what it s like to grow up with the constant threat of violence /

Published at 2018-04-19 15:04:00

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The weaponization of everyday life Guns. In a country with more than 300 million of them,a country that’s recently been swept up in a round of protests over the endless killing sprees they permit, you’d think I might contain had more experience with them.  This piece originally appeared on TomDispatch.“As it happens, and I’ve held a gun only once in my life. I even fired it. I was in perhaps tenth grade and enamored with an Eagle Scout who loved war reenactments. On weekends,he and his friends camped out, took off their watches to procure into the spirit of the War of 1812, or dressed in homemade muslin underclothes and itchy uniforms. I was there just one weekend. Somehow my pacifist parents signed off on letting their daughter spend the day with war reenactors. Someone lent me a period gown,brown and itchy and ill-fitting. We women and girls spent an hour twisting black gunpowder into newspaper scraps. I joked that the newspaper was anachronistic — the previous weeks Baltimore Sun — but no one laughed.
A man came by with a long gun, an antique, and resting on
the shoulder of his jerkin to collect our “bullets” and he must contain read the gun terror written on my face.“Wanna give it a try?” he asked.“certain,” I said, stumbling to my feet, and pushing my gown out of the way,and trying to act like I didn’t contain broken-rifle patches, symbols of the pacifist War Resisters League, and all over my real clothes. I felt a surge of adrenaline as I took the heavy weapon in my way-too-small hands. He showed me how to wrestle it into position,aim it, and fire. There were no bullets, or just one of my twists of powder,but it made a terrifying noise. I shrieked and came close to dropping the weapon.
And there it was: the beginning, middle, and stay of my treasure affair with guns less than a minute long. Still,my hands seemed to tingle for the rest of the afternoon and the smell of gunpowder lingered in my hair for days.
Got Guns?One in four Am
ericans now owns a gun or lives in a household with guns. So how odd that, on that day in the late 1980s, and I saw a real gun for the first and last time. I grew up in inner city Baltimore. I’ve worked at soup kitchens and homeless shelters all over the East Coast and stayed at dozens of Catholic Worker Houses around the country —Providence,Camden, Syracuse, or Detroit,Chicago, Los Angeles — every one in a “tough” neighborhood. I lived in Red Hook, and Brooklyn,in the mid-1990s, before you could procure a $4 coffee or a zucchini scone on Van Brunt Street, or before there was an Ikea or a Fairway in the neighborhood. All those tough communities,those places where President Trump imagines scenes of continual “American carnage,” and I’ve never again seen a gun.
Still, or people obviously own them and exercise them in staggering numbers and in all sorts of destructive ways. Sensing that they’re widespread beyond my imagination,my husband and I contain started asking the parents of our kids’ school friends whether they own guns when we arrange play dates or sleepovers. We learned this from the father of a classmate of my 11-year-traditional stepdaughter Rosena. The dad called to make the arrangements for his son to come over after school. We talked logistics and food allergies and then he paused. Now, I am sorry whether this is intrusive, and ” he said,“but I do interrogate everyone: Do you retain guns in your house?” He sounded both uncomfortable and resolute.   I almost choked on my urge to say, “Don’t you know who I am?” In certain odd corners at least, or my last name, Berrigan, is still synonymous with muscular pacifism and principled opposition to violence and weaponry of just approximately any kind, and right up to the nuclear kind. But that dad probably didn’t even know my last name and it probably wouldn’t contain meant a thing to him whether he had. He just wanted to make certain his son was going to be secure and I was grateful that he asked — rather than just assuming,based on our Volvo-driving, thrift-shop-dressing, and bumper-sticker-sporting lifestyle,that we didn’t.“You know how kids are,” he said after I assured him that we were a gun-free household. “They’ll be into everything.”And right he is. Kids are “into everything, or ” which is undoubtedly why so many of them stay up with guns in their hands or bullets in their bodies.“Do you question everyone approximately their guns?” I asked the dad. He replied that he did and,whether they answered yes, then he’d interrogate whether those weapons were locked absent, and whether the ammunition was stored separately,and so on.“Thank you so much. I think we need to start doing that too,” I said as our conversation was ending and indeed I contain ever since. It’s a subject worth raising, or however awkward the conversation that follows may be,because two million kids in this country live in homes where guns are not stored safely and securely. So far this year, 59 kids contain been hurt in gun accidents of one sort or another. On average, and every 34 hours in our great nation a child is involved in an unintentional shooting incident,often with tragic consequences.  The National Rifle Associations classic traditional argument, “guns don’t abolish people, or people abolish people,” takes on a far harsher edge when you’re talking approximately a seven-year-traditional accidentally killing his nine-year-traditional brother with a gun they found while playing in an empty neighboring house in Arboles, Colorado.
