New Nonfiction from Dr. Anthony Gomes: “The Gun Culture in America: Will There be a Light at the End of the Tunnel?”

To fathom the Gun Culture and gun-related violence in the US, it is important to understand The Second Amendment (Amendment II) to the United States Constitution, which protects the right of the people to keep and bear arms. It was adopted on December 15, 1791, as part of the first ten amendments contained in the Bill of Rights. The Second Amendment was based partly on  English common law¾the right to keep and bear arms and was influenced by the English Bill of Rights of 1689Sir William Blackstone described this as an auxiliary right that supported the right of self-defense and resistance to oppression, in addition to the civic duty of every citizen to act in defense of the state. It originated during a turbulent period in English history during which the authority of the King to govern without the consent of Parliament, and the role of Catholics in a country that was becoming Protestant was challenged. Ultimately, James II, a Catholic, was overthrown in the Glorious Revolution, and his successors, the Protestants William III and Mary II, accepted the conditions that were codified in the Bill. One of the issues the Bill resolved was the authority of the King to disarm its subjects, after James II had attempted to disarm many Protestants and had argued with Parliament over his desire to maintain a standing (or permanent) army. The bill stated that it was acted to restore “ancient rights” trampled upon by James II.

There have been several versions of the Second Amendment. As passed by Congress and preserved in the National Archives, the amendment states:A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” The Supreme Court of the United States has ruled that the right belongs to individuals, while also ruling that the right is not unlimited and does not prohibit all regulation of either firearms or similar devices (Epstein, Lee; Walk, Thomas G. September 18, 2012). State and local governments are limited to the same extent as the federal government from infringing this right.

Early English settlers in America (Hardy, p. 1237; Malcolm, Joyce Lee (1996). p. 452, 466), viewed the right to arms and/or the right to bear arms and/or state militias as important for one or more of these purposes (in no particular order):

  • enabling the people to organize a militia system.
  • participating in law enforcement.
  • deterring tyrannical government; (Elder, Larry; July 3, 2008)
  • repelling invasion.
  • suppressing insurrection, allegedly including slave revolts; (Bogus, Carl T, Roger Williams,1998)
  • facilitating a natural right of self-defense.

Excepting for the last, none of the other purposes hold sway today.

THE NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION (NRA) AND ITS ROLE IN THE POLITICS OF GUNS

The NRA was founded in 1871 in New York by William Conant Church and George Wood Wingate. It is headquartered in Fairfax, Virginia and had 5 million members as of 2017.  The NRA advocates gun rights and informs its members regarding gun related bills since 1934. Since 1975, the organization directly lobbies the presidential candidates, the US Congress and Senate for and against gun legislation.  According to Center for Responsive Politics, nearly 90% of NRA donations went to Republican candidates. The NRA spent $54.4 million in the 2016 election cycle, almost all of it for or against a candidate but not a direct contribution to a campaign. The money went almost entirely to Republicans. Of independent expenditures totaling $52.6 million, Democrats received $265! The NRA’s largest 2016 outlay was the $30.3 million it spent in support of Donald Trump for President. (Mike Spies and Ashkley Balcerzac, OpenSecrets, November 9, 2018). According to ProPublica and the Federal Election Commission, most of the money went to support the Republican Presidential candidate and Republican Congressional races in 2020. Undoubtedly, the NRA is one of the most powerful lobbies in Washington that rates political candidates targeting candidates that are for gun control. Essentially, it uses the Second Amendment as cover to promulgate gun dissemination and profits on gun sales, much at the cost of gun deaths of Americans.

 

Guns are displayed at Dragonman’s, an arms seller east of Colorado Springs, Colo.

THE IMPACT OF NO-ACTION ON GUN-CONTROL ON YOUNG HIGH-SCHOOL AMERICANS

Since the Columbine High School shooting on April 20, 1999, in Littleton, there have been 229 U.S. school shootings not including misfires or instances in which a shooter was stopped before inflicting deaths or injuries. In 2022 alone there have been 212 mass shootings. On May 14, 2022, a racist attack at a Buffalo, New York, supermarket by an 18-year old gunman took the lives of 10 people and left three more injured. And just only 10 days later, an 18-yeard old gunman killed 21 people including 19 children at an elementary school in  Uvalde, Texas.  It was the deadliest school shooting in America since Sandy Hook.

There is no purpose in reviewing these ghastly events; however, to mention just two that touched me the most since these were only children, is what happened on December 14, 2012, in Newtown, Connecticut at the Sandy Hook Elementary School, and on May 24th in Uvalde, Texas.

