Our Jihadis and Theirs
The Real (Armed) Dangers of American Life
By Tom Engelhardt
Consider this paragraph a holding action on the subject of getting
blown away in America. While I write this dispatch, I’m waiting
patiently for the next set of dispiriting killings in this country. And I
have faith. Before I’m done, some angry -- or simply mentally disturbed
-- and well-armed American “lone wolf” (or lone wolves) will gun down
someone (or a number of people) somewhere and possibly himself (or
themselves) as well. Count on that. It’ll be my last paragraph. Think of
it as, in a grim way, something to look forward to as you read this
piece on American armed mayhem.
National security officials and politicians have been pounding home the message that the “greatest threat”
to Americans is an extreme and brutal jihadist movement thousands of
miles away and the videos and social media messages its followers
produce that make it seem close at hand. With that in mind, let’s take a
look at a few of the dangers of armed life in these United States, a
quick survey of national insecurity in a country armed to the teeth.
I’m sure you won’t be surprised to learn that, in the first half of
2015, there’s been a plethora of incidents to draw on. There’s the
killer still on the loose in northern Colorado who shot at people in cars or out biking or walking late at night. There’s the suspected serial killer who dumped
seven bodies behind a strip mall in New Britain, Connecticut, and may
now be in jail on unrelated charges. There’s the ongoing trial of James Holmes who blew away 12 moviegoers and wounded 70 in a multiplex in Aurora, Colorado, in 2012. There was the mass killing
of seven people in February in the tiny town of Tyrone, Missouri, by
Joseph Aldridge, an armed recluse who then killed himself. And don’t
forget Sudheer Khamitkar, who shot to death his wife and two young sons and then himself in Tulsa in April, or Christopher Carrillo, who murdered four of his family members and then turned his gun on himself in a Tucson home in May. And many others.
In such a list, there should be a special place for a phenomenon
that, though largely untabulated, has been gaining attention in recent
years as ever more Americans “carry” in ever more places.
This means ever more loose guns lying around. I’m talking about the
mayhem committed by toddlers (or perhaps they should be thought of as
American lone wolf cubs). Toddler shootings range from the two year old who killed his mother in a Walmart in Idaho with the gun she was packing in her purse as 2014 ended to the three year old who discovered a gun
in a purse in an Albuquerque motel room in February and wounded his
father and pregnant mother with a single shot. Such a list for this year
would have to include the Florida two year old who found his father’s gun in the family car and killed himself with it in January, the three year old who picked up an unattended gun and killed a one year old in a Cleveland home in April, the Virginia two year old who found a gun
on top of a dresser and killed himself in late May, and the four year
old who, at about the same time in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, picked up a shotgun
at a target shooting range and killed his 22-year-old uncle. Toddler
killings have been commonplace enough in these pistol-packin’ years that
they now significantly outpace terror killings in the U.S.
The Big Leagues of Violence
While we’re at it (before we get to the really big stuff), there is
the crew I think of as American-style suicide killers. They lack a
political or religious ideology like the suicide bombers of the Middle
East, but they are on missions for which killing yourself as well as
others is the imagined end. Think of them as informal American jihadis,
in touch with no ISIS social media types, watching no inflammatory
terror videos, but all riled up anyway, often deeply disturbed, armed,
and on suicide missions in the American homeland.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176013/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_armed_violence_in_the_homeland/#more
No comments:
Post a Comment