Thursday, December 27, 2012

Fisking Huckabee on the Bath MI Disaster

A post from Mike Huckabee, former presidential candidate and late Conservative rock star, is making the rounds on Facebook:

Michael Tremoglie on the Italian website, Academia Res Publica, offers some food for thought about the Sandy Hook school shooting. He writes that the worst school killing in history wasn’t committed by a disaffected teenager, didn’t involve a gun, and happened before there was violent entertainment and before God was taken out of schools. In 1927 in Bath, Michigan, a middle-aged farmer blew up a schoolhouse, then detonated a car bomb. He killed 38 kids and six adults, and nobody ever figured out why.

Tremoglie notes that the only scholarly study of mass school killings was published by an Ohio sociology professor in 2007. It found that there is no holistic approach to investigating school killings, where interdisciplinary experts examine every possible angle and share their knowledge. Instead, different groups quickly seize on the tragedy to advance whatever angle they already believe. Liberals blame lax gun control laws. Conservatives blame violent media. Mental health groups say it shows the need for more funding. And so on. The study suggested that until we start investigating these tragedies the way we do other disasters, where experts from many different fields work together to discover the truth, we may never learn what really causes them or how to prevent them from happening again.

So much of this is untrue, it's pathetic.

The bombing was the work of a "farmer." Well, EVERYONE in Bath, Michigan at the time was a "farmer." But the bomber was also the former school district treasurer, a person known for being difficult, impatient and violent. He was bitter over his loss in a recent school board election, and was also facing foreclosure, and his wife was dying of tuberculosis. He had stopped working his farm, tried to give his horses away to a neighbor. He planted the explosives months before the event, and blew his own house up.

Mike Huckabee can't figure out why Andrew Kehoe blew up the Bath school building. I can't figure out why anyone should listen to Mike Huckabee about anything.

The FBI has a very clear set of profiles for mass killers. The problem isn't that we need more investigations. The problem, clearly, is that we've created a culture where there's a prevailing abhorrence of guns and gun owners, and where people are unprepared to protect themselves. We've seeded the landscape with "gun-free zones" that are nothing more than target-rich environments for potential shooters. Paradoxically, we've simultaneously conditioned a generation of disaffected young men into numbness regarding gun violence via video games and movies. And to top it off, we've created a media system that sensationalizes the relatively rare mass killing incidents while largely ignoring murder rates in poor and minority communities.

There have been 76 people killed in mass-shooting incidents within the past 10 years. There were more than 440 school-aged children killed in Chicago in the past year. I submit that if we want to do something to protect children, we would be further ahead forcibly relocating the population of the greater Chicago area than we will either by more gun control or by putting police in schools.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Thoughts on the Newtown Massacre

The "elephant in the room" in the discussion of recent mass-killing events is how existing gun regulation and cultural mores have created pockets where there are concentrated numbers of potential victims. Once a person has decided, for whatever unfathomable reason, to kill a bunch of people in a public spectacle, the obvious best places to do it are where they are most assured of not encountering armed resistance: schools, malls, theaters, or anyplace else with highly publicized bans on gun possession. These events decidedly do not occur at places where one encounters ordinary citizens with guns on their person: firing ranges, police stations, hunting clubs or gun shows. We have concentrated the most vulnerable members of our society in places where they can easily be victimized, and then systematically disarmed the people charged with protecting and defending them.

After pilots were targeted by the 9/11 terrorists, a number of airlines changed their policies to again allow pilots to carry side arms. Now we hear a cry for a police presence in schools. Well, we don't need armed guards in schools. We need to allow legitimate, responsible gun owners to carry their weapons in defense of themselves and their communities. That's what the Second Amendment is about. That's what we've spent the past 50 years systematically thwarting with gun regulations and enculturated squeamishness about gun ownership. Meanwhile, paradoxically, much of our popular culture glamorizes and cartoonifies gun violence in ways that, while not clearly causative of gun violence, certainly desensitize some of us to the horrific damage that guns can do.

20 children are dead because some decided to be evil and nobody was able to shoot back and stop him. A bitter harvest indeed.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Reflections on Retiring Politicians



If you want to know what's wrong with America, consider this: Only 1 out of 3 eligible voters bothered to vote in the last election.

Judging from the results, its pretty clear that a little over 1/6th of America thinks that the Tea Party is a racist elitist secession movement, thanks to the lies told by political hacks on MSNBC.

Meanwhile, a little less than 1/6th of America think Barack Obama is a closet-muslim communist straight out of the Manchurian Candidate who wants to radically change the social and political structure of the country, thanks to the lies told by the political hacks at FOX News.

Meanwhile, in New Mexico, the guy who basically ran on a platform that the government should leave us alone and keep its hands off our stuff was able to draw only 1% of the vote.

Meanwhile, in Washington, the only person on either side of the political spectrum who had the guts to point out that the country is working with a fraudulent central banking system - and that the credit card bills from the past 25 years of military adventure expeditions are piling up for our children to pay, while the world continues to despise us despite our constant assertion that we are the good guys - just left town after been marginalized out of the political process for more than 30 years.

Meanwhile, his son is the only person in congress to stand athwart the stream of history and yell "stop" at the relentless erosion of civil liberties that the executive branch pursues in the euphemistic name of "homeland security." (Excuse me, but the Founders had a plan for "homeland security". It's called the Second Amendment.)

I don't know where people who think Gary Johnson and Ron Paul are onto something are supposed to go after the 2012 elections, but as soon as it becomes clear, we all better go there and forget about the one-party Republicrat Democan system, because as the stream of nonsense we're hearing from Barry and John and company about the "fiscal cliff" (by the way, what ever that is, we went over it a long time ago) isn't going to amount to a hill of beans when the rest of the world figures out that our money isn't worth the paper we high-speed print it on.