| Guns
and Poses: The Left's Irrelevant Answers to School Shootings
March 1, 2001
by Henry Payne and Diane Katz
Copyright 2001 National Review
Online
Flint, Mich. - America has been overtaken by an epidemic
of teasing that is turning our high schools into killing fields.
Scrawny teens, badgered beyond reason, are taking advantage
of lax gun laws to blow away their peers.
Or so we are now told.
"Many are asking if things would have been different
at Santana High if suspect Charles 'Andy' Williams hadn't
been bullied," declared MSNBC, echoing the mass media's
predeliction for elevating a perpetrator's victimhood status
- no matter how horrific the crime.
"The shooting . . . should be the occasion for a fresh
and urgent look at the whole subject of school violence and
gun control," droned a New York Times editorial.
But what gun control and teasing actually have to do with
a 15-year-old opening fire on schoolmates with a pistol snatched
from his father's collection seems a rather pathetic -- if
not politically opportunistic -- stretch. And altogether too
familiar.
Here in Flint, Mich., last March, a 6-year-old boy fatally
shot Kayla Rolland, a fellow first-grader who supposedly had
taunted him. With his father in jail on drug charges and parole
violations, the boy's drug-addled mother had left him in a
crackhouse run by his 19-year-old uncle. It was there the
child found the stolen, loaded .32 caliber revolver and plotted
Kayla's murder.
Like last week's Santana incident, and Columbine before it,
the killing provoked a gun-control spasm -- as if another
new law would somehow have made any difference.
Television-talk show host Rosie O'Donnell and President Bill
Clinton demanded mandatory gun locks (gun-stealing crack dealers
take note!), while supporters on the Left organized the Million
Mom March in Kayla's memory. Failure to act on new gun legislation,
they insisted, would only aggravate the tragedy.
Now, a year later, the first-grade killer's dysfunctional
family has all but been forgotton. But the Left continues
to insist that by failing to enact stricter gun control legislation,
Michigan has heartlessly ignored Kayla's death.
"The lessons of Kayla Rolland fell on deaf ears in the
state Legislature," complains Genesee County Prosecutor
Art Busch.
Eric Gorovitz, policy director of the Million Mom March,
laments the lack of new laws but says the girl's death still
inspires his passion for gun control.
"We've got 50 years of National Rifle Association policy
and extremist rhetoric to overcome," Gorovitz says. "There
is great enthusiasm for the prospects of bringing about meaningful
change, although that might take some time."
A year from now, will Americans will regard the Santee tragedy
as yet another gun control failure? (Despite the fact that
it already is illegal for a minor to possess a gun absent
parental supervision, to carry a concealed weapon or live
ammunition, and to bring a gun to school.) Or will the media
begin to question the dangers inherent in a boy living a continent
apart from his (divorced) mother? Or why his father did not
or could not alleviate his son's misery.
America already has the strictest gun control laws in its
history. Spurred by the attempted assassination of Ronald
Reagan in 1981 and the rampage on a Long Island commuter train
in 1993, Congress enacted waiting periods, background checks
and prohibitions on the sale of semi-automatics. Nonetheless,
the number of school shootings increased (although youth violence
is down overall).
It is the Left, then, that is deaf to the message these incidents
send. Unwilling to pass moral judgment on the accused, they
instead are left to recycle irrelevant and wasteful policy
prescriptions.
But conservative scholars have warned for years that the
implosion of the traditional family robs youth of the both
the moral underpinnings and parental oversight so necessary
to leading a righteous, productive life - particularly in
a culture that preaches instant gratification and bestows
Grammys on the likes of Eminem.
William Bennett, author of the "Index of Leading Cultural
Indicators," notes that the explosion in juvenile crime
in the last thirty years closely tracks the deterioration
of family infrastructure (single - parent homes have increased
threefold since 1965). Even with the recent decline, youth
crime rates remain at levels 15 times what they were 10 years
ago.
Social scholar John DiIulio - currently leading President
Bush's Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives - attributes
this pathology to "moral poverty," the "poverty
of being without loving, capable, responsible adults who teach
you right from wrong."
While the Left's message obviously resonates with many Americans,
millions of others understand that preventing another Santana
lie not in unending government intervention, but in the conservative
values that that long guided a nation blessedly free of school
shootings.
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