The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Are mass shootings a ‘mental-health problem?’

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“This isn’t a guns situation,” President Trump said after the horrific slaughter in a rural Texas church. “This is a mental health problem at the highest level.”

In one sense, that’s true. This long, depressing string of mass shootings should force us to acknowledg­e that there must be a cold romance in this evil, in evil so unthinkabl­e and outrageous that a dangerous few will be drawn to commit it, if the means are available.

One walks into a quiet country church during worship hour, dressed in black tactical gear and armed with an assault weapon, to mow down parishione­rs as young as 18 months. Another walks into church Bible study to kill black people, another into a Connecticu­t elementary school to slaughter grade-schoolers; yet another into a Vegas hotel to set up a sniper’s nest in the 32nd floor, looking down upon tens of thousands of people and then killing and wounding more than 500 in a matter of minutes ...

Yes, there is undoubtedl­y a mental-health component to the problem.

However, that framing is also misleading. It implies that if it’s a mental-health problem, then there must be a mental-health solution. And even a cursory attempt to think through the problem tells us that there is not. The idea that we are somehow going to pre-identify these people, that once they’re identified we’re going to deny them access to weapons of mass destructio­n in a society that is awash in such tools — it’s nonsense. The argument that this is a mental-health problem is an argument for doing nothing, for simply accepting this carnage as a fact of modern life. Personally, I do not accept that.

If the indiscrimi­nate slaughter of large numbers of people has become a means of expression for those drawn to evil, then let’s address the tools they use to make these fantasies real, that partly inspire them to do so. I firmly believe that the immense, military-grade firepower now available at the pull of a trigger finger is itself part of the intoxicati­on, part of the power that fuels this madness. It offers an exhilarati­on among those predispose­d to such evil that firearms lethal on a less grand scale do not.

Historians of mankind as a tool-making species speak of something called the “technologi­cal imperative.” Basically, the imperative argues that if a tool gives human beings the power to do something, somebody will do it. We will drive and text while driving, even if it’s not smart, because we can. We will rearrange our own genetic code, because we can; we will blow each other up with nuclear weapons, because we can. And if the power to kill large numbers of people in a short amount of time is placed in enough hands? That power will be used.

In most cases, we have learned to erect legal barricades to the abuse of machines and tools, to contain the technologi­cal imperative. So it seems madness to suggest that there must be one form of technology that is exempt from such regulation, especially when its primary function is to kill man.

Why choose that one form of technology to be placed above all others? That is not what the Second Amendment requires of us, not as it was designed by the Founders and not as the courts have interprete­d it. These high-capacity assault weapons are not constituti­onally protected weapons of self-defense, and they aren’t being used for that purpose, yet we do nothing? In that sense, maybe this really is “a mental-health problem at the highest level.”

 ?? He writes for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. ??
He writes for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

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