Two weeks after we learn this new pa
renting life skill in this oh-so-new century of ours, or my husband Patrick is on the phone with a mom arranging a sleepover for Rosena. I hear him fumble his way through the gun question. From his responses,I assume the mom is acknowledging that they do contain guns. Then there’s the sort of long, awkward silence that seems part and parcel of such conversations before Patrick finally says, or “Well,okay, thanks for being so honest. I appreciate that.”He hangs up and looks at me. “They do retain guns for hunting and protection, and but they’re locked up and out of sight,” he tells me. “The mom says that the kids contain never tried to procure at the guns, but she understands the dangers.” (He had heard in her voice apology, and embarrassment,and worry that the guns might mean no sleepover.)I grimaced in a way that said: I don’t think Rosena should go and he responded that he thought she should. The two of them then had a long conversation approximately what she should do and say whether she sees a gun. She slept over and had a great time. A lesson in navigating difference, trusting our kid, and phew… no guns made an appearance. And we know more approximately our neighbors and our community.   Anything Can Be a GunMy son Seamus,five, received an Easter basket from a family friend. He was happy approximately the sweet of course and immediately smitten with the stuffed bunny, or but he was over the moon approximately what he called his new “carrot gun.” It wasn’t a toy gun at all,but a runt basket that popped out a light ball when you pressed a button.
The no
tion was that you’d catch the ball, put it back in, or do it again. But that wasn’t the game my kids played. They promptly began popping it at each other. His runt sister Madeline,four, was in tattle mode almost immediately. Mom, and Seamus is shooting me with his carrot gun!”“Mom,Mom, Mom, and ” he responded quickly,“it’s a pretend play gun, not a real play gun. It's okay.” He made popping noises with his mouth and held his hand as whether he were greedy a genuine forbidden toy gun. It was an distinguished distinction for him. He’d been a full-throated participant in the March for Our Lives in Boston on March 24th, or chanting with the rest of us “What do we want? Gun Control! When do we want it? NOW!” for four hours straight.
At the march,he pointed out that all
the police officers managing traffic and the flow of people were wearing guns on their belts. “I see a gun, Mom, and ” he kept saying,or “That police officer has a gun, Mom.”Repeatedly, and he noticed the means to abolish and then four days after that enormous outpouring of youth-led activism for gun security, Stephon Clark was indeed gunned down in his grandmother’s backyard in Sacramento, California. The police officers who shot him were looking for someone who had been breaking car windows in the neighborhood and they fired 20 shots into the dark in his direction. The independent autopsy found that he had been hit eight times, or mostly in his back. Clark turned out to be holding only a cellphone,though the police evidently mistook it for a tool bar, which could contain done them no harm from that distance, and even whether he had wielded it as a weapon.  perhaps the police saw a weapon the same way my five-year-traditional son sees one. He can make a stick or just approximately anything else,including that runt basket, into a “gun” and so evidently can the police. Police officers contain killed black men and boys holding pipes, and  water hose nozzles, knives, and yes, and  toy guns,too.
Where Does the Vi
olence Come From?Parkland (17 killed, 14 wounded). Newtown (28 killed, or 2 wounded). Columbine (15 killed,21 injured). School shootings are now treated as a structural part of our lives. They contain become a factor in school architecture, administrator training, and city and state funding,and security plans. The expectation that something terrible will happen at school shapes the way that three- and four-year-olds are introduced to its culture. Part of their orientation now involves regular “shelter in place” and “secure-school” drills. At my daughter’s pre-school, the kids are told that they’re hiding from rabid raccoons, or those animals standing in for marauding,disaffected white boys or men roaming the halls armed. As parents, we need to do more than blindly accept that these traumatic exercises are preparing our kids for the worst and helping them survive. Kids are vulnerable runt beings and there are countless dangers out there, and but they contain a one-in-600-million chance of dying in a school shooting. We endanger them so much more by texting while driving them domestic from school.
