The mass shooting at Umpqua Community College on Oct. 1
brought a violent end to the lives of nine victims (eight students and one
professor), besides the death of the perpetrator, Christopher Harper-Mercer, at
the hands of police called to the scene.
This tragedy has inspired a predictable chorus of editorials calling for
something to be done about such things.
Two voices heard on opposite sides of the political
fence are E. J. Dionne, based at the Washington
Post, and Charles Krauthammer, a familiar face on Fox TV. In a recent column, Dionne decries the
standard knee-jerk responses of his fellow liberals who call for gun control
laws that they know won't pass Congress.
He rightly regards this as a futile gesture, especially now that
Republicans control both houses of Congress and the National Rifle
Association's influence is strengthened thereby. Dionne's idea is to focus on gunmakers, who sell almost half
their output to governments of various forms (federal, state, and local) and
who might start making safer guns if that segment of the market demanded
them.
Safer how?
Dionne mentions two technologies that might mitigate unlawful gun
use: smart guns that can be used
only by their owner, and microstamping of guns and bullets. Several gunmakers have marketed various
versions of smart guns, which typically use some add-on such as a magnetic ring
or RFID chip worn by the owner to allow use of the gun. These things are not popular with the
gun lobby, and a sea change in attitudes would have to happen for any one of
the smart-gun technologies to become common. Microstamping is a patented technique of engraving a tiny
serial number on the firing pin of a gun, which is then stamped into the
cartridge when the gun fires. If
the cartridge is recovered, it can be matched with the microstamped gun. Although California passed a law requiring
microstamping of semi-automatic guns, it specifically exempted law-enforcement
weapons (there goes the government tie-in), and two gun manufacturers have quit
selling semi-automatic weapons in that state, citing the microstamping
requirement as a major reason.
The main weakness of Dionne's technological fixes has
nothing to do with the virtues or flaws of a given new technology. As Charles Krauthammer pointed out in
his column last week, even if every new gun sold was smart enough to shoot only
at truly bad guys, there were some 350 million guns in the U. S. as of last
year (more than one for every man, woman, and child), and the only effective
gun law that would stand a chance of reducing mass shootings would have to round
up the ones out there already.
Krauthammer cites Australia's compulsory buy-back program as an example
of this, but for a number of reasons it would never work in the U. S. To stop such a program here, all that gun
proponents would need to do is to cite the Second Amendment, which the U. S.
Supreme Court has interpreted as granting citizens the right to bear arms.
And that gets to the tradeoff involved in this
situation. Australia decided that
the risk of gun-related crime was so great that they sacrificed the freedom of
average citizens to bear arms, by and large. In this country, the right of private citizens to own guns
is valued more highly, and the result is that we have to run the risk of
unstable individuals now and then getting hold of a gun and shooting lots of people.
Is that problem any worse now than it has been? Every mass shooting is a unique
tragedy, but if we look at them in the same light as other unlikely but spectacularly
awful ways to die such as airplane crashes, the problem takes on a different
look. According to the Stanford
Mass Shootings in America Database, a comprehensive but not exhaustive study of
mass shootings in the U. S. since 1966, 1011 people have died in mass shootings
in the last 49 years. To put that
into perspective, more than 1300 passengers have died in commercial airline
crashes in the U. S. since only 1996, although many of those fatalities
happened in the 9/11 terrorist attack.
Graphing the Stanford data versus time produces a curve that has no
clear upward or downward trend—just noticeable spikes that don't seem to be
clustering toward the recent past.
Maybe it's coldhearted to view these things as
statistics, but one way to view this is that as a society, we have decided to
tolerate a certain risk of a small number of unstable people getting hold of a
gun as the price we pay for the freedom of the vast majority of well-behaved,
law-abiding gun owners to keep their firearms. Krauthammer speculates as to how you could stop the isolated
mass shooters, but most of them prior to their flame-outs never do anything
illegal enough to warrant taking their guns away before they come out
shooting. What has emerged about
Christopher Harper-Mercer's background has eerie resonances with that of another
mass shooter, Adam Lanza, who walked into a schoolroom in Sandy Hook,
Connecticut and killed 26 people after shooting his mother, and then killed
himself on Dec. 12, 2012. Both
were loners with absent fathers whose mothers struggled to socialize their
autistic-spectrum sons. But if
having minor autistic tendencies is made a crime, we'll have to lock up a lot
of engineers.
These matters come close to home here at my university,
just down the road from Austin where Charles Whitman inaugurated the modern era
of mass shootings in 1966 from the famed University of Texas tower. In its most recent session, the Texas
legislature passed a law making it legal for qualified concealed-weapons owners
to carry their firearms into classrooms and other buildings at public and
private universities. The idea seems
to be that if a nut case suspects that somebody besides himself may have a gun
in the room, he'll at least hesitate before he starts anything. Even if he does, maybe dead-eye Annie
there in the back row will take him out before he gets too far.
Needless to say, I don't look forward to the Shootout at
the Mitte Engineering Building taking place in my classroom. Fortunately, you have to be 21 to get a
concealed-carry permit, and so only a small minority of our students would
qualify.
We can count on oceanic news coverage of any mass
shooting, but it's hard to keep a sense of perspective while the media rattles
on. Unless the great majority of
gun owners in the U. S. decide it's just not a good idea to have a gun around,
those 350 million weapons are not going to go away any time soon. And anybody without a serious criminal
record (and even some with one) can still get one of them. Current technological fixes for the
problem simply don't seem to have the political traction to get very far. Maybe smart, unobtrusive metal
detectors with RFID chips for people authorized to carry concealed weapons
could work, but that would be a lot of expense for an unlikely problem. In the meantime, I'm going to act like
nobody in my classroom has a gun.
But all the same, I'm glad my podium is close to the exit.
Sources:
E. J. Dionne's
column "Let's focus on gun makers and smart-gun technology" was
carried by the Austin American-Statesman on Oct. 9, 2015. Charles Krauthammer's "Massacre begets charade with confiscation a no-go" appeared in the same publication
on Oct. 10. The Stanford Mass
Shootings in America Database is available to anyone (after a check-in
procedure) at https://library.stanford.edu/projects/mass-shootings-america. I also referred to Wikipedia articles
on smart guns, microstamping, and airline fatality statistics.
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