The Daily Escape:
Memorial Day, Arlington National Cemetery â May 2013 photo by William Coyle
Welcome to Americaâs Memorial Day weekend, when we remember those in the military who died in service to the country. But this year, we must also honor those who have died from mass murder by gun right here at home.
We need a three-day weekend. We need a break from the slowly unveiling and depressing news out about how shamefully the police of Uvalde, TX reacted to the killer. We also need a break from listening to the tepid responses by both political Parties.
The Republicans are saying the same as always: The country should not have stricter gun control. Why do Republicans refuse to act? Beyond the fact that many believe stricter gun control would not prevent such mass shootings, recent polling data reveal that thereâs less political pressure on them than you might have thought.
Letâs examine the public mindset on the gun control debate as shown in Gallupâs polling conducted in October 2021 and January 2022. Both polls found a slight decrease in support for stricter gun laws compared with the prior year’s measures. Here are the top line results:
Last October, 52% of Americans indicated they wanted stricter gun control, while 46% either thought laws should be kept the same (35%) or made less strict (11%). The headline is that Americans’ support for stricter gun control fell five percentage points from October 2020 to the lowest since 2014.
That decline was driven by a 15-point plunge among independents, while Democrats’ desire for more restrictive gun laws ticked up six points to 91%. Republicans’ views were essentially unchanged, at 24%, (after dropping 14 points in 2020).
Of course, these numbers can be hard to understand when polls also indicate that north of 80% of Americans want universal background checks for guns, which Democrats have been pushing for in Congress and which most Republicans wonât go along with.
Why? There’s no sign that the polling on background checks holds up when its on the ballot. CNNâs report (March 2021) showed that ballot measures for background checks have appeared on ballots in California, Maine, Nevada, and Washington.
In all four, the pro-gun control side’s vote margin was worse than the Democratsâ baseline in the same state. In 2016, Clinton won California by 30 points, while gun control won by 27 points. In Maine, Clinton won by 3 points, while gun control lost by 4 points. In Nevada, Clinton won by 2 points, while gun control passed by a single point. Lastly, Washington passed its gun control law by a little less than 19 points in 2018, while Washington stateâs House Democratic candidates won by a bigger margin in the same year.
The question is: Why would Republicans feel political pressure to support more gun control, when something that polls as well as universal background checks doesnât draw as much support as the Democratic presidential candidate?
And here are a few more depressing thoughts. First, before the assault weapons ban went into effect in 1994, there were about 400,000 AR-15 style rifles in America. Today, there are 20 million.
Second, itâs doubtful that you were aware that there is an active group of school principals who have survived a school shooting. Itâs called the Principal Recovery Network, a support group of sorts that mobilizes to help principals in the immediate aftermath of a school shooting. Frank DeAngelis, the former principal of Columbine High School says:
âItâs like that club that no one wants to belong to,â
They provide support for a principal whoâs having his/her worst professional day. In every scenario, the goal is to help a principal in crisis. This is America: We put all this energy into dealing with the aftermath of a preventable trauma, and that now includes therapy for principals. Weâre in this dark place because we will not open our eyes.
And for the 21st time since a mass shooting in Isla Vista, Calif. in 2014, the satirical site The Onion republished its saddest headline:
“No Way To Prevent This,” Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens
The best way to stop a bad guy from getting a gun is prevention.
Time for our long weekend Saturday Soother. The blog may be taking some time off, so donât expect to see another column before Tuesday.
In view of the Memorial Day observance, and to remember those who died in Texas, listen to Samuel Barberâs âAdagio for Stringsâ, played in the original version by the Dover Quartet. Barber finished the arrangement in 1936. In January 1938, Barber sent an orchestrated version of the Adagio for Strings to Arturo Toscanini. The conductor returned the score without comment, which annoyed Barber.
Toscanini later sent word that he was planning to perform the piece and had returned it simply because he had already memorized it! It was performed for the first time by Toscanini in November, 1938. Here, for the third time on the blog, is the quartet version of âAdagio for Stringsâ:
Perfect musical choiceâŚ