There is no doubt that Adam Lanza, the mass killer of Sandy Hook was mentally deranged, but without guns he would be unable to go on a killing spree of innocent first-grade children. Although the states of Connecticut and New York passed stricter gun laws, despite President Obama’s highly emotional appeal and repeated appeals after other gun shootings, the US Congress and the Senate did nothing. To me this was and remains unconscionable and speaks of total inhuman cowardice of politicians in front of the world at large. Besides, most of these politicians are of the Christian faith who flaunt their Judeo-Christian faith and the greatness of our western civilization. I have wondered where Christ fits in this equation!

On the night of October 1, 2017, Stephen Paddock of Mesquite, Nevada fired more than 1,100 rounds on a crowd of concertgoers at the Route 91 Harvest music festival on the Las Vegas Strip in Nevada, leaving 58 people dead and injuring 851. He was found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. This incident was the deadliest mass shooting in the United States committed by a single individual whose motive remained unclear. As usual it reignited the debate about guns and guns laws. This time around the attention was focused on bump-stocks used by Paddock to convert his semi-automatic rifles to fire at a rate of a fully automatic weapon. The usual pictures on TV; the mourning, the flowers, the prayers, President Trumps visit to the injured, but NO action whatsoever!

And it happened again: On February 15, 2018, a 19-yesr old Nikolas Cruz opened fire with a semi-automatic gun at the Marjory Stonerman Doughlas High School in Parkland, Florida killing 17 and wounding 14 others, five with life-threatening injuries. Apparently, he purchased the semi-automatic weapon a year ago when he was only 18. It is ironic that the legal age to purchase alcohol in the US is 21 years, whereas a semi-automatic weapon can be purchase at the age of 18! As usual we saw the same pictures on TV: students running helter-skelter, parents crying, TV and newspaper correspondents saying and writing and asking the same questions all over again, and politicians offering prayers and condolences.

Mental health has been often used as a scapegoat. Yes, indeed these killer individuals could have significant psychiatric issues, that need to be dealt with, but without a gun and a semi-automatic moreover, they couldn’t kill. Yes, they might stab some, and even kill some with a knife or whatever else, but the overwhelming number of killings with a semi-automatic wouldn’t occur. Mentally deranged people are all over the world, but they don’t go killing innocent people at random, because they don’t possess guns! Furthermore, it is difficult to determine which medical condition is associated with a desire for mass killing, and young people with mental disorders unless institutionalized are well known to stop their medications for a variety of reasons.

It seems these killings of young people, and the after-emotions have become routine, and in a few days all of this drama disappears from the radar, until another killing surfaces. All of this despite the fact that the majority of Americans favor some gun control. Today, as before, parents all over the US agonize over the safety of their children. It is ironic that instead of passing sensible gun reforms, some elected politicians and lawmakers would prefer to further militarize our schools by arming teachers.

Our politicians and gun advocates can take the examples of several countries in the world, in particular Australia, where the current homicide rate is the lowest on record for the past 25 years. In 1996, after a mass shooting in Tasmania in April of that year, Australia passed the National Firearms Agreement. In the Tasmania killing, known as the Port Arthur Massacre, a 28-year-old man, armed with a semi-automatic rifle, shot and killed 35 people, and injured 18 others. Under the 1996 law, Australia banned certain semi-automatic, self-loading rifles and shotguns, and imposed stricter licensing and registration requirements. It also instituted a mandatory buyback program for banned firearms. (Eugene Kiely, The Wire, October 4, 2017).

What can be done to prevent gun violence in America?

1: Ban on the purchase of all semiautomatic and automatic weapons, bump stocks, and high-capacity magazines. These are military style weapons and need not be used for hunting or protection.

2: Strict background checks and uniform gun-laws nationwide. There is high rate of gun violence in Chicago despite strong gun laws; however, guns in Chicago come from Indiana.

3: Increase age limit for gun purchase to 21.

4: Better attention and alertness to mental health issues. However, this is a difficult problem to deal with in our multi-faceted culture and our dysfunctional health care system.

4: Campaign finance law in the US changed drastically in the wake of two 2010 judicial opinions: the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United v. FEC and the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals decision in SpeechNow.org v. FEC (Campaign Finance Historical Timeline, 2011). In a nutshell, the high court’s 5-4 decision gave a green light to corporations and labor unions to spend as much as they want to convince people to vote for or against a candidate.

Our corrupt political system based on lobbies and campaign contributions by individuals, PAC’s, super PCC’s, and corporations should end forthright. Each individual should be able to contribute an X amount, and the pool of public money should be divided equally both in local and presidential elections.