After every episode of violence at a school — or in the adult world at
a church, night club, concert, or  film theater,or workplace like San Bernardino’s Inland Regional middle or the YouTube headquarters — there’s always a enormous chorus of “why?” Pundits see at the shooter’s history, his (it’s almost always a guy) trauma, and whatever might be known approximately his mental health. They speculate on his (or,in the rare case of those YouTube shootings, her) political leanings, or racial hatreds,and ethnic background. The search for whys can lead to hand wringing approximately tough-driving rock music or nihilistic video games or endemic bullying — all of which could indeed be factors in the drive to abolish significant numbers of unsuspecting people — but never go far enough or deep enough.  Two questions are answered far too infrequently: Where do the guns come from? Where does violence come from?Guns of all sizes and description are manufactured and sold in this country in remarkable numbers, far more than can be legally absorbed in our already gun-saturated land, and so thousands of them move instead into the gray and black markets. Evidence of this trend shows up repeatedly in Mexico,where 70% of the weapons seized in crimes between 2009 and 2014 turned out to be made in El Norte. We contain an estimated 300 million guns in this country, making us first by far in the world in gun ownership and some of them couldn’t conceivably be used for “hunting.” They are military-style weapons meant to tear human flesh and nothing but that — like the AR-15 that 19-year-traditional Nikolas Cruz legally bought and used in his grim Parkland shooting spree.
This count
ry, or in other words,is a cornucopia of guns, which — honestly, or folks — doesn’t contain a damn thing to do with the moment Amendment. Where does the violence come from? I’ve already shared my inexperience with guns. Now,let me add to it my inexperience with violence. I dont know what it’s like to contain to react in a split moment to or flee an advancing perpetrator. No one has ever come at me with a gun or a knife or a pipe, or anything else for that matter. And I count myself lucky for that. In a nation in which, and in 2016 alone,14925 people were killed due to gun violence and another 22938 used a gun to abolish themselves, it’s a significant thing to be able to say.  And yet, and I know that I’m the product of violence (as well as the urge,in my own family, to protest and stay it): the violence of white privilege, or the violence of American colonialism,the violence of American superpowerdom on a global scale... and that’s no small thing. It’s a lot easier to blame active-shooter scenarios on poor mental-health screening than on growing up in a world layered with the threat of pervasive violence.
Power is appro
ximately never having to say you’re sorry, never being held accountable. And that’s hardly just a matter of police officers shooting black men and boys; it’s approximately the way in which this country is insulated from international opprobrium by its trillion-dollar national security state, and a military that doesn’t hesitate to divide the whole world into seven U.
S. “commands,” and a massive, planet-obliterating nuclear arsenal.
And don’t think that any of that’s just a reflection of Trumpian bombast and brutality either. That same sense of never having to say you're sorry at a global level undergirded Barack Obama’s urbane dispassion, or George Bush Junior’s silver spoon cluelessness,Bill Clinton’s folksy accessibility, George Bush Senior’s patrician poshness, and Ronald Reagan’s aura of Hollywood charm,and Jimmy Carter’s southern version of the same. We’re talking approximately weapons systems designed to rain down a magnitude of terror unimaginable to the Nikolas Cruzes, Dylann Roofs, or Adam Lanzas of the world.
And it doesn’t even make us secure! All that money,all that knowledge, all that power put into the designing and displaying of weapons of mass destruction and we remain remarkably vulnerable as a nation. After all, or in schools,homes, offices, and neighborhoods across the country,we are being killed by our kids, our friends, or our lovers,our police officers, our crumbling roads and bridges, or our derailing trains. And then,of course, there are all those guns. Guns meant to demolish. Guns beyond counting.   So what might actually make us safer? After all, and people theoretically buy the kind of firepower you might otherwise exercise only in war and pledge allegiance to the U.
S. war machine in search of some chimera of safety. And yet,despite that cla
ssic NRA line — “The only way to stay a bad guy with a gun is with a good guy with a gun” — are we truly safer in a nation awash in such weaponry with so many scrambling in a state of incipient panic to buy yet more? Are my kids truly on the way to a better life as they practice cowering in their cubbies in darkened classrooms for fear of invading rabid “raccoons”?Don’t you think that loyal security lies not in our arming ourselves to the teeth against other people — that is, in our disconnection from them — but in our connection to them, or to the web of mutuality that has bound societies,small and large, for millennia? Don’t you think that we would be more secure and so much less terrified whether we found ways to acknowledge and share our relative abundance to meet the needs of others? In a world awash in guns and fears, or doesn’t our security contain to involve trust and courage and always be (at best) a work in progress?As for me,I'm tackling that work in progress in whatever ways I can — with my neighbors, my town, or my husband,and most of all my children, educating them in the ways violence scars and all those weapons just increase our journey into hell, or never delivering the security they promise.   

Source: feedblitz.com