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 The American Family Guns: Why?  By Frank Scott Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 26, 2012 Question: What the hell are we Americans scared of?
 Answer: 
	Other Americans.
 
 The latest mass murder nightmare in America 
	is provoking much needed discussion about a very serious problem. As is 
	often the case, key points will be avoided in that discussion, especially as 
	it is indulged in by national leaders and their corporate stenographers in 
	media.
 
 The usual suspects in this gun lobby vs. gun control debate 
	have valid points to make, but they are similar to those in any national 
	argument of a political or economic nature; they deal with two sides of a 
	coin without daring  to question the existence of the coin. We argue 
	over whether heads are better than tails or vice versa , treating the coin 
	itself as some form of universal deity over which there should be no 
	question, concern or thought. In this fashion, we are provoked (?) to wonder 
	whether taxes should be raised on a minority of wealthy people or government 
	services should be cut for the majority, assuming that the system within 
	which this argument takes place is natural and beyond any concern for 
	citizens of  an alleged democracy.
 
 The subject of fantastic 
	wealth accruing to a tiny minority while poverty expands among a group fast 
	approaching a plurality in the supposedly richest and most democratic 
	society in  history  is left out of the discussion. In the same 
	tradition, Americans will tear each other apart, insult reason and morality 
	and denigrate the very idea of a social debate of substance in the matter of 
	whether there is a constitutional right to own a gun to protect home, body, 
	soul, family pets, jewelry, or stamp collections, and never wonder why there 
	is no constitutional right to a home, a job, health care and other serious 
	necessities of life.
 
 Those of us who find no need to own a gun will 
	trash those who do, and neither side will question their citizenship duties 
	as members of the most violent nation in world history , committing murder 
	and mayhem all over the globe while waving the flag of democracy and 
	freedom. We will insist, under the direction of our consciousness 
	controllers and their servant mind managers, that individuals  are 
	responsible for whatever is wrong with all of us collectively. Of course we 
	are not supposed to be a society or a collective unless we are at war 
	killing foreigners, shopping, or united in grieving  over  crimes 
	committed by individuals.
 
 A case can be made, sometimes strongly, 
	for idiocy and irrationality on the part of gun lovers, but there can also 
	be an easy target for those lovers when they comment on the gun haters' 
	seeming admiration for a system that brings us , or at least many of us, 
	creature comforts not possible without domination of others and  
	profits trickling down to us from cheap labor and exploitation, however much 
	we individualize it as only certain companies and certain business leaders. 
	Naturally, none among those individually bad companies and people are the 
	ones we rely on for our lives of relative comfort. So it is easy for each 
	side in these debates to feel righteous, correct and beyond criticism. 
	That’s what keeps the system going and what we need to confront and deal 
	with, unless we wish to see the continuing weapons use in other places and 
	in our midst, the destruction of the planet’s ecosystem, and economic 
	downfall which will ultimately include all of us and not just one or another 
	segmented minority forced into mental belief in being different from 
	everyone else.
 
 While our personal obsession with guns has declined 
	over the years, from half the homes in the country  armed now down to 
	only (?) a third, the number of weapons we own has increased. The Gun Market 
	expands every time there is a mass murder as those homemakers rush to buy 
	even more weapons before a supposed ban is instituted. What is important to 
	remember is that these loyal, patriotic and freedom loving citizens are 
	allegedly protecting themselves not from foreign invaders or outer space 
	attack but from other Americans. According to this view ,you never know when 
	some nut case will break down your doors and assault your family, given the 
	wide open, murderous and lawless society we live in. And it isn’t far from 
	the reality experienced by millions of Americans, though they hardly rely on 
	legally purchased weapons to suffer from or participate in the bloodbath 
	that finds more than 100 people murdered every month via gun violence.
 
 Of course we kill three times that number in our vehicles – as gun lobbyists 
	will point out – but it is rare for a person to consciously wish to die or 
	inflict death on others via driving, however often that is the outcome of a 
	ride to work, shop or school. Nevertheless, despite legends, myths and 
	outright lies about the great saviors of freedom that armed Americans have 
	become, guns are primarily used to commit suicide and murder innocent 
	people, with the few cases of actually interfering with or stopping a crime 
	being broadcast all over the internet, and most of those turning out to be 
	urban legends only believable to those who need – sometimes desperately so – 
	crisis intervention and adult management  in their lives.
 
 Yes, 
	of course, a ninety seven year old woman killed thirteen terrorists who 
	threatened her home, and yes, of course, a three year old boy used his 
	father's gun to kill the monster about to rape his mother. Sure. But these 
	myths and fables only feed into a national disorder which probably follows 
	from historic origins of armed settlers needing to protect themselves from 
	the people on whose land they were settling. But to actually believe we need 
	personal armed protection in the 21st century, with police departments, 
	armies, navies, air forces, drones, rockets, missiles and a  network of 
	eavesdropping spies supposedly protecting us from the menace of evil, should 
	pose the question:
 
 What the hell are we Americans scared of?
 
 Answer: Other Americans.
 
 And that is the problem whose solution 
	will not simply involve refraining from killing one another because we are 
	so fearful of one another, but facing what it is we fear, and why? It is 
	easy to dismiss gun ownership as an aspect of PRS ( Penis Replacement 
	Syndrome) and there may be some cases that involve just that, along with 
	very loud auto engines and other socially induced signs of personal 
	machismo. But women own and practice gun use – the mother of the mass 
	murderer in Connecticut suffered death at the hands of her son using her own 
	weapons – and along with rural customs and honest hobbyists there are target 
	shooters and others whose only purpose in having a gun is for the hunt, 
	sport or collection value. Silly? Then what is ownership of pets, to a 
	non-pet critic? Or wearing cosmetics, to those who find the practice sexist 
	and demeaning? While pet ownership and makeup use hardly seem as  
	dangerous as weapons, a detractor could make a case for skin, respiratory , 
	hygienic and environmental disorders connected to those socially induced and 
	privately provoked profit making market ventures. The point is not what 
	individuals practice personally  under  socially induced pressure, 
	but the power of that pressure and who or what truly profits most from it, 
	and who or what absorbs the social loss for those private profits.
 
 If we can get a little closer to confronting that problem as a result of the 
	latest atrocity in America, we may get closer to ending the atrocities we 
	commit in other places and arrive at a democratic standard that brings  
	safety and well being to all of us and not just some of us. That would be a 
	worthwhile public debate.
 
 
 Frank Scott writes  political 
	commentary and satire which appears online at the blog Legalienate
 
 http://legalienate.blogspot.com
 email: fpscott@gmail.com
 
 
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