The Mercury News

UC firearms researcher says we are flirting with disaster

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Guns, violence and political extremism are on the rise. And America risks disaster — sooner than later.

That’s the view of a longtime University of California firearms researcher whose hard-hitting report was published last week in the journal Injury Epidemiolo­gy.

“Upward trends in firearm purchasing, violence and political extremism are converging to put the USA at risk for disaster in the months ahead,” Garen Wintemute warned in introducin­g the report. “We have no time to waste if we are to prevent the loss of thousands of lives and emerge with our democracy intact.”

Those are strong and alarming words, particular­ly from an academic researcher.

Wintemute, 69, is director of the California Firearms Violence Research Center at UC Davis. He has been studying gun violence for nearly 40 years, and his research has provided the impetus for several major gun control bills in the state Legislatur­e. He’s also an emergency room physician whose obsession with firearms violence grew from his constant treatment of gunshot wounds.

“The risk of major political violence is higher now than at any other time in my lifetime,” said Bob Shrum, a former Democratic consultant who is director of the Center for the Political Future at USC.

“We see members of Congress talking about using violence or excusing the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on. That attack on the nation’s Capitol was unpreceden­ted in our modern history. And people are rationaliz­ing the violence.”

Dan Schnur, a onetime Republican strategist who is a political science professor at USC and UC Berkeley, said: “As long as we convince each other that people who disagree with us are evil, the likelihood for violence will keep growing. The answer isn’t more gun control or more gun ownership . ... The core issue is tolerance.”

Wintemute told me that political polarizati­on, “to be honest, is the thing that concerns me the most.”

The deadly mob invasion of the Capitol was the loud volcano erupting from growing political violence — or threats of it — throughout the country.

School board meetings everywhere have become uncivilize­d battlegrou­nds over curriculum involving race and COVID-19 mask and vaccinatio­n mandates. County health officers also are under threat.

“We’ve seen attempts to create a new type of politics in which the threat of violent force drives political action, and that’s something we’ve not seen in the country for a very long time,” Wintemute said.

“That has happened simultaneo­usly with efforts to invalidate the election process, either by challengin­g the results or suppressin­g the vote.”

“Through the first nine months of 2021 … the COVID-19 pandemic and political and social instabilit­y remained dominant features of the American landscape…. The unpreceden­ted surge in firearms purchasing … shows no sign of abating and risks becoming part of a new normal for the USA . ...

“The population of gun owners is evolving rapidly. ... At least 20% are firsttime buyers.”

Meanwhile, “by spring, 2020, violence was also increasing beyond expected levels,” he continued. “Homicide rose by 27.5% in 2020 … far greater than anything seen in the past 100 years . ... In the first half of 2021, homicide rates in major cities increased another 16%.”

California saw hate crimes rise 31% last year. And crimes involving racial bias jumped 67%.

Wintemute concludes the report by pleading for citizens to heal the country.

“We all come equipped with tools for the job,” he wrote. “Each of us can publicly reject violence and say something if we see something . ... Work to reduce disparity, increase opportunit­y and build inclusive communitie­s.”

We could also beef up law enforcemen­t to counter violent idiots. And lock up lawbreaker­s to punish them and deter their pals.

Wintemute is boldly saying stuff that most people don’t like to contemplat­e because it’s so ugly and depressing. But we should listen up and open our eyes to what’s happening to America.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States