A
Child's Right to Safety
“Too
often we...enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of
thought.”
John
F. Kennedy
There
was another school-shooting yesterday. I don't know about you, but I
am a person of strong opinions. Just ask me how I feel about
something and I'll tell you in no uncertain terms. As I've aged, I've
become less clear about right and wrong and live mostly in the gray
areas, but still, I tend not to be wishy-washy about controversial
issues. Take the issue of gun control, for example. I understand
about second amendment rights, but for me it's a no-brainer that we
don't need folks running around the country with assault weapons and
semi-automatic handguns with thirty round clips. I don't care what
Wayne LaPierre says about it; he's paid to have his opinion, and he's
protecting, not your constitutional rights, but his own pocket book.
It's
all well and good to be a gun-rights advocate as long as it's not
your child who's gunned down at school, or in a movie theater or a
shopping mall. But I think one's stance would change dramatically if
this issue touched one's life 'up-close and personal'. Take
Birmingham's Mayor, for instance. Recently he was motoring home from
a charitable event and stopped for a traffic light. Across the
intersection from his vehicle was an SUV with a gunman, all in black,
hanging out the window, gun pointed at the Mayor's car. Shots were
fired. The mayor's protective detail returned fire and sped away,
only to be followed onto an Interstate ramp by the gunman's vehicle.
They drove for a couple of miles, firing at one another until the
gunman's car crashed into a guardrail. Turns out, the Mayor was just
in the wrong place at the wrong time! The firepower wasn't even aimed
at him, but at someone in a car next to him that, presumably, got
away. I'll bet the Mayor's stance on gun-control is different today
than it was a couple of weeks ago.
Think
about that one little scenario for a moment. What if the Mayor had
been killed in that incident. What if innocent by-standers had been
shot in the hail of bullets going back and forth? For that short
time, Birmingham's streets were a war zone. Is that how we want our
cities and highways to be? Are we really willing to live in a time
when everyone around us is armed with semi-automatic weapons just so
that we can feel justified in holding our strong opinions about our
rights? Are we willing to endure a school shooting a month to
preserve 'rights' that the founding fathers never imagined in their
wildest dreams?
We
need to shelve our opinions for a while and really think this thing
through. Our 'rights' end where the safety of our children begins.
In
the spirit,
Jane
1 comment:
I'm with you, Jane. I love that quote from JFK, too - so true.
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