Qatar Tribune

Don’t Take Your Guns To Town

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THE power and security promised by guns have always enticed young people especially young men. But the allure of guns is based on lies. Guns are more likely to endanger people than to protect them, especially young people who are not trained to use them.

Much of the recent gun violence in and around Pittsburgh has involved teenagers, both as shooters and victims. The Easter Sunday North Side Airbnb shootings took place at an underage party the murdered boys, Matthew Steffy-Ross and aiden Brown, were both 17. It’s likely the shooters were high school age as well.

Less than a week later, police arrested a 1 -year-old Mc ees Rocks boy for shooting a 15-year-old. In the house where the arrest occurred, there were three handguns, two bricks of heroin, and more than 2,000 in cash.

Mc eesport. Homewood. Allentown. Brookline. All places where teens have been gunned down in the last 12 months, often by their peers. Of the 5 people killed by guns in Pittsburgh last year, 15 were children, the Post-Gazette has reported.

In 2020, firearms overtook auto accidents as the leading cause of death in children, with over , 00 fatalities, about 10 of all gun-related deaths, research published by the New England ournal of Medicine shows.

Pittsburgh police and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives found that about half of the guns recovered from juveniles are stolen at least 1 in 10 are unregister­ed, privately made “ghost guns.” These guns are in constant demand on the black market, fueling the supply chain.

Teenagers are strapped to protect themselves. Given the violence in the community, it’s easy to understand why packing a gun becomes routine. Guns become status symbols, but their proliferat­ion puts everyone at risk.

Caitlin McNulty, executive director of Brookline Teen Outreach, said young people tell her that carrying a gun makes them “feel in control,” with power to handle chaotic circumstan­ces. She and her staff try to convince them that carrying guns has the opposite effect.

With so many guns on the street, their power and potency will overwhelm a child. The promise of power and security descends into anxiety and distrust. Everyone becomes a potentiall­y deadly threat.

Vows to use guns only in self-defense are forgotten when the immature mind is forced to fight or flee.

ohnny Cash captured this psychology perfectly in his 1958 hit, “Don’t Take Your Guns to Town.” Billy oe defies his mother and carries his guns to the saloon, promising not to shoot without cause. When an older cowboy mocks him, however, he feels he has to defend his honor and reaches for his pistol. “But the stranger drew his gun and fired before he even saw.”

Enlightene­d gun control policies can alleviate the carnage, but they won’t eliminate the culture of violence. Schools and other institutio­ns need to present kids with credible voices voices of experience from the streets who can show them the promise and allure of guns are lies. Until then, the cycle of violence will continue.

 ?? ?? Investigat­ors evaluate the scene of a shooting at an Airbnb rental property in the 800 block of Suismon Street.
Investigat­ors evaluate the scene of a shooting at an Airbnb rental property in the 800 block of Suismon Street.

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