Saluting Taya Kyle on Firearms

Oughta Be a Law

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

— by Polydamas

In the olden days of the silver screen (and later television), a respectable-looking gentleman of middle age years often proudly proclaimed that he was “a tax-paying citizen” or “a law-abiding citizen” which he used to buttress his otherwise unsupportable argument that “there ought to be a law” against something or other. If he believed that his position was especially important — which was almost always — the situation called for a FEDERAL law. Apparently, mere state laws, statutes, administrative regulations, and municipal ordinances  were never good enough vehicles for imposing his authoritarian views on everyone else.

It is likely impossible to discern now whether the administration of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and its myriad of three-letter federal agencies caused its authoritarian views to be inserted into the mouths of actors by actively influencing the era’s Hollywood screenwriters and directors. There is an equal likelihood that the same authoritarian views were already espoused by the selfsame screenwriters and directors which were then used to justify federal regulations. Whether life imitated art or art imitated life, the end was the same — a myriad of federal laws and regulations.

Later on, in the 1960s and 1970s, government authoritarianism was marketed and re-branded as citizen initiatives to appeal to idealistic hippies. Gone were the days that new federal laws and regulations were marketed to the American people as the brainchildren of the Beltway bureaucracy’s bright boys who devoted every neuron of their brains to formulating technocratic solutions to every societal ill. Even though, in reality, congressional staffers and industry lobbyists still did the actual drafting of the laws and regulations, the fiction peddled to the American people was that these rules originated by the citizenry. Schoolhouse Rock’s naive depiction of how a bill became a law, which supposedly began earnestly in America’s heartland and traveled to Washington, D.C., exploited the idealistic notions of the generation.

Since the late 1970s and the early 1980s all the way to the present, America has been and is currently in the midst of the third stage of marketing ever more stringent government rules and regulations by exploiting the victims — especially children — for public policy purposes. Lawmakers, lobbyists, and busybodies of all persuasions have been quick to seize upon the death of any victim, especially a child, to use as the martyr to the cause. Passing a restrictive new law is now presented as the only way to remember and honor the memory of the victims. The undercurrent of this cynical sales pitch, aimed at parents everywhere, is an unabashed tug at the heartstrings, “if you really love children, you must support this law” or “if this law could save the life of even one child, it will be more than worth it”. Of course, the low threshold of “potentially” saving the life of even one child could be used to justify any restrictive law, e.g., a complete ban on sticks because they could poke out a child’s eye, the prohibition of peanuts and nuts at every school or business establishment because an allergic child could experience anaphylactic shock, etc.

In the realm of gun control, many Democratic politicians and operatives eagerly seek to capitalize on the electorate’s grief for gun violence victims. California’s Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein has parlayed the 1978 assassinations of San Francisco Democratic Mayor George Moscone and Democratic City Supervisor Harvey Milk by former police officer and Democratic City Supervisor Dan White into a ten-year tenure as San Francisco’s Mayor and into a 24-year career in the United States Senate. Carolyn McCarthy was elected New York’s Democratic Representative in 1996 after she lost her husband three years earlier when Colin Ferguson killed six passengers on the Long Island Railroad. She spent 18 years in the United States Congress. Senator Feinstein and Congresswoman McCarthy authored and sponsored federal laws to strictly regulate firearms, even admitting that their ultimate objective was the outright confiscation of firearms even from law-abiding and responsible citizens.

James Brady, the former Press Secretary for Republican President Ronald Reagan, became partially paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair in 1981 after John Hinckley, Jr. attempted to assassinate President Reagan. For the next three decades, James Brady and his wife Sarah crusaded for stringent government regulations. In 1993, they were instrumental in the passage of the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, known as the Brady Law.

More recently, after her husband Chris Kyle, the renowned Navy SEAL sniper and the subject of the Clint Eastwood film “American Sniper”, was murdered in 2013 by Eddie Ray Routh, his widow Taya Kyle could have easily become the darling of the left and a voice for gun confiscation. She could have been invited to appear on Oprah Winfrey’s shows. She could have been feted by former three-term New York City Mayor and financial tycoon Michael Bloomberg who has spent many millions of his dollars to fund his gun control organization “Everytown for Gun Safety”. She could have appeared throughout the land with former Arizona Democratic Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, who survived being shot in the head in 2011 by Jared Lee Loughner, and together they could have campaigned for vigorous gun control legislation with Giffords’ political action committee “Americans for Responsible Solutions”.

