Thursday, August 28, 2025

Guns are killing kids

Another mass shooting at a school.


Nothing is going to change anytime soon.


I'm just being honest here. Nothing much will change because Americans who have guns want to keep them. They are organized as a disciplined coalition in the GOP.  Any Republican officeholder who steps out of line on gun rights will get "primaried" and lose. It is a litmus test: with us or not-with-us. 


The gun issue isn't a matter of smart public policy or a careful weighing of pros and cons on widespread gun ownership. It is cultural. Americans like their guns. And as I have written many times in different contexts, informed by my long career as a financial advisor, people experience loss at about five times the intensity as they experience gains. For a great many Americans, a restriction on their right to have guns around them would be experienced as a loss. 


So nothing much will happen. Guns are readily available and American culture validates their being used. They connote strength and agency. Mentally ill and angry people will continue to shoot up schools. 


All this makes the guest post by Bruce Van Zee, a retired Medford, Oregon, physician, all the more poignant. This post was written a week ago, before yesterday's incident in Minnesota. America tolerates an intolerable situation. Van Zee explains how wrong, dangerous, and hypocritical the widespread availability of guns is. Americans flood the country with firearms, then people with the power to enact gun laws act mournful when guns are used, yet again, in a mass murder. Van Zee writes like a man deeply frustrated at observing a condition that is wrong and illogical, yet not subject to change in a self-governing country. Surely we can do better. But we don't because we cannot. I subscribe to his Substack blog: https://bvzcvz.substack.com






Guest Post by Bruce Van Zee


The Epidemic Killing our Kids

The Hypocrisy of the Right-to-Life Movement

 

“Thoughts and Prayers, Thoughts and Prayers!”  That’s the usual comment by Republicans after another horrific mass shooting, and it usually signals the end of their engagement in the affair.

 

Over the past week, there have been at least 9 mass shootings (defined as four or more victims injured). Six persons are dead, 44 injured, and countless traumatized (https://massshootingtracker.site/). This does not count the CDC shooting on Aug. 9 in which 500 rounds of semi-automatic fire were emptied into the CDC buildings, because only 2 people died – the gunman and a policeman. This episode was triggered by RFK,jr.-inspired Covid vaccine disinformation since the shooter mistakenly believed his depression was caused by the vaccine. Since Jan.1, 2025 there have been 320 mass shootings and 6852 mass shootings since 1/1/2013.

 

There used to be at least a semblance of shock and regret over these tragedies from the Republican administrations, but even that is gone now. It’s like background noise that the GOP is accustomed to and doesn’t even warrant a “Thoughts and Prayers” anymore. Certainly, no talk of doing anything about the gun violence problem. Trump doesn’t even mention gun violence cases. Maybe someone should tell him to use it as a distraction effort from the Epstein affair.

 

Trump recently cut more than half ($158 million) in gun violence prevention from the DOJ.  This follows a pattern in which the GOP has tried to stifle gun violence research. America is unique among nations regarding gun violence. What is striking is that the epidemic of gun violence has particularly affected the young. Here is data from KFF showing the mortality rate of children and teens from gun violence – more than 28 times the rate of comparable wealthy Western nations!  I repeat, 28 times as much!   

 If this was anything else killing our kids -- infections, drugs, accidents – don’t you think there would be widespread efforts to decrease the risk? Gun violence is now the leading cause of death for children 1-17 in America. 

In this context, let’s remember that a major part of traditional Republican support is evangelical, conservative Christians because of the Right-to-Life value that motivates their alignment. I can understand their belief regarding conception as an act of God and the consequent sacredness of a fetal life; but are not all these slaughtered children at least equally sacred? How can this travesty be ignored while they march in protest at Planned Parenthood clinics? And how can they abide the cruel dismantling of USAID that serves AIDS-infected and starving children throughout Africa and the world. Many of them will surely die for the “gain” of saving less than 1% of our national budget. Credible estimates are as many as hundreds of thousands of deaths. Are not all lives equally sacred?

