Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
 

WilliamPitt

(58,179 posts)
Wed Jan 1, 2014, 10:43 AM Jan 2014

The Year of the Gun



(Image: Bullet pile via Shutterstock)

The Year of the Gun
By William Rivers Pitt
Truthout | Op-Ed

Wednesday 01 January 2014

The year of the gun began in Tulsa, where four women were found bound and shot to death in their apartment. Twelve days later, a fifteen-year-old boy in New Mexico used an AR-15 to slaughter his father, mother, brother and two sisters; his brother was nine years old, and his sisters were five years old and two years old respectively. Less than a month later, a man shot and killed four people in a rural New York barber shop.

A little over a month later, two men and two women were lined up and shot in a basement in Akron. Four days later, a man in Washington State shot and killed his girlfriend and three neighbors before the police shot him down. Two days later, a man shot and killed five members of the mother of his daughter's family before also being killed by police. Four days later, a Kansas man shot his roommate to death, shot his best friend to death, and then shot his best friend's girlfriend and her 18-month-old daughter to death.

On the weekend of Mother's day, a man shot and killed two couples before burning their homes, and then shot and killed a newspaper deliveryman. A little more than a month later, a man in Hawaii shot and killed the couple that managed his apartment building, shot and killed four neighbors, took hostages, and was eventually himself gunned down by police. Two weeks later, a Dallas man shot dead his wife, his girlfriend and two of his children. A week after that, a man in Oklahoma City shot his mother, sister, niece and baby nephew to death. A month later, a man walked onto the Navy Yard in Washington DC with a sawed-off shotgun and killed twelve people. Four days later, a woman in Texas shot and killed her husband, her three sons, and then herself.

A month later, a man in Phoenix shot and killed four people and then himself with a shotgun. Two days later, a Texas man shot and killed five people. The next day, a South Carolina man shot and killed his ex-girlfriend, two of her children, her parents, and then himself. A month later, four people were shot and killed in Topeka. Two days after that, an Arkansas man shot and killed his daughter's boyfriend, his four-month-old grandson, his granddaughter, and then himself. On the same day, a Tennessee man shot and killed his wife, his son, his daughter, and then himself. Five days later, a Connecticut man shot and killed his ex-girlfriend, two other people, and then himself.

This is, bear in mind, an incomplete accounting.

Then there were the school shootings. In 2010, by comparison, there were nine school shootings in America that killed seven people. In 2011, there were eleven school shootings that killed nine people. In 2012, there were fourteen school shootings - including the massacres at Sandy Hook Elementary and Oikos University - that killed 43 people. In 2013, there were twenty-three school shootings that killed nineteen people.

Nine, then eleven, then fourteen, then twenty-three. If the trend holds, we can look forward to maybe thirty or forty school shootings in 2014.

Then there was the two-year-old North Carolina girl who shot herself to death with a gun someone left lying around, the three-year-old Arizona boy who shot himself to death with a gun someone left lying around, the five-year-old Texas boy who was shot in the head by an eight-year-old boy with a gun someone left lying around, the two-year-old Texas boy who shot himself in the head with a gun someone left lying around, the South Dakota woman who was shot while trying to take a gun away from her two-year-old son, the four-year-old Michigan boy who shot himself to death with a gun someone left lying around, the 11-year-old Virginia boy who shot himself in the mouth with a gun someone left lying around, and all the other 7,500 children who were admitted to hospitals with gunshot wounds this year, 500 of whom died.

But there's nothing we can do about it, because there's nothing we can do about it, because there's nothing we can do about it, because there's nothing we can do about it, because there's nothing we can do about it, because freedom, or something.

The rest: http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/20949-the-year-of-the-gun
7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The Year of the Gun (Original Post) WilliamPitt Jan 2014 OP
Life in a Republican Paradise. Turbineguy Jan 2014 #1
+100 billh58 Jan 2014 #3
In sane nations, after one mass shooting, they did sane sensible things, and the Warren Stupidity Jan 2014 #2
Yes, yes, yes we can. We've taken steps in Colorado. mountain grammy Jan 2014 #4
And here in Ohio, we make guns easier to get ladym55 Jan 2014 #5
Kick nt Hissyspit Jan 2014 #6
BUT, BUT..."you were never safer!" Didn't you know that? CTyankee Jan 2014 #7

mountain grammy

(26,624 posts)
4. Yes, yes, yes we can. We've taken steps in Colorado.
Wed Jan 1, 2014, 12:10 PM
Jan 2014

Of course, the backlash is ugly, but that's America; two steps forward, one step back. I have hopes we will take two steps forward again this year, leaving yet another year of senseless deaths. We are running out of time.

ladym55

(2,577 posts)
5. And here in Ohio, we make guns easier to get
Wed Jan 1, 2014, 12:53 PM
Jan 2014

We have expanded concealed carry ... cut the number of hours of training needed to carry concealed. I can't tell you the number of times I've contacted my "pro-life, Christian" Republican legislators and "pro-life, Christian" governor to ask them to use restraint and common sense. I can't even get a canned response from any of them.

According to my local paper just this past week, guns make people "feel safer." And this is the state that led the country in the number of accidental child gun deaths for a good chunk of 2013.

CTyankee

(63,912 posts)
7. BUT, BUT..."you were never safer!" Didn't you know that?
Thu Jan 2, 2014, 10:33 AM
Jan 2014

More guns=more safety, fewer gun deaths. Let's see, where are those charts I always use to illustrate my point, the one with the flashing lights....hmm, must have misplaced it somewhere...oh well...just take my word for it..."

Never mind...

Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Editorials & Other Articles»The Year of the Gun