Gun Deaths, Activists and Executive Orders
I
like facts more than opinion, but facts are stubborn things that don’t fit
easily into preassigned molds.
Out of every 100,000 black men in this country 34 will
be killed by guns in 2016; just half that many, 17 white men, will die the same
way.
If you are a young adult (age 20-29) the numbers
are even more dramatic. Humans of that
age have incomplete brain development.
They have limited ability to project consequences and are governed by
hormones more than logic. That shows in
their bad choices and emotional volatility.
From 2011-2013 ninety young black men per 100,000 population died by
gunshot compared to just 20 white young adults.
The cause of these gun deaths also shows an
instructive difference. The vast
majority of white gun deaths (77%) are suicides and only 19% are homicide. In the black population the numbers are
flipped: 14% suicide and 82% homicide.
The much publicized shooting of blacks by police account for about 2% of
the black gun deaths which is almost the same as for white’s shot by police.
This is much more an issue of affluence and
culture than color and guns. In 1978 poor
blacks and affluent blacks were almost equally as likely to be the victims of
violent crime (45 and 38 per 1000, respectively). But what happens when we fold in almost 40
years of social and legal evolution? By
2008 poor blacks suffer 75 incidents of gun violence per 1000 but affluent blacks have actually become
safer than they were in 1978 with 23 incidents per 1000!
People trying to make political purchase with the
proliferation of gun violence or the Black Lives Matter movement are loathe to
address these irresistible facts for two reasons: to admit the complicity of
the black community in its own extraordinary death rates might distract from
their targeted narrative of police policies toward blacks and it provides
ammunition to those who resist criminal justice reform. These are legitimate concerns, but ignoring
(or worse still denying) the facts doesn’t solve any problem and makes social activists
obvious hypocrites.
I am ready to talk about police responsibility
toward the black community. I am ready
to talk about how to prevent the possession of guns by people who do not
deserve to have them. Anything as
serious as gun ownership deserves to be—must be—regulated. But I do not believe that the Black Lives
Matter politicians are ready to have a serious discussion about gun control. I do not believe our President is ready to
have that discussion either. If he did,
he would have multiple meetings—long, focused, and committed to resolution—with
the leaders of Congress (Republicans and Democrats) about what laws must be
passed. This President talks to union
leaders, athletes, and Hollywood activists.
Why doesn’t he talk to the NRA about what they believe responsible gun
ownership looks like?
For example, how about a law that any crime
committed with a gun is a life sentence—non-negotiable and not subject to probation?
How about a photo and date stamped I.D.
(similar to a hunting license) that must be shown by anyone buying any gun from
any seller, private or commercial, that says that person is a righteous gun
buyer? The fact is, if you are not an
anarchist you want to live in a land of laws.
Laws are enforceable documents passed by legislators, not demands made
by protestors and not Executive actions made by ineffective Presidents.
Look at the numbers, clean your house and keep the
faith.
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