Guns and
Politics in the United States
On December 15, 1791 the first ten
amendments as the “Bill of Rights” were adopted to the United States
Constitution. The Second Amendment which, is one of the most controversial
passages of it, reads: "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”.
Many citizens are surprised to
learn that until recent years the U.S. Supreme Court didn’t
rule that the Second Amendment guarantees an individual’s right to own a gun.
In fact, until 2008 every other time the court had ruled otherwise. So, what
had changed? And why the Supreme Court ruled differently, in the battle of Gun
Control and Gun Rights, this time? The answer is: NRA, National Rifle
Association.
Michael Waldman the author of The Second Amendment: A Biography, in his
article, How the NRA Rewrote the Second Amendment,
shows us how NRA and gun lobbies succeeded in planning and influencing the
politicians, especially conservative presidential candidates, which can lead to
appointing a guns friendly General Attorney or Supreme Court Justices. So
the law and interpretation of constitution has changed gradually and firmly
within a decade not sudden.
Despite the facts and statistics that show the
catastrophic effects of guns in our society, still many of our citizens are
obsessed with guns and NRA fuels this obsession to its benefits. Here is a
brief gun related statistics for the year 2015:
•
Mass Shooting: 372
mass shooting, killing 475 people and wounding 1,870 people.
•
School Shooting: 64.
•
All Shooting: Some
13,286 people were killed and 26,819 people were injured.
It is so saddened and disturbing that NRA and gun
obsessed citizens use the same statistic to justify the needs for more guns for
self defense against gun violence. They choose to ignore the fact that there
wouldn’t be such high rate of gun violence in the first place if we had
efficient gun control laws. The diagram bellow compares the homicide rate and guns
contributions to it between USA and some other advanced democracies with
restrictions on guns:
The role of guns in crimes seems so obvious and I believe we can use the experience of other countries such as Australia on gun
control to save lives. A study shows a strong effectiveness of adapting such law by Australian government.
As the firearm homicide rate fell by 59 percent, and the
firearm suicide rate fell by 65 percent, in the decade after the law was
introduced.
I support a very restricted gun regulation with these parameters:
1- All the automatic and
semi-automatic guns should be prohibited for everyone other than military
and law enforcement.
2- Hand guns only by federal government's
permission for private citizens, due to special circumstances, and public
servants as needed.
3- Shotguns
and rifles for hunting and as sport would be allowed for private
citizens with state issued license.
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