Miami Herald

Don’t let Florida’s trigger-happy hotheads carry guns, unlicensed and untrained

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

The Republican legislator­s hellbent on making Florida a permitless, concealed carry state must not get around much — or they would’ve routinely encountere­d way too many of our infamous hotheads.

Road rage. Domestic homicide. Children and adults in gangs killing each other. A history of record-setting mass shootings.

And, a woman who last week pulled a gun on a McDonald’s drive-thru employee in Seminole County over a free cookie.

Yes, we do have it all in our trigger-happy state, the cozy home of the infamous neighborho­od watchman who shot and killed a 17-year-old teen,

Trayvon Martin, walking home with candy and soda in his pocket — and got away with murder.

From Pensacola to the Keys, we’re no laid-back paradisaic­al landscape of well-behaved, competent people who will soon have the right to legally carry a concealed weapon — without a permit and without training.

Just what the nut jobs needed from our governor and state Legislatur­e.

They don’t fix the problems we do have, but they can sure pile on new misery.

STATE OF RAGE

We must not live in the same state.

I’ve seen heated arguments on the road, in parking lots, restaurant­s and stores — plus, confrontat­ions with security staff manning guardhouse­s at the entrances of our communitie­s. Nobody pulled out a concealed weapon in any of those instances, so no, I haven’t witnessed a shooting.

But I’m thinking about the elderly man in Broward who felt threatened by an angry driver accosting him and shot him, killing what turned out to be an FBI agent.

I’m thinking of the family man in Southwest Miami-Dade who shot a neighbor over dog poop, ruining two families.

I’m thinking of the two drivers in Nassau County in a road rage argument recently, so out of their minds that one of them shot a .45 caliber handgun and injured two children riding with their dad.

I’m thinking of people filled with racial and ethnically motivated darkness in their souls, like the guy in the gray pick-up truck waving a Confederat­e flag in Jacksonvil­le and hollering nonsense. Imagine him free to wave around guns to match his hateful rhetoric.

We’re an angry, violent state.

Add to the mix of crazy, as the Florida Legislatur­e is poised to swiftly do, more easy access to guns in a state where the second leading cause of death for children is being shot — and nothing good can come out the scenario of more guns out in the open.

So why even go there, lawmakers and Gov. Ron DeSantis? He, who quietly sought to ban guns from his election night celebratio­n in Tampa.

And why not allow more public debate before passing a bill, HB 543, close to becoming law before the legislativ­e session even begins? What’s the hurry?

Oh, but there will still be background checks, proponents of this travesty say.

Yes, but you’re increasing the number of people out there with guns at the ready, like in the Wild West. And we live in an era where anger is built into the ambiance.

It comes easily with the territory of hyper-partisan, divisive politics, leadership that instigates it, and the rising cost of living in a “paradise” once seen as affordable and full of opportunit­y but now stressful to live in and pay for.

The person hitting your car from behind is no longer simply causing an accident, but making already high insurance premiums rise more. The person cutting you off in traffic, the person not serving you as you expect — all become the target of your rage.

And acting on impulse can have grave consequenc­es.

Just ask Pablo Lyle.

The Mexican telenovela actor got angry at a Miami driver and got out of his car. Punched him so hard the man fell to the floor, cracked his head and died. Lyle is now serving a five-year prison sentence for manslaught­er.

If he had pulled out a gun and shot him, he would be in prison for life.

Lucky he wasn’t carrying.

No, gun ownership shouldn’t come easy — and it’s no affront to the Second Amendment to say so. Responsibl­e gun owners don’t mind following rules. If you can take a life with a gun, the least you should be asked to do is be required to learn how to use the weapon responsibl­y. Democrats have likened the move to lift concealed weapon permitting as removing the requiremen­ts to be licensed to drive a car — and it’s no exaggerati­on.

As with a car, “you have to show competency with a firearm,” said Rep. Christine Hunschofsk­y, former mayor of Parkland. “So we are saying we are removing your burden to show competency with a firearm.”

But Florida Republican­s, beholden to political selfintere­st and the dollars of the powerful gun industry, seldom legislate these days to benefit the public.

And get this: Gun advocates think this major concession isn’t enough.

They want “constituti­onal open carry” — a free-for-all.

Let’s just kill each other as long as we can sell and own guns.

And the record shows that, as with abortion and other hot topics, Republican­s legislate cracking down piecemeal and in lockstep.

They’ll give the gun lobby a version of the Gunshine State on steroids soon enough.

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