Arthur Hose Professor Ciobanasiu English 1A 1 September 2016 A Great Compromise It seems like mass-killings, accidental firings and highway snipers have snuck comfortably into our society. Have we accepted mass shootings like Columbine HS, Sandy Hook Elementary and especially our local Lindhurst HS? Even law enforcement is not safe with the murder of five police officers in Dallas in one of our latest mass-shootings. With these famous, headline grabbing news stories, there are countless active shooter and murders that don’t reach national headlines. When is enough, enough? Very few social arguments are more polarizing than gun control. In Molly Ivins, “Get a Knife, Get a Dog, but Get Rid of Guns”, she takes a strong, passionate position …show more content…
The Constitution addresses our basic civil, individual, God-given rights and liberties and our government both local and central, should and must protect those rights. However, our brilliant Founding Fathers created these laws in the early development of our Country realizing our laws needed to evolve as our Country evolved. They went as far as calling our Constitution a “living and breathing document” meaning the laws must change with the current times and state of our nation. So as guns and firearms evolved to become more dangerous and accurate, I believe even our most basic, fundamental laws should have followed suite and evolved. Not only do I reason that this law is grossly misinterpreted, but I also believe this law should have been amended or at least evolved for more clear language to account for the evolution of the …show more content…
First off guns have many uses that do not involve killing. Guns are generally used for sport, hunting and self-defense while cars are mainly used for transportation. Deaths caused by guns seem senseless and avoidable while deaths caused by vehicles are mostly accidental in nature and unavoidable. The data does show that cars kill more people than guns do, but many more people drive and own cars than people use and own guns. The data shows that from 1999-2014 the trend for vehicle deaths has fallen due to improved safety features in cars and the trend for gun deaths has steadily risen greatly closing the gap between vehicle and gun deaths (Gun Deaths Compared to Motor Vehicle Deaths). To compare deaths by vehicle and deaths by guns just doesn’t make sense to me, but to compare the way vehicles are tracked and monitored and then implementing those same regulations to the control of guns does make sense. There are too many innocent lives that are lost by the use and ownership of
In America, guns have done great harm to society. Guns have been culprits to many different types of shootings such as Charleston, which was a shooting in a church, Sandy Hook, which was responsible for the deaths of twenty young children and six adult staff members, and the shooting in Aurora, Colorado during a midnight premiere of The Dark Knight Rises which resulted in the deaths of twelve innocent people. These are just three we listed here. How many times have there been news of another shooting? It’s like, everytime we turn on the news, we see another shooting that occurred. It doesn’t take a lot for one to notice that the current gun laws haven’t been working. The evidence which we all see daily in the news
Gun control in America is one of the most fiercely debated topics in today’s political sphere. Nearly everyone has an opinion and there is a mind-boggling amount of information typically discussed regarding the matter. Media hot takes and campaign talking points aside, far too many lives have been lost to gun violence. A total of 12,902 in 2016, to be exact. The fact that more lives have been lost to gun violence in the United States this year than the 5,000 lost in the almost 10-year war effort overseas in Iraq and Afghanistan is appalling. Is sensible and reasonable gun control progress attainable in our near future? That remains to be seen, however it is my intention to respectfully dissect an argument presented by none other than an essay
Gun control in the U.S has been a highly talked about topic the past couple of years. Through the development of technology and social media; many people across the country have been more involved in voicing their opinions about this issue. America is known as the land of the free, many people take pride in being able to bare arms. However, this right has been abused by not only civilians, but law enforcement as well. The United States has the 31st highest rate of gun violence in the world and it is not decreasing anytime soon. The phrase “America's largest mass shooting” has been reassigned to numerous occurrences that have taken place over the past decade. It is apparent that through these tragedies it is time for a serious change, innocent lives are being lost for no reason.
It appears as though the repetitive and unfortunate tragedies of mass shootings have become incorporated into the everyday life of American culture. We are forced to live in a heightened degree of fear, skepticism, and hesitation concerning our public safety. This phenomenon could reasonably occur in response to the vast ineffectiveness of the country’s current gun laws. Time after time similar misfortunes arise, yet few major changes are implemented to prevent them from reoccurring in the future. We cannot let this trend continue any further. Though some claim that increased gun control is useless and infringes upon the Second Amendment, it limits civilians’ weapons grade, obstructs those deemed unfit to wield such lethal weapons, and insures a greater level of security, thus it should be executed.
One of the main topics of debate is whether or not gun laws actually correspond with lower murder rates. “The average annual gun death rate ranged from almost 3 per 100,000 in Hawaii to 18 per 100,000 in Louisiana. Hawaii had 16 gun laws, and along with New Jersey, New York and Massachusetts was among states with the most laws and fewest deaths. States with the fewest laws and most deaths included Alaska, Kentucky, Louisiana and Oklahoma.” (CBSnews.com). These statistics can lead one to believe that more gun laws equate to lower death rates. What these numbers prove is that some gun regulations help lower death rates. However, what gun control activists would have you believe that a full on gun ban would lower these numbers more. This is not the case as evident in the following, “During the years in which the D.C. handgun ban and trigger lock law was in effect, the Washington, D.C. murder rate averaged 73% higher than it was at the outset of the law, while the U.S. murder rate averaged 11% lower” (James D.
