Monday, 17 December 2012

Why people won't let go of their guns

The problem with trying to achieve anything with gun control in the US is that Western neo-conservative societies have all created a culture in the last 30 years where everybody is obsessed with individual rights and individual responsibilities. These things have become part of our national identities, so that any restriction of them, no matter how reasonable, is deeply felt. Talking about our collective wellbeing and the structural barriers that make it impossible for some people to succeed apparently makes you a communist now. If someone needs benefits or welfare to help them survive, we tell them they need to take individual responsibility. If someone tries to make laws designed to protect everybody, we start whining about our rights as individuals.

I can understand why some Americans want to hold on to their guns. Some people have no sense of being part of a wider society and having moral obligations to that society. This is why so many people in America and Europe complain about paying their taxes (god forbid the rich be made to help the poor). There is no doubt that restricting guns would save lives. In the UK, 0.25% deaths are gun related and in the US it’s 9%. That difference is purely down to the availability of guns. But if you’ve been brought up in a society that tells you “look after your own, don’t worry about anyone else and don’t expect any help from us” then you can’t be surprised when people want the means to defend themselves and to hell with the consequences for everyone else.

This 30 year project of Reaganomics and Thatcherism isn’t just economically unviable. It’s killing people. We need to stop obsessing about our individual circumstances and realise that what we do affects others.