Taya Kyle could have transformed her personal tragedy into a crusade to ban all firearms in the hands of civilians and called it “Kyle’s Law”. She could have been invited to the White House and dined with President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle. She could have been drafted to serve as a Democratic Congresswoman and spent a quarter of a century in the corridors of Washington, D.C. and following in the footsteps of Senator Dianne Feinstein and Representative  Carolyn McCarthy. However, instead of opting for the expedient route that would have gained her political and social acclaim from the liberal elites of Hollywood, the Atlantic and Pacific coast states, and Washington, D.C., Taya Kyle chose to follow the wisdom of America’s heartland, long derided by the liberal elites as “Fly-Over Country”. She courageously spoke on television against President Barack Obama’s unconstitutional executive actions that he announced in early January.

In addition, on January 8, 2016, Taya Kyle authored her heartfelt and eloquent opinion piece for CNN titled “‘American Sniper’ Widow: Gun Control Won’t Protect Us” (http://cnn.it/1PQQURk), which is reproduced in full below. Her opinion piece should be read by any fair-minded person who wishes to understand this crucially important subject matter. Most particularly, her opinion piece should be read by women of Taya Kyle’s age, young, urban women and the mothers of young children. These young women’s laudable empathy with the victims of gun violence coupled with their general unfamiliarity with firearms and the underlying reasons that the Framers of the United States Constitution chose to give us the Second Amendment have been cynically exploited by Democratic, gun-grabbing politicians to support draconian, statist, and confiscatory legislation.

Taya Kyle’s opinion piece makes many excellent observations and arguments against President Obama’s executive actions on guns. One very important point that she makes is that the liberal knee-jerk reaction to pass more laws will not bring the promised safety to the American people. She wisely points out that “We can’t legislate human nature. By the very nature of these crimes, we know that evildoers don’t care about the laws. After all, murder is against the law, and they are choosing to ignore the law from the moment they plan to harm people”. In general, evildoers do not care about the murder laws that they break and will not be deterred by any additional punishment for violating gun laws. A murderer, who already risks the death penalty or life imprisonment without parole, will not be deterred any further by the extra five-to-ten years for a gun law offense.

We at The Cassandra Times wholeheartedly agree with Taya Kyle’s poignant and overarching observation that “We have slipped into a land of government that has promised the moon, seldom delivered and driven us into a world of more laws, more government, and less freedom — and none of that has stopped murder, pain and suffering. No government can provide the utopia many seek. How absolutely true and remarkable.

In our over-lawyered 21st century America, there is no reason for the American people to believe that more government legislation in any area of life — not only in the area of gun control — will result in safety or everlasting prosperity. The only certain consequences of government legislation are an ever larger Leviathan government that wields more power, requires more government employees to carry out its dictates, and extracts more onerous taxes to feed its gargantuan budgets, all of which cannot be accomplished except at the cost of ever-diminishing individual liberties and pocketbooks.

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‘American Sniper’ Widow: Gun Control Won’t Protect Us

Taya Kyle

CNN

January 8, 2016

(CNN)—Many of us taking part in the CNN town hall on guns have been touched by someone who chose to do evil.

I am sharing my thoughts with you because I feel I can relate to people on both sides of the issue of gun control. I have been afraid of guns, I have sworn I would never use a gun on another person and so did not need one, and I have wanted to deny the existence of evil.

I have also become a gun owner, am prepared to defend myself with a firearm, and understand the fear of my freedoms being taken away.

I have been touched by extreme violence and I have been robbed of the life I always wanted by someone who chose to do evil. Because I have felt, and lived, all of these things, I have spent much time thinking about evil, freedom and not only the world we live in, but the country too.

There are many facts and statistics people will use to argue both sides of the gun control issue. We can use other countries as examples and we can use crime rates of cities, states and countries. And no matter how thoroughly researched the statistics are, people have an emotional reaction to this issue that almost always overrides the statistics presented, other than this one: The violent crime rate in the United States has gone down substantially in the last 20 years.

