Some Thoughts On Gun Control From Stuprendan
My brother Stuprendan came to visit me last Friday in Brooklyn, and we got to talking about his high school midterms, which he had just finished. He told me he had been up until 2am the night before writing a term paper on gun control. The paper was 12 pages long, and it argued heavily for gun control—which is unsurprising, considering that my family is firmly anti-guns.
When we first moved into the house where my family lives, there were two hunters that would set up camp on the edge of the property. They had been given permission to do so by the family before us, but my mother didn’t like them being there.
They didn’t even hunt with guns—they used crossbows and arrows—but my mother was afraid that one day, we’d be playing in the woods, and they’d actually mistake us for deer. That was entirely possible, considering that she encouraged us to spend most of our time outdoors—we had camps and tree houses all over the place, buried deep in the woods, where we would eat onion grass and pretend to survive the apocalypse. She asked them to leave. They snuck in through the entrance to the park adjacent to our driveway. Finally, after a few calls to the local police station, they disappeared for good.
If you were a mother with four young children, you probably would have felt the same way—how could you feel comfortable letting your children play outside when there were men in fatigues sitting in trees, waiting to shoot moving objects? Now imagine that the crossbow is a semi-automatic gun, and the woods are a more populated area, and you want to protect someone you love. You can start to see how insane it is to say that people should have such automatic rifles, even if they’re used solely for hunting.
In the 18th century, the Second Amendment was added to the bill of rights for the primary purpose of allowing the anti-federalists the means to uprise against the federal government if it came to that point. Now, in our current society gun promoters are using the Second Amendment as a justification to stockpile whatever dangerous weapons they chose. The real intention of the amendment, however, was to provide the citizens of America with right to rebel against an oppressive government.
When the National Rifle Association was founded in 1870, they never once mentioned the Second Amendment as one it’s causes. Only later did they conveniently adopt the Second Amendment into the arguments for more lenient gun control.
Many right-wing gun activists feel that nuclear weapons should not be freely distributed among different countries because the risk of of them falling into the wrong hands is too great. The same can be said for assault rifles or pistols with high capacity rounds; they should not be distributed and sold because if they do fall into the wrong hands, there will be devastating outcomes.
No one should decide to do nothing, and not attempt to be a part of the solution to our our country’s gun problems. Promoting bans on assault rifles and other military grade weapons will help to get these firearms off the streets. It is not a valid excuse to simply claim that somehow people will always find access to guns. We have bans on chemical weapons and explosives because of their potential to kill large numbers of people, even if does not necessarily prevent every terrorist attack.
Governor Cuomo took the first brave steps towards gun reform, banning high capacity rounds and assault rifles in New York, and hopefully others will follow his example. We don’t have to tackle the gun problem all at once, but we do need to slowly chip away at it, passing one bill at a time. Throughout the fight for a safer America, with tougher gun control laws, it is important not to waver in your beliefs. You can’t rely on others to be your voice, even if leaving it to others seems like the easiest thing to do. The most meaningful things in life are the hardest to accomplish at first, but end up to be the most rewarding in the end. It is important to remember that whenever a gun is picked up, there is seldom a happy ending.