School Killers
"Wouldnt it be great if everybody had a gun
Wouldnt it be great if everybody had a gun
Nobodyd ever get shot
Cause everybodyd have a gun
Wouldnt it be great if everybody had a gun"
- The Arrogant Worms
"
our whole school year is ruined.'' -- student Casey Brackley
Im never sure what goes through the mind of Charlton Heston at a moment like
this.
Charlton Heston is the president of the National Rifle Association. It is the stated
aim of the NRA to prevent the slightest legal restriction from being imposed upon the
ownership of almost any type of gun. Im not exaggerating.
A naïve person might think that the NRA doesnt know where to "draw the
line". The NRA doesnt think automatic or semi-automatic assault rifles should
be outlawed. It doesnt think you should have to wait a day or two when you apply to
get a handgun. It doesnt think you should be held responsible if you leave a loaded
gun sitting around somewhere and a child picks it up and accidentally kills another child.
It is quite comfortable with the fact that you can get 30 years in prison for possession
of five ounces of marijuana, but not even one day, if you happen to shoot someone who
walks up your driveway one evening to ask directions, or if you happen to shoot your own
daughter to death because she decided to hide in a closet and scare you when you came home
late one evening.
The NRA has a very strong presence in Colorado. Right at this very moment, the Colorado
State Legislature is considering a law that would make it legal to carry a concealed
handgun. Charlton Hestons boysI am not kidding are already arguing that
if only a teacher had had a concealed handgun, he could have put a stop the carnage
immediately.
If a manufacturer made a product that was so defective that it caused injury or death,
the lawyers would descend like flies and there would be billions of dollars in lawsuits.
Ive never understood why the parents of children who are killed by other children
using guns that were stored carelessly or not at all don't sue.
In the past several years, two children were killed in Pearl, Mississippi, five in
Jonesboro, Arkansas, three in Moses Lake, Washington, two in Springfield, Oregon, and
three in West Paducah, Kentucky. In almost all cases, they were killed by young males
using weapons easily obtained from careless relatives or friends. I have not heard of a
single lawsuit launched against the owners of the guns.
The law requires seatbelts in cars, pets on leashes, and litter in bags. For some
bizarre reason, Americans have chosen to award special status to the gun. If you dropped
it in a park, you could not be charged with littering. If you made the trigger so
sensitive that a fart would set it off, you could not be subject to a safety inspection.
If you sold it to a half-witted naked dwarf with a noose around his neck, you could not be
held liable for anything.
I am also baffled by the police. Whenever a cop is killed in the line of duty, there is
a massive funeral, with tributes to the courage, selflessness, determination, and virtue
of the slain officers. But the 911 call from Columbine High School came at 11:30. Police
arrived within minutes but did not enter the building until 12:30. They proceeded slowly,
checking every knapsack and desk for bombs, and did not reach the library, where they
found the bodies of the two killers, until 4:00 p.m. Clearly, some of the wounded
teenagers died between 11:30 and 4:00 p.m. I dont understand why they were left
lying there, mortally wounded, while the police "secured" the perimeter.
Well, I do understand. The police were operating on the basis of conventional
military strategy: you secure the area, quadrant by quadrant, before proceeding to the
primary objective. That's why they were in no hurry to stop the shooting.
That's why the students fleeing the building were practically arrested.
I dont get it. Where was the courage and determination? There were hundreds of
police surrounding the building, including agents from the FBI and the Bureau of Firearms,
Tobacco, and Alcohol, yet two children with guns held a school of 1800 hostage. Were they
thinking Waco?
When students were able to leave the building, the suddenly powerful and courageous
police made them hold their hands up and chased them into a corner or lined them up
against a wall so they could be frisked. Did they really think that the killers would try
to escape with a gaggle of terrorized cheerleaders? It looked like Attica on television.
It bothered me a lot. Some kids dress up in black and come into your school with guns and
start shooting the place up. You think youve escaped, but then men dressed in black
with guns make you put your hands on your heads and line up against a wall. Who decided
that this procedure was suitable?
CNN, right after showing us the results of the carnage in Colorado, showed us some of
the carnage in Kosovo. It left an indelible impression: man is a killer.
So, Charlton Heston, where are you now? How come you arent on CNN telling us that
this is all the result of rock music or feminism or homosexual rights or declining morals
or communist infiltration, and that guns have nothing to do with it?
Charlton would probably tell us that if only some of the victims had been
armed
And if you could ignore the past and the future and concentrate purely on the moment
the two boys appeared in the cafeteria with their weapons and their empty grimaces, you
might have a point. And then you would come to your senses and ask yourself if we are
better off with everyone having a gun, or with no one having a gun.
How extreme is the NRA? They make it easy for us liberals. We dont even have to
argue that guns should be banned, to get the NRA upset. All we have to do is argue that
guns should come with a child-proof lock, like aspirin containers, and that guns should be
electronically disabled until the owner has entered his very own personal identification
number. The NRA become apoplectic at the very suggestion!
Charlton Heston once played Moses, in the movie "The Ten Commandments", one
of the worst of the big-budget spectacles Hollywood liked to foist on us in the
1950s and early 60s. "The Ten Commandments" bore little resemblance
to the real story in Genesis, just as the NRAs vision of reality bears little
resemblance to anything but a Hollywood spectacle.
Charlton Heston can shrug. It was just an unfortunate incident. I don't
think God shrugs.
Copyright © 1999 Bill Van Dyk All rights
reserved. |