These are some of the many feelings we all went through, as
news of the tragic shooting of innocent little kids in small town America spread.
The president of the United States cried as he responded
live on television to the mass murder in Sandy Hook Elementary School, in Newtown CT.
Last night, parents, families, friends, and neighbours all
gathered in a small school gymnasium, while local religious leaders offered
words of hope and prayer during the public memorial service for the victims of
another act of random violence in America.
American President Barack Obama gave a solemn message of
hope, saying that we cannot go on allowing this sort of thing to happen. This isn't the first time the American president has addressed parents and families
of a school shooting.
World leaders issued statements, expressing their horror
over the incident, and offering their condolences for the families and friends
of the victims.
Parents all over the world echoed thoughts of hugging their
children extra tight that night on all the major social networks.
Today has been labelled “Hug Your Kid Today” to encourage parents
to hug their children, and tell them they love them.
Maybe tomorrow will be “Bring an Apple, Not a Gun to School”
day?
When I was a kid, the most violent thing anyone ever
witnessed was the occasional fist fight between two jocks trying to woo the
same cheerleader.
Back then, it was too much testosterone and the foolishness
of a youthful mind which occasionally caused someone to get a black eye.
These days, social pressures on our youth – and us all –
build up until we explode. Most just punch a pillow, write a nasty blog, or
maybe snap at their spouse.
They shoot people.
Innocent people.
People going on about their daily lives, not aware that
today is their last day on Earth.
Over the next few hours, days and weeks, as the victims are
laid to rest, the media will focus on the never-ending question about gun control in the land of the free and the home of the brave.
The American Constitution’s Second Amendment tells citizens
of that once great land, they are not only allowed to carry fire arms, but
encourages them to use them to defend their freedom.
That fine piece of legalize – which is defined as the
Supreme Law of the United States of America – was written in May of 1787, and
adopted in September of that year by the Constitutional Convention. The law of
the land was ratified by the then 11-member states, and went into effect on
March 4, 1789.
Back in the 1700’s one could understand the logic of
allowing people to own and use guns to defend their property. It was a very
different time, long before the microchip.
The world was an unsettled place – a global wild west. The
French Revolution began with the fall of Bastille on July 14, 1789. The Spanish
captured the British schooner ‘Northwest America’ near Vancouver in June of
that year.
It was the same year that Benjamin Franklin wrote: “there is
nothing certain in life, except death and taxes.”
It was a time when governments were battling each other for
land.
No wonder the founders of the United States of America wrote
into law, the right to carry and use guns.
Times really have changed.
Wars still exist – but not in the land of the American
dream.
Or do they?
Every time a crazed gunman goes on a killing spree in the States, the media, politicians and others raise questions about whether or not
the law of the land should be amended, eliminating the right to bear arms.
And every time a crazed gunman goes on a killing spree in
the States, the largest political action group in that country – the National Rifle Association (NRA) goes quiet at first – they took down their website
today pending a slew of media attention and anti-gun lobbyists. Then the NRA
enlists famous American cowboys to continue the fight for the right to carry
and use guns.
It’s no longer a war over land, but over the right to shoot
someone.
The NRA argues that guns don’t kill people, people kill
people.
But it’s people with guns that kill people – often without
guns.
It’s time the American constitution was amended to keep in
touch with the reality of our modern times. We no longer need worry about
someone coming onto our land to try and take it from us. The wild west is no
more.





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