5: Regarding the Second Amendment it is important to recognize that at a time when the English Bill of Rights of 1689 was written England had no standing army. And when the Second Amendment was adopted on December 15, 1791, as part of the US Constitution, the US had gained freedom from British colonialism and imperialism just 15 years before, and consequently feared a foreign invasion. Furthermore, it is important to recognize that we have the largest and most sophisticated military the world has ever seen, and we don’t need guns in individual citizenry to protect us from a foreign invasion. Those amongst us who feel threatened by our own government, should keep in mind that their guns and militias are no match to our government military forces. Thomas Jefferson believed that unless every generation had the right to create a new constitution for itself, the earth would belong to “the dead and not the living”. (Thomas Jefferson to William Plumer, 1816.)

These arguments in no way means that we should take away guns for self-protection, sport and hunting. One can well understand that for rural America gun ownership for sport is part and parcel of their culture.

These changes would go a long way in asserting our humane values and our democracy and shall not deprive any person in the pursuit of life, liberty, and property without due process of law.

 

***

References:

Epstein, Lee; Walk, Thomas G. (September 18, 2012). Constitutional Law for a Changing America: Rights, Liberties and Justice (8 ed.). CQ Press. pp. 395–96. ISBN 978-1-4522-2674-3.

Hardy, p. 1237. “Early Americans wrote of the right in light of three considerations: (1) as auxiliary to a natural right of self-defense; (2) as enabling an armed people to deter undemocratic government; and (3) as enabling the people to organize a militia system.”

Malcolm, Joyce Lee (1996). To Keep and Bear Arms: The Origins of an Anglo-American Right. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Elder, Larry (July 3, 2008). “Why Do We ‘Keep and Bear Arms?’ Part 1”Human Events. Retrieved May 14, 2016.

Bogus, Carl T.; Professor, Roger Williams University School of Law (Winter 1998). “The Hidden History of the Second Amendment”. U.C. Davis Law Review. 31: 309–408.

Michael Roberts: Parkland School Shooting 208th Since Columbine: The Tragic List. Westword, February 15, 2018.

Mike Spies and Ashkley Balcerzac: The NRA Placed Big Bets on the 2016 Election and Won Almost All of Them. OpenSecrets, November 9, 2018.

Emily Stewart: Trump blames Florida school shooting on Russia investigation. VOX, February 18, 2018.

Eugene Kiely: Gun Control in Australia, Updated. The Wire, October 4, 2017

Campaign Finance Historical Timeline. Archived from the original on2011-07-24

Thomas Jefferson to William Plumer, 1816. ME 15:46

 

Anthony Gomes

Dr. Anthony Gomes, MD, FACC, FAHA, is a Professor of Medicine at the Mount Sinai Medical Center, and The Icahn School of Medicine, New York. He is the author of over 150 scientific articles in Cardiovascular Medicine and in the Humanities. He has also published several books in Cardiovascular Medicine, two books of poetry: Visions from Grymes Hill and Mirrored Reflections, and three novels: The Sting of Peppercorns, Nas Garras do Destino and Have A Heart.

19 Comments
  1. Dr Anthony Gomes ,
    I feel that you are correct about everything. You bring up very good points that everyone forgets. We originally were allowed to have guns to be part of a Militia to defend our homes and towns. Now it has been interpreted that everyone is allowed to own a machine gun and at a young age of 18.
    It has gone Insane.Now the republicans are blaming marijuana. (Laura Ingraham from Fox News.) what about alcohol, or just plain evil people?
    The republicans will deflect it to anywhere except gun control. There is too much money in the NRA.
    Trump got too much money donated to him. It is a very sick situation.
    You are an outstanding writer. I hope this catches peoples attention.
    I am glad that I read your article.
    Marilyn Swope

  2. This essay is historically very well contextualized , and argued that armed militia is a thing of centuries ago. However, as argued, today’s NRA is about gun industry.
    Well stated
    4: Better attention and alertness to mental health issues. However, this is a difficult problem to deal with in our multi-faceted culture and our dysfunctional health care system.
    What is mental health ? It has elastic definition. Deviancy is a inevitable social problem … but deviants with deadly guns is societal tragedy.
    Basílio Monteiro

  3. Dr Anthony Gomes,
    I feel that you are correct about everything. You bring up very good points that everyone forgets. We originally were allowed to own guns to be part of a Militia to defend our homes and towns. Now it has been interpreted that everyone is allowed to own a machine gun and at a young age of 18.
    It has gotten insane.
    Now the republicans are blaming it on marijuana (Laura Ingraham from Fox News). What about alcohol, or just plain evil people?
    The republicans will deflect it to anywhere except Gun Control. There is too much money in the NRA.
    Trump got too much money donated to him. It is a very sick situation.
    You are an outstanding writer. I hope this catches peoples attention.

