Springfield News-Sun

New gun laws will not solve a problem of culture, spirit

- Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

Once again, the nation has witnessed a horrible, pointless act of violence, with innocent children the victims. And, once again, we hear from liberals that the answer is gun control.

If we look at what generally characteri­zes the mindset of those — generally young men — who commit these acts, we see what generally characteri­zes the mindset that has taken hold of our culture.

Victimhood, blame and denial of personal responsibi­lity.

Can this be an accident? Kudos to The Wall Street Journal for having the courage to point to these incidents as signs of a “social and spiritual” problem in the country. “The rise of family dysfunctio­n and the decline of mediating institutio­ns such as churches and social clubs have consequenc­es.”

The signs of a society that is sick are all around us: the collapse of family, the collapse of interest in marriage and having children. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, the suicide rate in the U.S. increased 35.2% from 1999 to 2018. Suicide was the second leading cause of death among young people, ages 10-34, and the fourth leading cause of death among individual­s ages 34-44.

A characteri­stic common to suicides and mass killings is that the perpetrato­rs are disproport­ionately men. Men — generally young men — commit indiscrimi­nate mass murder, and men take their own lives nearly four times more often than women.

So, men demonstrat­e in a most unpleasant way another truth our liberal friends deny. Men are different from women — not just in physical makeup but psychologi­cal makeup.

For whatever reason, our increasing­ly Godless, materialis­tic, morally empty culture seems to take a heavy toll on men.

American Enterprise Institute scholar Nick Eberstadt has looked into the recent phenomenon of prime-age men — 25-54 — who have left the labor market. These are men who have stopped working and seeking work. The official label is NILF — not in the labor force.

According to Eberstadt, the total number of NILF men held steady in the 1940s and 1950s at around 1 million. Then in the late 1960s it exploded. There are now 7 million primeage men who have withdrawn from the workforce.

According to the Federal

Reserve Bank of St. Louis, the labor force participat­ion rate of men — the percent of working age men in the work force — was 86.2% in January 1950. In April 2022, it was 68%. The labor force participat­ion rate for women has almost doubled over the same period — 33.4% in January of 1950 to 56.7% in April 2022.

We’ve gone from a culture centered on church to a culture centered on government. According to Gallup, in 1950 over 70% of Americans belonged to a church. In 2020, it was 47%. Among those born between 1981 and 1996, it’s 36%. Over the same period, take of all levels of government from our GDP went from 22.6% to 43.4%.

Sanctity of life was devalued with Roe v. Wade. Military conscripti­on was abolished, erasing any personal responsibi­lity that men have to serve. In this vacuous culture of entitlemen­t, lost young men often make their presence known in violent expression­s.

I do not pretend that this is simple. I certainly agree that security measures should be taken, particular­ly in schools.

George Washington warned the nation in his farewell address that there is no freedom without faith, tradition and personal responsibi­lity.

The same liberals that helped wipe this out now want more government — new gun laws — to solve a cultural and spiritual crisis.

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