Behold Your God
Posted on October 13, 2015 by Peter H.
Davids
I
have watched with fascination and then boredom
as each mass shooting or attempted mass shooting has unfolded in the USA. There is, of course, horror and anger. Then there are the calls for keep weapons out of the hands of such disturbed (as often proves to be the case) people. Then there are those who argue that what is needed is more guns: more police, more weaponizing of the police, indeed everyone should be armed or at least a lot of people should be armed. It is in having one’s own weapon that security is to be found. Besides, it is a right.
as each mass shooting or attempted mass shooting has unfolded in the USA. There is, of course, horror and anger. Then there are the calls for keep weapons out of the hands of such disturbed (as often proves to be the case) people. Then there are those who argue that what is needed is more guns: more police, more weaponizing of the police, indeed everyone should be armed or at least a lot of people should be armed. It is in having one’s own weapon that security is to be found. Besides, it is a right.
The guns-as-a-right attitude always wins,
of course, for it is part of the national narrative. Colonists arrived in the
Americas with guns, and that enabled them to enslave, oppress, or outright
exterminate the Native Americans as they stole their land. If only those Native
Americans had had the weapons . . . but too bad for them. The colonies that
eventually formed the USA fought a war over taxes. Whether there is moral
justification for a such a revolution (Augustine did not think that there could
be a moral revolution) or for a war over what in essence
were economic issues
(Augustine had said that economics could not justify war)
was not at issue, for the victors write the history. In this case it was not
who had guns that was the issue, but who could use them more effectively,
although the last major battle was decided by the French navy. Ironically, not
long afterwards a rebellion over similar issues but within the colonies was put
down by – guns. But this time the fledgling nation was the winner, not the rebels;
the Whisky Rebellion is hardly remembered. And so the history of the USA goes
on. The Louisiana Purchase may have been peaceful (but not the settlement of
what was purchased), but not the Texan war of independence (no wonder the USA
has some fear of immigrants – look what happened to Mexico), nor a number of
expansionary ventures. Violence is part of the history of the USA. The Bill of
Rights enshrines the “need” for a “well-regulated (citizen) militia,”
which is presently interpreted as each one being their own militia. As it says
in the Judges, “Everyone did what was right in their own eyes.”
Read more at :http://phdavids.com/2015/10/13/behold-your-god/
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