  4. Dr Anthony Gomes,I feel that you are correct about everything. You bring up very good points that everyone forgets. We originally were allowed to own guns to be part of a militia to defend our homes and towns. Now it has been interpreted that everyone is allowed to own machine guns and at a young age of 18.
    It has gotten insane. Now the republicans are blaming it on marijuana . (Laura Ingraham from Fox News) what about alcohol, or just plain evil people?
    The republicans will deflect it to anywhere except Gun Control. There is too much money in the NRA.
    Trump got too much money donated to him. It is a very sick situation.
    You are an outstanding writer. I hope this catches peoples attention.

    1. Thanks Marilyn for your comments. We are on the same page on this. Most of the elements of the 2nd Ammendment except self defense and hunting do NOT hold sway today. Gun advocates shamefully hide behind the skits of the 2nd Amendment. We have the most sophisticated military in the history of the world…our military budget for this year was >700 billion dollars. What use does an 18 year old who cannot buy beer do with an automatic or a semiautomatic weapon except to go on a killing spree? Sad to say it is all politics and money, money, money for the gun industry!

      1. Good historical background on the 2nd Amendment and its roots in English law. The gun control regulations suggested are spot on, widely accepted and supported, and effectively implemented in other countries. Yet nothing changes. Nothing will change either. Best to hope for is state regulations – there is evidence in CA of positive impact of gun laws – but with the new Supreme Court even that is in jeopardy.

        1. Thanks Cristopher for your comments. It is disgraceful how our politicians are in the pockets of the gun lobby and hiding under the skirts of the 2nd Amendment I agree that our best hope is State regulations but unfortunatly it is almost impossible t prevent guns from coming from other states where. Anyway lets hope that there will be a flicker of light at the end of this tunnel of death. Being a physicians I am optimistic and never give up on a patient, but I am realistic as well when things are hopeless.

  5. Good article! Thoughtful informative backstory on the second amendment. Some people would use that to rationalize guns to fight the government. As you said form an AK-47 does not hold up to a tank! This is on the website for military veterans? Will be interesting to see comments from those readers

  6. Amazing article.Well thought out wit historical bacground.
    Demoniacal killings.
    Outlandish political gains at the contributions of guns,
    AND OF COURSE WHAT’S REASONABLE TO DO.
    CONGRATULATIONS DR.GOMES.

    1. Thanks for your comments. I doubt that the measures put forth by the Congress will pass the 50:50 Senate. It is a shame and totally unconscionable.

  7. Your article is a thought provoking piece on the historical background of gun violence brought on by the gun culture. If the politicians don’t work together to take the automatic weapons out of the equation then these tragedies will be an everyday occurrence. The second amendment argument is dead. We cannot justify automatic weapons in the hands of everyday citizens. The passage that hit home:
    “ Thomas Jefferson believed that unless every generation had the right to create a new constitution for itself, the earth would belong to “the dead and not the living”. (Thomas Jefferson to William Plumer, 1816.)”

    1. Thanks for your comments. We are on the same page. Why would citizens need automatic weapons when we have the most powerful military ever assembled in world history. And even if we do are automatic weapons and guns a reasonable match to invasions? We have the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and President Zelensky keeps on begging for long range missiles, tanks and heavy armor. The arguments put forward by gun advocates do not hold any weight whatsoever,

  8. Dr. Gomes, Your background research provided a much needed context on how this tradition of gun culture started, grew and…grew. But the obsessive attachment to a flat out refusal to any form of oversight, however modest, can not be explained and is, therefore, hard to understand. And so the killings will go on…!
    From various articles I read it appears that the extreme-right wing citizens are looking at their firearms as a way to hold back the change that is operating across the USA. One Alt-Right leader has said on a recorded video interview with BBC that he does not exclude the possibility that the USA would have to be split in at least two. There has been no charge of sedition served on him.
    It is worrisome to see where the USA is going – year after year the elected officials spend almost their entire mandate on frivolities – endless Congressional hearings, Court cases, budgetary wrangles, etc, etc, everything EXCEPT Governance. I do see, with pain, that a substantial cohort of elected representatives put their personal and Party interests ahead of those of the Country. History has shown (and the lesson still holds) that such conduct is a precursor to decay.

  9. Thanks Antonio for your valuable comments. It seems this time around the Senate will pass some Gun control legislation finally after so many needless killing of innocent people including children. However, it is my feeling that it does not go far enough in increasing the age to 21 and banning the purchase of semi and automatic weapons and magazines.

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