 

Republicans, of course, point to the 2nd Amendment and use that as a shield to prevent any action on gun violence, claiming, “Guns don’t kill people, people do.”  But there is no evidence that mental illness is any more prevalent in this country than others. And the idea that we could somehow predict which deranged individuals are contemplated mass murder is unrealistic. But what we do know is that the United States has far more guns and easier access to them than any other country.  We have 120 guns per 100 people in the USA. 393 million guns total. The next highest country is Yemen with 52.8 guns per 100 people (here). Here's a little-known fact that somehow escaped censorship by the NRA and the GOP: you are more likely to die by gun violence if you have a gun in the home than if you don’t.

 

To maintain that this number of firearms has little to do with the carnage is simply magical, distorted thinking. But then, the Far-Right is adept at that sort of thing  -- The 2020 election was stolen, the Jan.6 insurrectionists were patriots, Hillary Clinton ran a pedophile ring out of a pizza parlor, etc. 

 

Here is the 2nd Amendment verbatim"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." 

 

I mean, even if you’re an originalist jurist, like Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, it seems a stretch to assume every individual is equivalent to a militia. And since even the wisest and most forward-thinking of our founding fathers could not have anticipated the semi-automatic weapons of war now in the hands of almost anybody, shouldn’t a little humane judgement be used to limit them? 

 

We would go a long way in lessening the slaughter of our children by having universal gun purchase background checks, by paying to take some of the guns off our streets, by outlawing weapons of war, by enforcing red flag laws, and other efforts. But I don’t think that’s on MAGA and Trump’s agenda, and it is most unfortunate and will lead to more unnecessary deaths.

 

A final irony: Now that Trump is employing armed, minimally trained teenagers in ICE on the streets of American cities, there may be more gun deaths.  The fear that drove the Framers to write the 2nd Amendment was the King’s army in our streets.  And here we are. 



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11 comments:

Rick Millward said...

All true and well said. And it's correct, it's highly unlikely that the sociopaths with their guns will ever be persuaded into civilized behavior, but what saddens and confounds me are the non-voters who could move this issue and so many others, but choose to close their eyes chanting the "both sides" mantra.

Democrats would enact laws to keep guns away from the mentally ill, perhaps something like evaluations before being allowed to own one. Idiot Republicans are leaping to politicize this with more anti-trans rhetoric. Every one of these shootings is by a disturbed person yet nothing about mental healthcare, which continues to be unaffordable and stigmatized. I can tell you why; insurance companies know it would put them out of business.

Mike said...

There are three legal uses for a firearm: hunting, target shooting and self-defense. None of those require assault weapons that can kill dozens of people per minute. Only a totally insane, self-destructive society would allow such weapons to be on the open market.

The old headline from The Onion still sums it up best: ‘No Way To Prevent This,’ Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.

Low Dudgeon said...

It's a combination of gun control, mental health, and culture or rhetoric, perhaps in that order. As a lifelong Republican, I must acknowledge the crying need for substantial gun law reforms, perhaps even unto requiring vetted gun registrations and licenses akin to motor vehicle regulations.

These guns aren't wielded randomly. Minds and troubled minds are affected by culture. Dr. Van Zee spoke of what "triggered" the CDC shooter. Anti-trans rhetoric followed this trans shooter's own virulent anti-religious rhetoric, put into action as with the trans school shooter in Nashville.

Racist church shooter Dylann Roof was linked to wider, putatively inspirational "climates" of hate. Murderous jihadists arguably swim in violent rhetorical waters, next to anti-abortion extremists. Was anti-corporate assassin--and sometime folk hero--Luigi Mangione mentally ill, or just...triggered?

Most older folks will vividly recall the Deadly Tower sniper massacre at the University of Texas. Did anyone raise gun control then? Guns were about as prevalent then, but "senseless" gun massacres were not. It's the degradation of society and culture that now mandates substantial gun law reform.

Ayla said...

Yes, guns are here to stay in America. When the USA did nothing after Sandy Hook, it was clear that nothing could persuade America to take the guns off the street.

The shooting in Minnesota will be one of the rare school massacres attributed to a female shooter. Minnesota leaders leapt to tell us that we must respect the pronouns of the violent male who shot up a Catholic church. If Westman had lived, Minnesota would undoubtedly have placed the killer in a WOMEN's prison. In addition to all the other craziness around the trans insanity, it is distorting crime statistics to count the actions of violent males as female crimes.