Our fears, though, have gone up, because of the high-profile incidents of mass killings of people caught unaware. Killers have taken lives in churches, schools, hospitals, government buildings, the site of a marathon, the Twin Towers and even a part of a military base where soldiers were known to be unarmed.

Our vulnerability

These killings highlight the fact that any of us, and any of our loved ones, are vulnerable when caught with our guard down against another person who desires to do harm.

Does it matter what weapon they used? If it was a rifle, a pipe bomb, a truck of fertilizer, a pressure cooker or a plane — the end result is the same. Yet millions of other people have the freedom to have those very same things and will never use them to kill.

These horrific mass killings were committed by a very small number of people who wish to harm and kill others. When they do it, we flock to the scene and ask “Why?” Who are these people who choose to do harm? What is their story? What went wrong? What are they trying to tell us?

Ultimately, in our horror, we give them a voice they would never have had otherwise. Is our insatiable need to know and find out how their lives might have gone wrong part of the result they are looking for? Is that part of the reason there is an incentive to do such harm to innocent people? We know it isn’t the availability of the weapon, because they used different methods, different weapons.

We can’t legislate human nature. If we add up the number of these mass killers over the last decade, how many people are we talking about? Fewer than 40 over the last decade? Do we want to make laws for millions based on the choices of fewer than 40 evildoers?

Can we fix these people? Can we legislate out of them the desire to kill? Those in the business of fighting crime and analyzing mental illness can look into the lives of each of these killers and tell you the red flags that popped up before the massacre.

Why don’t we deal with that instead of banning the tools very few use? By the very nature of these crimes, we know that evildoers don’t care about the laws. After all, murder is against the law, and they are choosing to ignore the law from the moment they plan to harm people.

Beyond that, who among us has the right to tell me I will murder someone because I have a gun? And who can tell me that I can only defend and protect myself in a way they feel comfortable with?

Just having access to a deadly weapon doesn’t turn someone into a killer. Have you ever felt road rage? Many of us who have cars have felt some form of extreme anger at other drivers because we feel they have put us in harm’s way. We might even envision ramming their cars or cutting them off in return, but do we actually do it? No, because the overwhelming majority of us never want to take another human life.

Even special ops guys, military and police who are trained to kill for legitimate purposes, who are familiar with multiple weapons and have access to the weapons and ammunition — even these people, who are experienced, will tell you they never know if they can pull the trigger until placed in a position to use deadly force to protect another person.

My government has proven that it’s not able to protect me against people who want to kill. And I don’t blame the government, because there is only one person to blame here: The man or woman who decided to kill.

Killers will use any means

If you put an assault rifle in my hands or yours, I am not going to murder anyone, and I am guessing you won’t either. But what makes gun control advocates think that someone who decides to kill will not use any means necessary to do so?

The person who killed my husband, Chris, worked in an armory with daily access to every caliber of high powered weapon for years. He chose to kill when he got out of an environment of accountability and drug testing.

Simply having a weapon did not make him a murderer. His life choices did. What red flags did he display? Well, the prominence he got after he took the lives of Chris and Chad Littlefield resulted in many people hearing his claim of post-traumatic stress disorder. And yet, psychiatrists on both the prosecution and defense testified he did not have PTSD. He was however a known drug user. Based on testimony at his trial, people around him not only tolerated but sometimes participated in the drug use and enabled him by seeing him as the “victim.” He repeatedly got out of trouble by claiming PTSD.

The officers would take him at his word, deliver him to a mental health facility where the facility would write a diagnosis which is known in that community as a label for likely drug use, and they would release him. Because of the HIPAA law and our desire to protect everyone’s privacy, we allow bad behavior to slip through the cracks.

Imagine how different things would be if a mental health facility could tell police, “This is a drug user,” and the police could go track him for drugs and put him in jail for breaking those laws instead of waiting for worse crimes in the future.

In the state of Texas, there is a fairly new certification process for our police where officers are trained to notice and recognize mental health issues and have knowledge of the drugs people take and the effects of them. So how they intervene is different based on whether they believe there is a mental health issue vs. a drug issue. Wouldn’t it be a better use of our time to work through this issue? It gives police a different crisis intervention method.

