WHAT TO DO ABOUT STOPPING MASS SHOOTINGS?
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
WHAT
TO DO ABOUT STOPPING MASS SHOOTINGS?
Mass shootings continue across
the nation where no part of the country is insolated from a “wild west”
mentality. The recent loss of life has
been staggering. Those slaughtered range from one-year old kids to 77-year-old
adults.
A country music festival in Las
Vegas was the scene of 58 people killed.
In the small town of Sutherland Springs, Texas, 26 people were murdered
in the middle of a Sunday church service.
A deranged gunman in northern California killed five people just last
week. And those of us living in
Louisiana can look back on a series of mass killings including those executed
at a Lafayette movie theatre and officers shot down on a Baton Rouge highway.
Gun rights supporters say we
should arm more people, and gun control advocates call for more restrictions on
gun ownership. I remember reading a book
back in the 70s called “Bible in Pocket,
Gun in Hand: The Story of Frontier Religion.” The problem today is that the
entire country is now the frontier, and there is no place that is a safety
zone.
So where does responsible action
begin? How about this refreshing
idea? Let’s start by enforcing the
present laws on the books. No new radical
initiatives for the time being. The
judicial system, on both the federal and state levels, has the tools to get
many potential mass killers off the streets.
But a number of laws are not being enforced.
Take killer Devin Kelley, the
mass murderer at the small church in Texas. While in the Air Force, he talked
openly about killing his superiors, illegally snuck a gun on his military base,
was charged with assault and escaping from a psychiatric hospital, attacked his
wife with a gun, hitting and choking her, fractured the skull of his baby
stepson, and became a convicted felon.
Kelley had no business owning a gun, yet the Air Force ignored the law
and failed to enter his name in the federal database that would have prevented
him from buying more guns.
Here in the Bayou State, a killer named John Houser had traveled
to Louisiana from the small Georgia town of LaGrange. He had a long
history of violence and mental illness.
He had been ordered to a psychiatric hospital by a Georgia judge in 2008, which should have prevented him from even buying a gun. But then he went to an Alabama pawnshop and bought a 40-caliber,
semiautomatic handgun. Georgia and Alabama are both saying the other state
should have done more to stop Houser from purchasing the gun considering his
checkered mental condition.
And if you think this is bad, how about the fact
that over 48,000 convicted felons and fugitives lied about their backgrounds, a
federal offense, so as to pass the background checks and purchase guns
illegally. How many of these 48,000 were
prosecuted for making false statements?
A total of 44. The Justice
Department’s response was that it was “prioritizing prosecutions to focus on
more serious crimes.” So killers like
Devin Kelley and John Houser have free reign to gather as many weapons as the
want.
If there are no specific requirements that mentally
deranged individuals like Houser are reported by every state to a national
database, then we can look for more mass shootings. It’s way too easy for a
potential killer to obtain a gun in one state, and then travel across the
country to pick and choose his victims. Congress should make reporting
mandatory with penalties for those states that fail to do so. And Congress should investigate why the
Justice Department lets these same killers continue to ignore the law and
continue to kill.
Simply put, start by enforcing current law before
clouding this issue with new restrictions.
It would seem to be common sense.
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous
newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read
all his past columns and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also
hear Jim’s nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till
11:00 am, central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home