I’m uncertain about the wisdom of joining the mob of talking
heads this morning following the latest abominable nightmare involving a crazy
person and firearms, but wisdom is not necessarily my strong suite. I should also preface this by noting that I
am a hunter, and own a number of firearms.
I tend to view things through an historical lens, and look
at precedent and data to evaluate likely futures. It’s what archaeologists and
historians do and are supposed to do.
But of course it ain’t that simple is it?
Currently, one of the most pervasive political ideologies in
this country holds that government is by nature repressive, restrictive,
intrusive, expensive and, yes, evil. In the same view the private sector is enabling,
vigorous, expansive, and entirely good.
Again, an unemotional and purely analytical perspective
would suggest that the public and private sectors are just two different parts
of our economy and society. Each is good at some things, not so good at others.
Each has a role to play in our society, and each interacts with the other in
various, constantly evolving, and mostly complicated ways.
I bring this up, because my posited “rational public
response” would involve spending government money (i.e. tax money) and passing
and enforcing restrictive laws. It therefore runs smack up against a popular, if
largely mythological, political ideology. It just won’t fly in 21st
century America.
So what is likely to happen?
There will be a week or two of hand wringing and cries for
gun control and better mental health care as we bury 20 children and 6 teachers
in Connecticut. Then a number of political leaders, mostly taking campaign
money from the NRA or afraid of NRA money going to their political opponents,
will say we should proceed with caution and respect and defend the 2nd
amendment in our deliberations. The deficit will be used to regrettably note
that we simply can’t expand provisions for mental health care at this time. The TV pundits will chime in with much more
strident shouting about government intrusiveness and big spending. In a couple-three months, it will die down,
and all will be as peaceful as the small new graves waiting for spring in the
foothills of the Berkshires. Sometime in 2013, some crazy person will do
something horrible again somewhere else and the cycle will repeat itself.
I write this as the shortest day of the year approaches in
the northern hemisphere, and the many festivals that celebrate the return of
the sun begin. All these celebrations focus on humanity’s hope for a better
year and a better world, and I think I will too. If there are reasons and conditions that push
us toward repeating our mistakes, there are others that push back. If you take
the long view, the archaeologists and historians view, a shift in our society
toward rationality and enlightenment is evident. 2012 America is a better place
than 1950 America, which was a better place than 1930 America, and so on. We
do, in fact, learn from our past, if slowly and haltingly. It’s one of the
things that make us human. Maybe
sometime this century or next, our descendants will look back at how we care
for the insane and how we regulate the distribution of firearms and wonder how
the hell we could be so ignorant and cruel. My God, I hope so…
I wish you all happiness and peace at the Holidays and the
turning of the year!