By César Chelala
June 10, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - Unrelenting
mass shootings in the United States show
that present gun laws are ineffective to
stem the increasing tide of gun deaths in
the country. Although controlling gun sales
is important, it is not sufficient to
control gun violence in the country.
Violence is not only the result of gun
ownership. Violence is multifaceted and
requires the collaboration of individuals
and institutions to address it. Violence is
a political and legal problem (lawmakers
need to pass appropriate laws); a public
health problem (firearms injuries are a
serious public health problem.); an
educational problem (educating youth on its
dangers is critical); and a social concern
(it disrupts the fabric of society.)
The National Rifle Association (NRA) has
been extraordinarily successful in
influencing lawmakers. Although the majority
of Americans say that gun laws should be
more restrictive, Congress continues
refusing to pass effective gun control laws.
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This reluctance by mostly Republican
lawmakers makes one wonder if they have
children and grandchildren. How else can it
be explained that they are deaf to a
phenomenon that costs thousands of deaths
and injured people? Why are they unable to
do their part to stop a phenomenon that is a
curse on our society?
The statistics are eye-opening. The U.S.
has the most guns per capita and the weakest
gun control laws of any developed country.
It is estimated that at least a third of
American adults own a gun, and an additional
11 percent live with someone who does. The
Pew Research Center reports that for 82
percent of African American adults, gun
violence is a very big problem –the largest
share of any racial or ethnic group.
Self-defense has been
often cited to justify the people’s right to
bear arms. Research, however, has shown that
a gun kept in a home is much more likely to
kill a member of the household or a friend
than an intruder. In the U.S., the number of
teenagers who die from gunshot wounds is
greater than those who die from all other
causes combined.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), there were
39,707 firearm-related deaths in 2019 in the
U.S., and firearm-related injuries were
among the five leading causes of death for
people ages 1-64 in the country. In
addition, the economic impact of gun
violence is substantial. It costs the
government $280 billion annually on medical
care and lost productivity.
Although many Americans claim that guns
are necessary for security, experiences in
countries such as Japan prove the fallacy of
this argument. In Japan, people who purchase
guns have strict background checks. They
include a mental health assessment performed
at a hospital, checking for evidence of drug
use, and the opinion about the applicant by
a relative or a colleague. As result, there
are less than 100 fatalities for a
population of 128 million annually.
Americans are exposed to violence since
they are children. It is estimated that when
a child becomes an adult, he will have seen
16,000 assassinations and 200,000 acts of
violence in television. Can we be surprised
when children try to imitate what they see
on television and in the movies? For some of
them, violence has become the normal way of
solving conflicts.
Gun violence can be prevented by applying
public health strategies such as continued
surveillance of gun-related death and
injuries; identification of risk factors;
development and evaluation of interventions
to reduce those factors; and
institutionalization of successful
prevention strategies. In addition, it
requires de concerted efforts of all
community members including law enforcement
and public officials, teachers and school
administrators, psychology experts and
religious leaders.
As gun sales soar in the country, until
violence is addressed as a multifaceted
problem requiring multifaceted solutions, it
will continue to threaten not only people’s
lives but our future as a civilized society.