Kuwait Times

Americans and their guns: It’s complicate­d

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From muskets to machine guns, Americans have a relationsh­ip with firearms that is as old - and as complicate­d - as the country itself. That intimate connection with guns is under renewed scrutiny after the worst mass shooting in recent US history left 58 people dead in Las Vegas. The United States is a nation born of a bloody revolution, scarred by a grisly Civil War and decimation of the native population and reared on tales of rugged Wild West heroes.

Guns are a big part of the story. “I don’t think we’re alone in the world in loving guns but clearly Americans have a fascinatio­n with guns and love their guns,” said Adam Winkler, author of “Gunfight: The Battle Over the Right to Bear Arms in America”. “I think it may stem, in part, from the fact that we’re a country that idealizes the founding, where armed revolution­aries decided to fight against a tyrannical government,” said Winkler, a professor of constituti­onal law at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). “We’re also a nation whose identity is very much tied up with things like the Wild West and the Frontier where there was definitely a gun culture,” he told AFP.

“The gun has a more or less central place in the national mythology,” agreed A J Somerset, whose book “Arms: The Culture and Credo of the Gun” also examined gun ownership in the United States. “The whole mythology that comes out of the American Revolution places the rifle front and center,” said Somerset, a gun owner himself and former member of the Canadian armed forces. But it wasn’t until several decades after the 1775-1783 American Revolution that the gun really became a national symbol, Somerset said. ‘A gun was a tool’ “In the middle of the 19th century, you had this sudden burst of innovation in firearms that gives you the Colt revolver, the breechload­ing rifle, which leads to the repeating rifle, the Winchester, and so on,” he said. “This revolution in firearms technology happens to coincide with the great period of American westward expansion,” Somerset said in a telephone interview. “And it’s at that point that the country really starts to make a myth out of its relationsh­ip with the gun.”

There are currently more than 300 million guns in the United States - more than one per American - and firearms are involved in some 30,000 deaths a year, nearly two-thirds of them suicides. About four in 10 Americans live in a home with a gun, according to a June survey by the Pew Research Center, with 67 percent of gun owners saying self-protection is a major reason for having a firearm.

Owning a gun is seen by many Americans as a fundamenta­l right enshrined in the Second Amendment to the US Constituti­on which states: “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.”

For the early Americans, “a gun was a tool,” said David Courtwrigh­t, a history professor at the University of North Florida and author of “Violent Land: Single Men and Social Disorder from the Frontier to the Inner City.” “If you were a cowboy on a cattle drive you might pull out a gun and shoot a rattlesnak­e,” Courtwrigh­t said. “It was a rare household on the frontier that was not equipped with some kind of a firearm and some people think that legacy still plays out (today),” he said.

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