As many firearms as people

How do you write about something that’s on television 24/7 and about which viewers are already feeling, perhaps, that it’s enough, it’s horrible, we have to move on? I think you point to something so clear and obvious that it’s inarguable.But not right away.When I was 12 years old, I was given a .22-caliber target rifle. I had learned to shoot at summer camp, and I was pretty good, achieving sharpshooter status with four bars. Of course, in order to do this, I became a dues paying member of the NRA.One of my friends and I would hop on our bikes on Saturdays, carrying a packed lunch, and peddle out toward a state park with our rifles slung over our shoulders, and pockets full of .22 longs and .22 birdshot.This was a perfectly normal way to spend a bright sunny summer’s afternoon. We also had fishing rods with us just in case we got bored shooting at birds which invariably disappeared and if they hadn’t, what would we have done with them, anyway?But we were all proud at that age to have moved up from Red Ryder BB guns to .22s. Rites of passage.By the following year, we had other things to do. Baseball and hiking, and maybe cutting lawns. Our .22s were closet-bound, and we hardly ever remembered even owning them.And so summer Midwestern life continued, and as we grew, eventually we gave away our own .22s or lost them in moves, or let them rust in disrepair ... shooting was always more fun than cleaning and oiling and adjusting sights. Then we were away at school, and until a mass shooting in Texas, for example, interrupted our happiest days, we hardly gave a thought to guns.Now we think about them all the time. Should we ourselves arm once more against shadows in the night? Is self-protection justifiable in terms of gathering an arsenal? If we’re not actual hunters, seeking deer and boar and turkeys and even bigger game, do we need to have weapons in the house? Weapons about which we’ve been told are more dangerous to us than to intruders in the night? Statistics become meaningless when there are as many firearms as people in our country. Accepting the current incantations about the Second Amendment, what more do we need to do? As we watch and hear about “carrying laws” throughout the country, of course we’re astounded but no longer to such a degree. The apocalyptic warnings that accompany each state’s granting of these “rights” have not brought mass death and destruction, the argument would go. And while we firmly do not believe in “bad apples” as opposed to the opportunity for mayhem, our country is weighted down now with matters that seem very pressing: the budget, the debt ceiling, jobs and the lack thereof, the general state of the economy, the do-nothing and ignore-everything Congress. Thank you for waiting. So, here’s the obvious.Without people, without real live human beings to worry over our national problems, what are any of us doing here?When children can be eliminated in wholesale madness, we lose just that many people who could have benefited us all in later years solving the big problems. And we lose their children, and their brain power, and their sentiment, and their patriotism.Annually we lose 30,000 souls to gun violence, and these losses are mortal, to the United States of America and what it wants to do, and dreams of being able to do.We gain, and this I think is small recompense, thousands of families determined to stop the expansion of gun rights and assault rifles. We lose hope. We understand frustration and unreason. We realize that gun advocates — whether for simple hunting pleasures, target shooting, nefarious deeds — are as tone-deaf as our Houses of Congress.What we are left with is grief. Unquenchable grief and anger and disbelief.And still nothing changes. John Neufeld is a Salisbury novelist and syndicated commentator for WHDD.FM.

Latest News

Salisbury honors veterans in snowy ceremony

Chris Ohmen (left) held the flag while Chris Williams welcomed Salisbury residents to a Veterans Day ceremony at Town Hall Tuesday, Nov. 11.

Photo by Patrick L. Sullivan

SALISBURY — About 30 people turned out for the traditional Veterans Day ceremony at Salisbury Town Hall on a cold and snowy Tuesday morning, Nov. 11.

Chris Ohmen handled the colors and Chris Williams ran the ceremony.

Keep ReadingShow less
North Canaan gives gratitude to veterans

Eden Rost, left, shakes hands with Sergeant Nicholas Gandolfo, veteran of the Korean War.

Photo by Riley Klein

NORTH CANAAN — Students at North Canaan Elementary School saluted servicemen and servicewomen at a Veterans Day ceremony Wednesday, Nov. 12.

Eighteen veterans were honored, many of whom attended the ceremony and were connected to the school as relatives of students or staff.

Keep ReadingShow less
Farewell to a visionary leader: Amy Wynn departs AMP after seven years
Amy Wynn, who has served as executive director of the American Mural Project in Winsted, has stepped down from her position after seven years with the nonprofit organization.
AMP

When longtime arts administrator Amy Wynn became the first executive director of the American Mural Project (AMP) in 2018, the nonprofit was part visionary art endeavor, part construction site and part experiment in collaboration.

Today, AMP stands as a fully realized arts destination, home to the world’s largest indoor collaborative artwork and a thriving hub for community engagement. Wynn’s departure, marked by her final day Oct. 31, closes a significant chapter in the organization’s evolution. Staff and supporters gathered the afternoon before to celebrate her tenure with stories, laughter and warm tributes.

Keep ReadingShow less