Mendalla
Happy headbanging ape!!
- Pronouns
- He/Him/His
Two stories from different countries.
First, in Providence, Rhode Island, a shooting breaks out during exams at Ivy League campus Brown University.
Then Hanukkah celebrations in Australia came under attack with even worse toll. This one likely has anti-semitic origins.
I mean, the first one is kind of business as usual for the US. The Guardian is even reporting that two survivors of this attack also survived other school shootings. Sad but expected in a country that refuses to take even basic measures to control access to guns.
But Oz has similar gun laws to us and even a buyback program like the one the Liberals keep trying to bring in here. So gun laws are not proof against this, just reduce the likelihood and number of such attacks. Canada has had a few, too. We have just passed the anniversary of the Ecole Polytechnique attack in Montreal and more recently there was the mosque shooting in Quebec City.
So is there, in the end, a way to stop these anymore? Does controlling guns do more than mitigate harm (witness things like the use of vehicles in attacks, including the murder of four people here in London)? Does controlling hate work, given our support for free speech often conflicts with hate speech laws? And hate speech laws just seem to attract more hate from the haters? We know that murder goes back to prehistory now (e.g. evidence of Neanderthal cannibalism was in the science news recently and there is archaeological evidence of humans killed with human tools going back a fair way). Is it just an inevitable part of human life that some humans are killers and all the rest of us can do is try our best to prevent harm and mitigate damage knowing full well they are going to happen again regardless of those efforts?
It's disheartening to see these headlines coming up again and again, not just in the USA but in countries like Australia that are much more like us in their attitude to "bearing arms".
First, in Providence, Rhode Island, a shooting breaks out during exams at Ivy League campus Brown University.
Then Hanukkah celebrations in Australia came under attack with even worse toll. This one likely has anti-semitic origins.
I mean, the first one is kind of business as usual for the US. The Guardian is even reporting that two survivors of this attack also survived other school shootings. Sad but expected in a country that refuses to take even basic measures to control access to guns.
But Oz has similar gun laws to us and even a buyback program like the one the Liberals keep trying to bring in here. So gun laws are not proof against this, just reduce the likelihood and number of such attacks. Canada has had a few, too. We have just passed the anniversary of the Ecole Polytechnique attack in Montreal and more recently there was the mosque shooting in Quebec City.
So is there, in the end, a way to stop these anymore? Does controlling guns do more than mitigate harm (witness things like the use of vehicles in attacks, including the murder of four people here in London)? Does controlling hate work, given our support for free speech often conflicts with hate speech laws? And hate speech laws just seem to attract more hate from the haters? We know that murder goes back to prehistory now (e.g. evidence of Neanderthal cannibalism was in the science news recently and there is archaeological evidence of humans killed with human tools going back a fair way). Is it just an inevitable part of human life that some humans are killers and all the rest of us can do is try our best to prevent harm and mitigate damage knowing full well they are going to happen again regardless of those efforts?
It's disheartening to see these headlines coming up again and again, not just in the USA but in countries like Australia that are much more like us in their attitude to "bearing arms".