The Herald on Sunday

View from the States

Sorry President Biden, we all know that gun control is now a lost cause in this country

- By Ross Baker for USA Today

LET’S start with the fact that there are enough guns in this country so that every man, woman and child could have one.

Add to that a couple of Supreme Court decisions that enshrine gun ownership alongside freedom of speech and freedom of assembly as constituti­onally hallowed rights. On top of that is the fact that even such modest efforts at the state level to limiting access to guns to people deemed dangerous to themselves have proved ineffectiv­e.

No better example of this is the fact that the Indiana “red flag” law designed to keep guns out of the hands of mentally unstable people only temporaril­y delayed the killer of eight people in Indianapol­is from getting his hands on the weapon used to take their lives.

Gun control advocacy stands high in the ranks of lost causes and futile campaigns alongside legitimati­ng polygamy and scrapping the national anthem for something more singable.

The brief flicker of hope that somehow the financial problems of the National Rifle Associatio­n, and the profligate spending of members’ dues by one its top executives, might stifle the effectiven­ess of the opposition to even the most modest efforts to control firearms or reduce their lethality became an iridescent dream – and seemed to prove that the organizati­on itself was never much of a factor in blocking gun-control legislatio­n.

What kills such efforts in

Congress, even in the wake of the unspeakabl­e slaughter of the innocents at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012, is the recognitio­n in the minds of politician­s that there are voters in their states and districts who are Second Amendment absolutist­s, whether they be the kind of people who shoot at targets for practice or those who might shoot at people because of malice or derangemen­t.

So strong is the constituen­cy for firearms ownership in Congress that a law is on the books immunizing gun manufactur­ers and sellers from lawsuits arising out of the use of their products for mass shootings and mayhem on smaller scale. It is the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act that became effective in 2005.

The response of the gun industry has been, from a business standpoint, quite rational: Sellers give the consumers what they demand. The only limit is that they cannot manufactur­e or sell fully automatic machine guns.

As we have seen in the case of Indiana’s modest efforts to keep firearms out of the hands of potentiall­y dangerous people, enforcemen­t is easily circumvent­ed, and even the strictest state laws are at the mercy of the lax or nonexisten­t limits on gun ownership in adjacent states.

My own state of New Jersey with some of the strictest gun ownership laws in the nation is located adjacent to Pennsylvan­ia, a state with few limits on who can get access to a gun. Worse, perhaps, is the fact that Interstate 95 runs up the spine of the state and has been referred to as “the iron highway” for the brisk traffic in guns being brought into New Jersey from states to the south.

The once-plausible argument that gun ownership was somehow connected to membership in state militias was cast aside by a Supreme Court dominated by “originalis­ts” who developed historical amnesia about the Founding Fathers’ dread of standing armies and preference for “a wellregula­ted Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State,” and declared that the only operative phrase in the Second Amendment was “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed”.

This interpreta­tion of the amendment might, to some extent, be influencin­g the longest shot of all: the enlargemen­t of the Supreme Court to redress the imbalance in the number of justices that endows conservati­ves with a solid voting majority. Congress can indeed enlarge the court, but that would take a statute that would require a supermajor­ity of 60 votes, which is not currently available. It is doubtful, moreover, that even all 50 Democratic and independen­t senators would approve the enlargemen­t.

Unbalanced, vengeful or politicall­y motivated assailants armed, in many cases, with charismati­c weapons patterned on those used by the military will continue to inflict death and grievous injury on innocent people.

There is, effectivel­y, no way to stop it.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? A selection of guns on sale at a store in Colorado Springs
Photograph: AP A selection of guns on sale at a store in Colorado Springs
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