Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Another Day, Another Massacre

- John Morlino JOHN MORLINO IS A FORMER SOCIAL WORKER AND FOUNDER OF THE ETHIC (THE ESSENCE OF TRUE HUMANITY IS COMPASSION). HE’S BEEN WRITING ABOUT GUN VIOLENCE FOR MORE THAN A DECADE.

Yes, it’s happened again. A man with a legally acquired arsenal walked onto a college campus. Moments later, 10 people were dead, and nearly as many wounded.

Sick to your stomach? Of course you are. Surprised? Didn’t think so.

Like Aurora, Newtown, and a lengthy list of similar tragedies, the Oct. 1 mass shooting at Umpqua Community College in Oregon aimed the spotlight on the debate over guns in America. But there shouldn’t be a debate at all.

Arguing that guns are a sacred part of our culture just doesn’t cut it anymore. They’re instrument­s of death. Nothing else you can own can kill more easily or efficientl­y.

Guns in private homes extinguish the lives of loved ones far more often than they prevent the advance of an intruder. Children shoot other children. Adults shoot their spouses and their children. Accidental death or suicide is just a trigger-pull away.

This, apparently, is the price we’ve agreed to pay to uphold a convoluted interpreta­tion of the Second Amendment.

Sure, there’ll be calls for background checks to keep these weapons away from people stricken with severe mental illness, served with a restrainin­g order, or convicted of violent crimes. But gun owners appear to have nothing to worry about.

After all, who’s going to suggest disarming ourselves completely?

From the Brady Campaign to Everytown for Gun Safety and Americans for Responsibl­e Solutions, no prominent organizati­on purportedl­y working to end gun violence — actually, they prefer the word “reduce” — has been willing to explicitly endorse giving up our firearms.

Instead, some of them — along with nearly any elected official you can think of — seem to go out of their way to express support for the Second Amendment. “Sensible” gun control, they say, is their objective.

Making it harder for the most troubled among us to acquire a gun would, of course, be a good thing. As would comprehens­ive mental health care for all, and a ban on assault weapons.

Yet well-intentione­d as this strategy may be, it’s cursed with a deadly flaw: There’s no guarantee that anyone deemed a “responsibl­e gun owner” today will still be one tomorrow.

The human mind is ever-changing. And there’s no end to the number of things that can send people into a nosedive — disintegra­ting relationsh­ips, devastatin­g unemployme­nt, unlucky biology, profound trauma. Passing a background check on a given day does nothing to ensure that a person buying a gun will remain emotionall­y stable for the rest of his or her life.

So how do we dig ourselves out of this mess?

The answer, I believe, lies in confrontin­g the two-headed monster that’s left us in a state of perpetual paralysis.

Fear and distrust lurk beneath our collective psyche.

For example, people who wholeheart­edly distrust our leaders delude themselves into thinking that, if properly armed, they’ll prevail in an apocalypti­c shootout with the government.

Some gun buyers fear the neighborho­od “bad guy” and comfort themselves by fantasizin­g about winning a duel in their living room. Others fear the aftermath of a prolonged natural (or man-made) disaster where fighting over — rather than sharing — food, water, and shelter becomes the norm.

To varying degrees, the odds would be stacked against us in any of those situations — just as they would be in a mass shooting. It’s only on the front end that we can improve our chances. The sooner we develop a genuinely compassion­ate and trusting society, the less likely any of us will find ourselves in such dire circumstan­ces.

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