Bang, bang, you’re dead, Part 1

Children and teen gun death rate per 100,000. Data source: The Horrific Risk Of Gun Violence For Black Kids In America, In 4 Charts. By The Huffington Post. 19 August 2014. Author: Delphi234. Made available under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication.

Stop, look, and bristle with anger at the image above.  The obscene rates at which American children are gunned down or left with life-altering physical and psychological scars from gun violence should horrify and activate us all.

What’s the story, anyway?  Are Americans genetically inferior to Canadians, Germans, the French, Slovakians, and citizens of all those other countries where there are so many fewer gun deaths of of children? Do most Americans lack a kindness gene? Do they uniformly inherit murderous violence?

Is there something in our polluted air that contaminates American minds and hearts, making people blind to the suffering of others, ready to kill anyone, anything that gets in the way?

I think the answer to these questions is No, but clearly the country has a big problem with deadly violence–a correlate, I believe, of structural violence and the corrosive collusion of too many Americans with structural violence laced with racism.

Structural violence is what helps the rich get richer while the poor get poorer.  Structural violence means that the powerful get to make the rules in ways they believe (perhaps mistakenly) serve their own interests; if having desperate people available to remove their garbage and tar their roads, then you can be sure the powerful will limit educational opportunity, employment opportunity, and freedom of movement to keep a substantial segment of our society trapped in poverty, undereducated, and locked up or shot if they are in anyway noncompliant.  Or look too different.

When you combine social injustice and social inequality with anger, frustration, and the ready availability of guns, does that sound like a mix that can explode in violence? Does that violence have the potential of spilling over in ways that destroy countless lives, including those of children and adolescents? Seems like a Yes to me.

How many deaths will it take?

“How many deaths will it take?” In how many places within the United States and abroad?

Aurora, Colorado? Tucson, Arizona? Virginia Tech? Columbine? The University of Texas tower?

Nagasaki? Korea? Vietnam? Grenada? Panama? Iraq? Afghanistan? Pakistan?

NRA headquarters
NRA headquarters. Photo by Bjoertvedt, used under CC Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

The answer, my friend, according to the corporate media, is that the number of deaths and injuries inflicted on Americans by Americans will grow without end because the National Rifle Association owns the government.

Another answer is that the number of deaths–mostly civilians–that Americans inflict around the world will grow without end because of

  • Fear promoted by the power structure
  • Glorification of violence in the media
  • National enthrallment with punishment, and
  • Belief in American exceptionalism to be defended at all costs.

How many roads must people walk down before they will choose civility and discourse over violence? Peace over war? Justice over guns? Humanity over profits?

For people who profit from the weapons business and gain power from manipulating fear, the rewards for making weapons available to individuals, groups, and nations far outweigh the costs.

According to The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), in 2010, Lockheed Martin, the biggest arms producer and military service company in the world, grossed $35.7 billion from arms sales.

Among the 100 top arms producers, 44 US-based companies accounted for over 60% of all arms sales (The Guardian DataBlog, March 2, 2012). Those are powerful incentives for pretending not to see all the gun-related deaths.

The NRA receives millions of dollars from online sales of ammunition and related products, as well as enormous donations from Smith & Wesson (manufacturer of the M&P15 assault rifle used in Colorado). Those are powerful incentives for not hearing the cries of victims and their families.

And what does the ready availability of weapons do for ordinary Americans? Among 23 high-income countries, 80 percent of all gun deaths and 87 percent of all gun deaths of children younger than 15 occur in the United States. (See Children’s Defense Fund report.)

If you are appalled by the loss of life, become an activist. To learn more about gun control, the NRA, and ways of promoting change, check out the following resources:

Kathie Malley-Morrison, Professor of Psychology