(June 12, 2014) Obama’s talk of gun control is a political diversion. When the President of the United States is asked about his proudest achievements and his greatest frustrations in office, and his response is to decry the lack of action to restrict the enumerated constitutional rights of Americans, that’s a diversion. Obama could have talked about the slow creeping economic “recovery.” He could have talked about the nation’s astronomical, and growing, debt. He could have mentioned the failure to develop anything close to a balanced budget. He could have talked about the loss of life in Iraq and Afghanistan – and the crumbling of progress toward freedom for the people in those countries, particularly women – the mistakes leading to and following the attack in Benghazi, the brouhaha over federal law enforcement selling guns to Mexican traffickers in total disregard of the consequences of that action, the total failure of his vision for “clean” energy, the growing instability of the dollar in the world market, or hundreds of other pressing, serious, and crushing problems, but he didn’t. Instead he talked about “gun violence” and Congress’ “failure” to enact restrictions on Americans’ fundamental, constitutional right to keep and bear arms.
Deaths of children in schools, and demented individuals going on murderous rampages are absolutely terrible problems that need to be seriously addressed, but all evidence shows that none of the proposals Obama complained about could have or would have had the slightest impact on those tragedies.
Obama himself unintentionally admitted both the futility of his “modest” gun control proposals, and the real objective of those proposals as steps toward a bigger goal, when he praised the draconian response of Australia to a mass murder. They almost completely banned the private possession of firearms, and instituted harsh restrictions on the few guns left in civilian hands. That nation had been slowly creeping down a path of “reasonable” restrictions for decades, but when one violent lunatic committed an unspeakable atrocity, the “modest” and “reasonable” measures were shown to be merely the launch pad for sweeping bans, confiscations, and criminalization.
But that argument is the distraction.