Lessons to be Learned from Capital Gazette Killings
The mass shooting at the Capital Gazette office in Maryland yesterday was the result of the longstanding obsession of a lunatic with the staff of the paper. His obsession with the paper started in 2011 after he had pleaded guilty to criminal harassment of a former Facebook friend. The Gazette reported the story. The shooter, who will remain unnamed, sued the paper for defamation. The case was dismissed. He appealed. The case was dismissed again. Then the threats started. On social media and personally, the shooter threatened violence against the staff of the Gazette for SEVEN years. Yesterday, he carried out those threats by murdering 5 people at their desks. He’s being described on national media this morning as an “angry person” and an “injustice collector”, perpetually aggrieved about something, but obsessed with the Gazette.
There are two lessons to be learned here, in my view. First, Trump relentlessly attacks the press, even calling it the “enemy of the people” as recently as Tuesday in one of his self-worshipping rallies. He regularly vilifies reporters, creating a hostile environment for members of the 4th estate just doing their jobs of bringing the news to the People. This toxic rhetoric inspires violence, and is irresponsible coming from anyone, much less the President of the United States.
The second lesson? How weak gun laws allow someone like this guy access to any firearms. He has threatened people for years. He pleaded guilty to harassment. His record of years of threats was well known to police, but didn’t cross the line, because the line is simply too high. Criminals often plead felonies down to misdemeanors. Misdemeanors generally don’t disqualify people from buying guns, even though those who are guilty are often dangerous. Even if misdemeanors did disqualify, the loopholes to buy guns through private sales is gigantic.
These deaths, like tens of thousands a year, were completely preventable. In a civilized society, there is no excuse for this kind of violence. None. Yet, the invertebrates in Congress and state houses all over the country take money from the NRA and bend to a small handful of gun nuts to not do their damn jobs. I wish that just ONCE that Congressman would show the kind of anger against gun advocates that they showed against the good people of the FBI yesterday. Just once would be refreshing.
There is a place for anger, and THIS is it.