From 2014 to October 2017, there have been 213,787 gun related incidents. Nearly 54,000 of those incidents have resulted in death. In my lifetime alone, I’ve experienced 42 mass shootings resulting in 414 deaths and 851 injuries. Although the location and number of victims changed, I still felt the same mixture of sadness and anger wash over me every time I heard about a shooting. Another constant through the years was the phrase “worst mass shooting in American history”. Living through the different iterations of mass shootings negatively shaped my views on the state of gun control. Coming from a
Imagine this, it’s a sunny day and you and your family are out eating ice cream at a park suddenly you hear 3 pops, people screaming, blood everywhere and one of your family members lying on the floor, what would you do?According to the government, the definition of mass shootings is that 4 or more people are killed, victims are selected randomly, and the attack is in a public place. Mass shootings started in the 1910’#, but got worse in the 1070s. In the The 1990s, there were 42 mass shootings due to easy access to guns. U.S. citizens own more guns than any other country. Some suggestions from liberals/gun control advocates to solve the problem of mass shootings are to address mental health illness seriously, common sense control, and re-examine the media’s role publicizing violence. Some suggestions that the conversation/gun rights advocates have are school and public buildings should have more physical barriers such as ballistic glass and steal plating and they should have more trained, air,
The scene is all too recognizable. A troubled person pulls out a gun in a school, an office, or a shopping center, and he or she slaughters innocent men, women, and children. Recently, mass murders have occurred at Columbine High School, Virginia Tech University, and Omaha’s Westroads Mall (Schwartz). These tragedies are not inevitable, so people wonder one question. Are guns in our society getting out of control?
Perry Chiaramonte’s recent article entitled “Gun groups accused of ‘swatting’ open-carry permit holders, putting lives at risk” is unrealistic in its accusations, as well as inflammatory. This article defines swatting as “the act of tricking an emergency service into dispatching responders based on a false report” and manufatures the outrageous claim that the people with guns are the victims when the people who are calling the police feel as if they are in enough danger to do so. Online campaigns for stricter gun control laws are made out to seem ludicrous in nature and are the enemy of the sane public. The usage of quotes in this article is quite one sided as well in an attempt to slant the opinion of the audience. Chiarmonte constantly neglects to consider the ‘other’ side of the argument and therefore falls flat in giving a ‘fair and balanced’ evaluation of the situation.
Nine students were killed at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon. A man opened fire in a church, in Charleston, South Carolina, killing nine people, including the pastor. Twenty-seven were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut. Twelve were killed in the Washington Navy Yard. This is only a few examples from a very long list. The grim truth is that mass shootings are becoming the new normal. Every few months, another mass shooting occurs and the public goes through the same routine of mourning, honoring, and ultimately debating. What causes these manic episodes of multiple, indiscriminate gun deaths? Some push for more gun control, others argue that the U.S. mental health system is a failure. Controversy aside,
How many times are these mass shootings in the United States of America going to take place? How long is too long before we realize that “Sending our prayers and thoughts to the victims of the families affected by such tragedies” is not going to cut it? When are we going to address the fact that America as a whole needs to take action towards such horrendous tragedies? Blaming such events on terrorism, mental instability and so forth is not the solution. We need to look at the big problem before us and that is we need to regulate gun control. If we have these regulations beforehand, we would have less to worry about. People go to such events as a form of stress relief, entertainment and to meet their favorite artists. Instead, here we are worried,
Henry Giroux is a Global TV Network Chair Professorship at McMaster University in the English and Cultural Studies Department; and a scholar at Ryerson University in Canada. With his numerous successes and as a renowned scholar, he has also written many books throughout his life, including America’s Education Deficit and The War on Youth, Disposable futures, America at War with Itself, and many more. In Giroux article, “Gun Culture and the American Nightmare of Violence,” he starts off describing how mass shootings have become a routine in American culture today and that this type of violence not only shifts people’s perspective on the world but is now a way for entertainment. As Giroux takes a serious look at society today, he reveals that
I am here today to advocate for our mission to achieve greater gun control within the United States. I would first like to thank you all for coming out today to learn about what my committee wants to accomplish. Everyone in America today knows that we hear about mass shootings regularly. Everyone has heard the calls for gun control because we hear about people being shot and killed by guns on a regular basis. Not much change is happening, though. Our call for gun control needs to be getting stronger and more desperate daily. Instead, we turn a blind eye to the constant news about the newest mass shooting as if it’s normal. It has become almost normal. How did we as a country allow that to happen? How can we continue to not take action, as
In this expository article. “America's lethal affair with the gun”, dated Februrary 6th, 2006, Micheal Gawenda contend s that America needs to be stricter on gun control laws. Gawenda, from 'The Age', writes the article with tones of dissension and assetiveness, but in a calm controlled way of approach. The intended audience of the article are the readers of 'The Age, as that is the source.
It seems that every few weeks you turn on the news and hear of cases with mass murders such as Adam Lanza and James Holmes, some of the more recent culprits of single incidents of mass murders. While neither of these events happened on college campuses, they took place in places that were once safe for everyone, an elementary school and a movie theater respectively. These are the cases that have caused massive national debates on gun control. While