Some advocates want to restrict certain kinds of guns — perhaps allowing a pistol but not an assault rifle.

To those who don’t know guns well, the term “assault rifle” brings to mind either a sniper’s gun or a fully automatic weapon we have seen in the movies, meant to mow down large numbers of people. In actuality, fully automatic weapons are already highly restricted and require an additional license most gun owners will never have.

The lack of understanding makes it easy to develop rhetoric and legislation that will calm the fears of people who don’t understand a given subject, but that doesn’t really change any end result because we cannot legislate the evil side of humanity.

Freedom and responsibility

Cars are tools that is involved in about as many deaths as guns. If you are a driver prone to drinking and driving, should we only allow you to drive an ultracompact car? Not an SUV which could kill more people? No, we take away the drunk driver’s access to legally drive any car. This is about freedom to do as you like until you prove incapable of showing good moral judgment.

In this country, we give freedom and take it away once you prove to be unworthy of the freedom we have given you. Nobody suggests taking away cars or going through a battery of tests to determine whether or not you might be a drunk driver one day.

Does every man commit rape? There is a human element here that is real and we cannot legislate. Would we take away the freedom of all men by castration because some cannot handle what they have? No, we allow freedom until an individual chooses to take something that others use for good and use it to do harm to another.

Are our current laws being enforced? Are felons and known drug users really put in jail when arrested for a lesser crime and known to have a gun? In most situations, no, because police have more pressing issues than to incarcerate a felon for having a gun that he or she hasn’t used in a crime. We have plenty of laws on the books that we cannot or do not enforce. Let’s start enforcing what we have before creating new laws.

Understandably, we want a solution to ensure that we and our loved ones will never be in the situation of being caught unaware by someone who chose to do evil. Mass killers have targeted churches, businesses, movie theaters, schools and hospitals, but they could as easily take their violence to a place where people are armed. Yet they do not.

Even at Fort Hood, the killer chose a place on the base where he knew soldiers would be unarmed. What does that tell us? That evil targets those who are unprepared for the evil to strike.

When Chris and I were looking into our personal security after the book “American Sniper” came out, we took measures and thought of different scenarios, and Chris told me that still, based on his experience, “Babe, if someone wants to kill me, they will.”

Presidents John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan were arguably some of the best-protected men in our country. Did it stop someone from shooting them?

As Reagan once said, “You won’t get gun control by disarming law-abiding citizens. There is only one way to get real gun control: Disarm the thugs and criminals, lock them up and if you don’t actually throw away the key, lose it for a long time.”

The evil few; the responsible majority

And what we need to do is find the courage to accept that from the dawn of time until the day man no longer walks the earth, evil will find a way. Murder is nothing new, it is not going away and it is not dependent on one method of killing or another.

We can forge ahead knowing that while evil is among us, it involves the few. The good, responsible people are the vast majority. We can trust each other with basic freedoms until one of us proves to be untrustworthy by maliciously, intentionally harming another of us.

If you have never owned a weapon, or have never known the masses of peaceful gun owners who love their families and are in nurturing professions such as counseling, nursing, social work and pastoral jobs, may I suggest you talk to them about why they cherish their freedom to have these weapons?

We have slipped into a land of government that has promised the moon, seldom delivered and driven us into a world of more laws, more government, and less freedom — and none of that has stopped murder, pain and suffering.

No government can provide the utopia many seek. My hope for this country is that we remain a people who value freedom, who have the courage to face the realities with faithful hearts instead of anxious ones. I hope our people hold tight to the notion that we do not have to be a fear-ridden country focused on restrictions, but rather that we remain the land of the free and home of the brave.

God bless you and thank you for giving me some of your time.

Editor’s Notice: Taya Kyle is the author of “American Wife: A Memoir of Love, War, Faith, and Renewal.” Her late husband, Chris Kyle, was the subject of the movie, “American Sniper.” Taya Kyle was an invited guest for the CNN Town Hall “Guns in America.” Follow her on Twitter: @TayaKyle. The opinions expressed in this commentary are hers.

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