Tag Archives: Second Amendment

THERE ARE NO WORDS

Photo by Robin McPherson on Pexels.com

There are no words.

Not even thoughts nor prayers

can escape beyond the grief.

Three nine year old Nashville children

could not hold the line

we asked and trained them to do.

The line has grown and stretched

and wrapped itself around

Columbine, Margory Stoneman Douglas,

Uvalde, Sandy Hook, Amish school, 

Pulse, Binghampton, Carthage nursing home,

University of Texas tower, University of Virginia,

Virginia Tech, Northern Illinois University

Washington Navy Yard, Fort Hood one and two,

San Bernardino, Edmund Post Office,

San Ysidro Mc Donald’s, LA dance studio,

El Paso and Virginia Walmarts, Planned Parenthood,

Birmingham church potluck, Living Church of God,

Sacramento and Texas First Baptist Church,

Tree of Life synagogue, Sikh Temple, 

Buffalo and Boulder supermarkets, IHOP

Molson Coors and Hartford Beer, 

Fed X, UPS, Xerox, Lockheed Martin.

The list goes on and on stretching ever longer

the lines we should never cross

until lines wrap our feet and ankles

no longer able to march in the streets.

Until lines wrap our hands and fists

no longer able to wrap them around a pen to write new law,

nor lift them in the air with promise to end what we saw.

Until lines wrap around around our heads and stuff our mouths

no longer able to speak out loud, only muffled groans of despair.

There are no words.

There are no words.

There are no words.

But, words have never been enough.

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Philly

24 shootings in 24 hours

In the cradle of liberty

Whose cracked bell rings out

Warning a country

To place a sentry

On the triggers of violence.

What are we truly about?

Gunning down civility

With inhumanity.

Would shouts and fists not suffice

To quell the fear unleashed

In a moment’s rage?

Let’s be clear.

The fingers on these triggers

Are not well-regulated

Militias protected by the Second

Amendment, as stated.

There can be no democracy

Among the trigger-happy.

Like the innocent

Democracy is caught in the crossfire

Of those who wield there ire

Against those they desire

To wound and destroy.

War in American streets

Is a cruel violation

Of a democratic nation’s

Efforts to endure.

Too many guns in too many hands

Enrich those seeking it’s ruination.

Control the guns. Make war no more.

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NRA ADVERTISES FOR GOOD GUYS WITH GUNS,GUNS,AND MORE GUNS,By Louise Annarino,December 21,2012

NRA ADVERTISES FOR GOOD GUYS WITH GUNS,GUNS,AND MORE GUNS, By Louise Annarino, December 21, 2012

Ohio was a primeval forest with river channels best suited to flat bottom boats as transport for those intrepid New Englanders who had survived a revolution against King George III of England, and headed into the wilderness which was home of several Native American Tribes whose confederation of tribes served as an example for the structure of the new government being established by the revolution’s leadership. These shopkeepers,farmers,students and laborers strapped the rifle issued them as citizen soldiers to use as protection, and to bring down game to feed their families.

Some of the earliest skirmishes with the British soldiers stationed in the New World occurred when the king’s subjects raided the King’s arsenals to arm themselves. Discussions in the Virginia Assembly were deteriorating,and emissaries of American colonists sent to Parliament were failing to convince King George and Parliament to lower or eliminate taxes which had recently been imposed on British colonies.

The pre-revolution American colonists,as British citizens, understood that England’s war with France was costly, and Parliament needed to raise revenue to pay for the war. American colonists s were not opposed to taxes. But, they believed that those who were taxed should have a voice in Parliament. As colonists, they had no voice. There were those in Parliament who took up their cause, arguing colonials should be able to participate in Parliament.

While these political discussions went on in England, unrest grew within the colony. The King sent more troops to the American colony to “keep the peace” among the colonials. These troops had no military bases, so their leaders moved them into colonists’ homes, with or without the homeowner’s permission. Some colonials remained loyal to the King,while others became increasing hostile to being taxed with no right to vote,and housing British troops. tempers flared on both sides.

After the revolution,as the founders wrote a national constitution, they based it upon the Virginia Constitution, adding some amendments reflecting concerns of the various “states” ( a new term for areas which had been chartered by the King -the Carolinas, the Virginia Territory etc.).

The 1st.Amendment was free speech. People wanted a “voice” without fear of repercussion from government. This Amendment has been argued over in the courts and is restrained by reasonable guidelines. One cannot shout “fire” in a crowded theatre,for example.  Protesters, parades, commercial vendors etc. can be regulated as to time, place and manner so as not to disrupt the ordinary course of business. The CITIZENS UNITED CASE stretched the right to free speech by extending the legal fiction that corporations are people for campaign financing purposes, as they had been earlier characterized for business organization and legal remedy reasons.

The 2d. Amendment was freedom to bear arms. People wanted the freedom to arm themselves to defend their communities from an autocratic King who would quarter his troops in their homes,which as every British citizen knew, violated their belief that a “man’s house is his castle”. When the Revolution started in the American colonies, many armed themselves by raiding British arsenals. After the revolution, the Americans wanted the freedom to build their own arsenals. National Guard Armories exist within every small town as remnants of these arsenals. There was never any intent to amass personal armories. But, the soldiers of the revolution kept their guns, granted the freedom to do so by the 2d Amendment. Like the 1st. Amendment, the 2d. Amendment is also subject to reasonable constraints, regardless of gun industry refusal to acknowledge that fact.

NRA Executive Director Wayne LaPierre held a news conference a moment ago. He blamed the violent video games, their production companies and stockholders as partners and co-conspirators in violent acts. He described Americans as surrounded by deranged and evil persons, who cannot be understood nor contained to prevent the evil acts their “voices” propel them to commit.He denigrated those with mental health issues as demons, asserting that the “only way to  stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun”. He argued forcefully that we are all targets surrounded by great evildoers and we all must carry guns.

LaPierre’s suggestion? Arm teachers and principals with weapons and provide security guards at schools. He repeatedly referred to the president using Secret Service to protect himself, impliedly berating this president for protecting himself and failing to protect American children. Then, he reminded us that grants for school security were removed from the budget last year. His continued attacks against President Obama were beyond the pale. His real effort was to undermine the president’s comments and efforts to place restrictions on assault weapons.

He repeatedly asserted that many people are deranged and evil,calling for well-maintained data-bases on the mentally ill. This is the same man who opposes a data-base of gun owners. Scapegoating the mentally ill is not a solution to gun violence with assault weapons. Treating the mentally ill, and denying weapons to the mentally ill likely to harm themselves or others should be considered and discussed. Demonizing anyone serves no purpose other than to create fear among us, and justify violence by the “good guys”.

Lapierre announced  the creation of a new program, the National Model Schools Shield Program funded by NRA to provide armed guards at every school.  “We can’t wait. We can’t debate and pass legislation which will not work,”  was an indirect effort to undermine and supplant V.P. Joe  Biden’s efforts. He called for every teacher,administrator and state to ask for NRA help to protect its children, to arm its schools with good guys.

We cannot allow his one reasonable suggestion, provide more school security, to  stop all discussion about reasonable constraints over gun manufacture,sale,purchase and possession of assault weapons;background checks,waiting periods,registration and removal etc. This was not a news conference. This was an ad for an NRA effort to arm more persons, with no limits nor constraints. This was an effort to undermine President Obama, and anyone who calls for a reasonable review of current gun laws. The laws must be reviewed and changed for the common good and within reason. I doubt those first Americans would expect any less of us.

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