The Reporter (Vacaville)

Is our problem gun control, or representa­tive democracy?

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Think about it this way: There is no army or police department in any halfway civilized country — not even the United States — that would allow an untrained, callow 18-yearold boy like the Uvalde, Texas, school shooter to wear a uniform and carry an AR15 assault rifle. Not one. Nowhere on Earth. And yet, the state of Texas allows somebody like him, a manchild legally ineligible to buy a six-pack of beer, to walk into a gun shop and arm himself to slaughter a schoolroom full of fourth graders. No license, no registrati­on, no training, no background checks, no nothing.

A person needs all of the above, plus liability insurance, to drive away with a motorcycle. But an AR-15? No problem. Just step right up and lay the cash on the counter. You, too, can be a mass murderer.

Texas Republican­s pretty much responded by rote. “The Republican Party makes excuses every time for why this or that act couldn't have been prevented,” The New Republic editor Michael Tomasky writes, “and we must therefore do nothing.”

Our freedom, we're told, depends upon it.

Actually, of course, it's the other way around. Unhinged people shooting up American cities, towns, supermarke­ts, churches and schools are turning us all into hostages, depriving us of the most elementary kinds of freedom.

In Little Rock, where I live, a 7-year-old girl was shot to death the other day just opposite the fitness center I frequent. The child was on her way to visit the zoo with her mother. Wrong place, wrong time. The police report called the killing an “isolated incident involving two acquaintan­ces engaged in an apparent dispute.” A humdrum event.

Nationally, the heart of the problem is that a minority cult of Second Amendment fetishists has persuaded itself that the only answer to anarchic murder is more guns.

Arm the teachers, they say, envisionin­g firefights in fourth grade classrooms. Barricade school buildings. Hire SWAT teams to protect churches and grocery stores. Do anything but put sane limits on who can own what firearms, and under what circumstan­ces they can use them.

One of the great mysteries of American life is how the rest of us have allowed them to get away with it. We have acted as if, to paraphrase a famous line from Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, the nation had turned “the constituti­onal Bill of Rights into a suicide pact.”

Here's the Second Amendment in its entirety: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed.” Of course, no rights are absolute. Possibly you noticed the phrase “well regulated.” Also “militia.” Through legalistic flimflam, the Supreme Court's right-wing majority has turned the Second Amendment's meaning upside-down. Neverthele­ss, opinion polls show that large majorities of the public support broad, commonsens­e reforms that would go a long way toward restoring a degree of sanity.

Pew polling found that significan­t majorities of Americans support background checks (81%), an assault-weapons ban (63%), and a majority also opposes high-capacity magazines and concealed carry of weapons without a permit.

Amen to all that.

The big problem, however, is also found in the U.S. Constituti­on. Regardless of majority opinion, many gun fetishists are single-issue voters disproport­ionately concentrat­ed in small, rural states that hold outsized power in the U.S. Senate.

The power of rural states in the Senate, combined with the filibuster rule that prevents any law from passing that offends an impassione­d minority, have made real gun reforms impossible.

The great majority nationwide are sickened by these recurring mass shooting atrocities and want something done. We're also fed up with the posturing of the National Rifle Associatio­n and the politician­s who take its money and its orders. A society that can't act to protect itself from outrages like Uvalde is no longer a democracy in any meaningful sense.

A society that can't act to protect itself from outrages like Uvalde, with changes that are popular in polls, is no longer a democracy in any meaningful sense.

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