Friday, January 18, 2013

The Invisible Trigger: Mental Health and Gun Violence. By Walter Russell Mead.

The Invisible Trigger: Mental Health and Gun Violence. By Walter Russell Mead. Via Meadia, January 17, 2013.

Mead:

This nation is awash in guns, and there is no sign that that is about to change. The cultural heritage and the social conditions that make violence so prominent a part of American life will also change slowly if at all. Those are facts. And enough Americans believe in the importance of the Second Amendment that it cannot be repealed; the belief that the right to bear arms is the citizen’s last defense against government tyranny (or insurance against the breakdown of civil order) is deeply rooted in American life. Serious thought about gun violence needs to begin with these truths, unpleasant though many of them are. Policy must stand on solid ground rather than on a tissue of hopes and illusions and the reality is that we are not going to solve America’s massacre problem by passing gun control laws. Nothing we do will solve this problem completely; some of the most violent cities in America have the toughest gun control laws and in some of our least homicidal cities and states have very loose laws.

But if as a practical matter we can’t do much to keep dangerous weapons out of the country, we can do something about keeping dangerous people away from them. This is not just a question of background checks; it is also a question of rebuilding our ability to protect society from people whose mental state makes them a threat to society at large. In dealing with the potentially violent mentally ill, we need to balance the potential danger to society more effectively against the loss of individual freedom. Building better facilities for the mentally ill and being more proactive about putting dangerous people in them is a necessary precaution given the abundance of weapons in these United States. In any case, making treatment more readily available and providing better services and more support for the families and friends of the mentally ill is a good thing in and of itself.

This problem is going to be with us for a long time. There is no clean and quick solution. There won’t be one magic law or one golden policy that frees us from the specter of these tragedies. But making it harder for the deranged to get weapons, and making it easier for society to protect and treat people showing serious signs of dangerous mental disturbance is a step that we can and should take, regardless of what happens on the gun control front.