Politicize the Oregon deaths
Published October 3, 2015 - 1:30am
President Barack Obamas condemnation of Americas latest mass shooting was no less striking for how often we have heard him essentially say the same thing. The White House podium lamentation is routine because the killings are routine, and the utter lack of any substantive response is just as routine. In his years in office, Obamas reaction in such circumstances has gone from outraged to bewildered because he knows if the murder of praying churchgoers in Charleston, S.C., didnt prompt reform, if the mass killing of elementary school children didnt spur action, if the near fatal wounding of a member of Congress didnt inspire Congress to act, that nine more deaths at a community college in Oregon wont change anything either. The stranglehold of gun absolutists on our politics is so strong no outrage ever seems strong enough to shake it ...
... From 2004 through 2013, the last decade for which all relevant data are available, 80 Americans were killed in terrorist attacks worldwide, excluding those related to combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to the University of Marylands Global Terrorism Database. During that time, 93,502 people were murdered with firearms in the United States, according to the FBI, and 186,168 people killed themselves with a gun in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for a total of 279,670. Even if we adjust the time frame to include the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the comparison remains stark: 3,066 terrorist deaths between 2001 and 2013, but 121,387 gun homicides and 237,052 gun suicides.
We spend over a trillion dollars, and pass countless laws, and devote entire agencies to preventing terrorist attacks on our soil, and rightfully so, Obama said. And yet, we have a Congress that explicitly blocks us from even collecting data on how we could potentially reduce gun deaths. How can that be?
It .. is, simply because of the influence of the National Rifle Association. The CDC effectively stopped doing gun violence research in 1996, after the NRA accused it of promoting gun control and the Republican-led Congress threatened to strip its funding. This summer, Democrats tried to include an amendment in an appropriations bill that would have allowed the CDC to study the root causes of gun violence, but Republicans voted it down ...
http://www.hawaiitribune-herald.com/commentary/their-views/politicize-oregon-deaths