The choice is simple to me: It's between those who would insist on unlimited and unregulated access to the weapon and those who would protect the living. It's time to be moved enough to finally move on them. They must be yanked from their position of power, of legal control, by force. They don't understand it it's not in their wheelhouse, as they say. And they cannot be cured or beaten by reason, love or tolerance. Those who would possess the weapon above all else represent the mental health problem we face. What are we collecting, ultimately? And whom, ultimately, does our "collection" serve? Between those who are still surprised and moved to work for change and those who will stand idly by while more of our babies are mowed down by automatic weapons, just so they can still possess the weapon for their "collection". This is the war civilized America should be fighting: The war between those still surprised enough to be moved to work for change by these crimes against reason and humanity and those who aren't. It's time - again and finally - to draw the line. And we will never, ever accomplish this by legally handing out any kind of firearms - weapons of war, not personal protection - to anyone who wants them without any kind of regulation whatsoever. That's our ultimate, god-given responsibility. Our gods are allowing us the rope - and the ability to choose - to either hang ourselves or set ourselves free. And we do not need to prove this to our gods.
It's time, finally, to prove we care more the living and breathing than our religious or constitutional delusions of supremacy and dogma. And another, more insidious and threatening one, is the mentality that claims, after such a wound to our hearts and souls and flesh, one of two things 1) that 2nd Amendment rights supersede the rights of parents to send their babies to school without the risk of being massacred by the clinically depressed with WEAPONS MADE ONLY FOR WAR, and 2) that this equates on any level whatsoever with the constitutional right of women to choose have an abortion. Our bitter, self-serving resignation to the belief that we are who we are and will not change and cannot learn a new way is the mental health issue we face. It means that our souls have been so stripped of compassion, our minds so numbed by what we see on the news, in films, video games or on television or the twisted revenge scenarios we create in our minds because we're too shallow and afraid to sacrifice or simply show up and be of service, that we're not surprised by kindergarten children and their teachers being mowed down by semi-automatic weapons - weapons of war - in an American elementary school. "Nothing surprises ya anymore" and "It's not the time to talk about gun control" is the mental health problem we face. Looking back on the last few years, when it appeared America's soul had finally been bought, owned and sold by Wall Street special interests, debilitated by those who would deny health care to millions in need, reduced to lower standards of living by anti-labor corporatists, crippled by those who desire to deny equal rights based on gender or sexuality, judged and proselytized by fundamentalist Christians with no concept of the separation of church and state or the core values taught by their Christ, defiled by racists whose lives are driven by fear of Islam and by the success of a black community organizer and law professor who had the audacity to have had a Muslim father born in Kenya and who succeeded in spite of the odds created by the bigoted system devised to keep men and women like him "in their place," what we now see as the real threat is a mentality that still insists that "guns don't kill people, people kill people." That's the foremost mental health threat we face, the soul sickness that will ultimately destroy us: The gun lobby's culpability in the slaughter of babies in elementary school and their insistence that they are innocent. Tragically, it applies as even more now than it did then.) Nothing has changed, no progress has been made. Since then, nearly 2000 Americans have died in mass shootings, thousands more have been injured. (I wrote this on December 15th, 2012, the day after the murders of 20 students and 6 educators at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.