... until
another mass shooting presses the replay button and the Kabuki dance is
repeated.
.