After a bloody baseball practice, guns remain king, but the culture is changing – Philly.com

Posted: June 15, 2017 at 6:54 am

Some things are predictable, some are not.

Not predictable was Wednesday mornings attack on members of Congress and their staffs, assembled for one of the most American of things, a baseball practice.

A gunman identified by authorities as James T. Hodgkinson fired a lot of shots after first asking, according to reports, if the players were Republicans. He learned they were and the gunfire commenced. House Majority Whip Steve Scalise was wounded, along with an aide to Texas Rep. Roger Williams and several others. The alleged gunman was killed.

It was the first shooting of a member of Congress since the 2011 attack on Rep. Gabby Giffords in the most American of settings, a shopping mall. Six people died that day in Tucson, Ariz., and 13 were wounded. The irony (?) is that Giffords was and is a gun owner and a supporter of the Second Amendment, and Scalise has a top rating from the NRA.

Those shootings were unpredictable.

What is totally predictable is the coming avalanche of screams for gun control, an amorphous phrase. If I cup my hand to my ear, I can begin to hear them now.

When you get down to specifics, such as universal background checks, they are unlikely to happen.

How can I predict that? Because the last time it was tried the 2013 billsponsored by Democratic West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin and Republican Pennsylvania Sen. Pat Toomey it went down to defeat despite the approval of a large majority of Americans.

That relatively mild proposal supported by this gun-owning columnist with a carry permit got shot down (pun intended) largely through the efforts of the National Rifle Association.

If the deaths of 20 children and six teachers at Sandy Hookin 2012 didnt result in legislation, I doubt this will.

The gun-grabbers will blame the gun and call gun violence an epidemic, which it might be in some few areas looking at you, Chicago but is largely unknown in the vast majority of counties around the United States. There are 300 million weapons in the hands of 100 million Americans. That tells you the periodic, and unspeakable, slaughters are an aberration committed by criminals and the mentally unbalanced.

The gun problem is a Gordian knot because it entwines rights protected by the First, Second, and Fourth Amendments.

The only way to ban guns is to revoke the Second Amendment, and I invite anyone who wants to to try. It is almost impossible.

Even if you could ban them, will the U.S. government try to confiscate (buy back) the 300 million out there, as was done with legislation addressing the millions of guns inAustralia and the United Kingdom?

That could kick off a civil war, given the current political mood.

Guns are enshrined in our culture, but I admit the culture is changing.

Although more guns are out there, they are in fewer households.

The majority of Americans dont own guns, but havent been able to thwart the NRA and get access to whats called sensible gun control. I applaud their efforts, but I think they are futile until the culture changes more.

Once upon a time, cultural change was glacial. But when you see how quickly the culture shifted on gay marriage, for instance, there is optimism that America will be able to get stricter gun laws in the foreseeable future.

But a ban, I think, is still a bridge too far.

Published: June 14, 2017 11:02 AM EDT | Updated: June 14, 2017 12:17 PM EDT Philadelphia Daily News

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After a bloody baseball practice, guns remain king, but the culture is changing - Philly.com

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