Westman's manifesto indicates he was tired of being trans, wished he had never brainwashed himself, and felt it had caused him prostate troubles. Rather than detransition and face his family and friends and tell them he'd made a mistake, he lived out his murderous fantasy and then committed suicide.

Progressive doctors and politicians are so quick to hand out cross-sex hormones to troubled youth, but then offer NO HELP AT ALL to those who realize it was all a mistake. If Democrats are going to continue to encourage young people to destroy their bodies chasing the trans dream, they have an obligation to also set up recovery centers and health care for those trying to escape the madness.

Anonymous said...

Peter Sage would not allow a Republican response to his gun diatribe because he censors his opposition.

Anonymous said...

This peer reviewed study in 2018 found that suicide attempts by trans youths were four times the rate of cisgendered youths
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/327581378_Transgender_Adolescent_Suicide_Behavior
It was published in NIH, AAP and others.

Anonymous said...

I censor (delete unpublished) posts from trolls who use obscene name calling and defamatory suggestions about me or my relatives. A well known local Trump-supporting Republican makes frequent comments critical of my posts, but since he inter-lards his comments about his fixation of gay pedophilia, I can’t publish them. And he, and perhaps others, copies and pastes articles from breitbart and the NYPost. I cannot publish this plagiarism. The material sent me by Trump’s supporters isn’t publishable.

Ayla said...

After the Sandy Hook massacre in 2012, I spent a year and a half as a full time activist to repeal the 2nd Amendment. I couldn't believe it was not an easy sell. I will share some hard learned lessons with anyone who cares to read.

America was multicultural before multi-culturalism was cool. Even when Americans knew their next door neighbors, they were still afraid of those Others across town or across the county. That fear has built a strong desire for self protection among the populace.
Now that the Other is next door and you likely don't know their names, that incentive for self protection and self defense is even stronger.

America is now a low trust society, a society with little social cohesion. If you don't trust your neighbors, it's hard to trust strangers at the gas station. Any moment, someone might attack you or your loved ones, and good people who want to protect their children feel they must be ready.

Bruce is correct that no one needs an AR-15 for self defense. Joe Biden once suggested that people get a shotgun to defend their home and family. But boys of all ages like to watch things go boom, to pulverize a hay bale with huge bullets and then scream in glee. When everyone can have guns, the boys with money want the biggest and best toys. If one tries to regulate AR-15s etc, people correctly point out that most people are killed by pistols. 9mms.

Sorry to be blunt here, but another hard truth: most people who die in gunfire are poor and black, shot by other poor and black people. Many people look at gang violence, of blacks killing blacks, and shrug. 'Not my problem. Not happening in my neighborhood, but if they do come here I have to be ready.'

Another hard truth: America could enact all the gun restrictions advocated by Bruce, and it would not have prevented the Sandy Hook massacre. The guns were legally purchased by Lanza's mother, a person with no mental health history or criminal record, to be used at the shooting range as a bonding exercise with her troubled son (good grief. now that's gun culture). They were kept in a locked safe that the son had somehow obtained the combination (even troubled young people can be very crafty). Lanza killed his mother in her sleep then set off to murder kids, so she had no way to sound the alarm of her weapons being misused. These types of details tend to be used against anyone trying to enact' common sense gun control.'

There's more guns than people in the US, so even if manufacture and sales were to stop today, we'd still be a country awash in guns. Seems like a pointless exercise. And there are people making money off manufacturing and selling guns. It's one of the few products where most are made in the USA, and it is the premier label to seek. Guns help keep the economy strong!

Final note: about half the people who die by gunfire in the US die by suicide. It's very difficult to get people to be concerned about them -- people think they would just find another way to kill themselves.

Hug your loved ones. We never know when it will be our last chance.

Mike said...

I call bullshit. He only censors the obscene and absurd.

Michael Trigoboff said...

They used to be high schools with rifle teams and shooting ranges in the basement. Can you imagine that now? Is it the culture or the guns?

Maybe the problem is that far too many toxic pathological ideas are being pumped into our culture by “artists“ who enjoy being transgressive.

Mike said...

Thank you for your activism after Sandy Hook, and for your insights.