MASSACRE AT VIRGINIA TECH
Gun woes call for more guns?
The debate was raging before the sun came up.
Cho Sung-Hui hadn't even been publicly named yet - or his weapons
identified - and the pro-gun people were already firing off their explanation
for the carnage at Virginia Tech:
Too few guns on campus.
Not too many. Too few.
"It is irresponsibly dangerous to tell citizens that they may not have guns
at schools," declared Larry Pratt, veteran director of the Gun Owners of
America lobby group.
"Americans have been brainwashed into taking a passive role in their own
survival," agreed pro-gun activist Chris Bird, whose new book is called "Thank
God I Had a Gun."
Bird, Pratt and other Second Amendment absolutists have turned their
rhetorical firepower onto the idea of gun-free schools. "When will we learn
that being defenseless is a bad defense?" Pratt wanted to know.
Only Utah and Oregon, he said, have taken a real step in the direction of
an armed campus, allowing their faculty to carry guns to class. "Isn't it
interesting that you haven't read about any school or university shootings in
Utah or Oregon?" the gun lobbyist asked.
It was a startling argument, especially yesterday, so soon after the worst
mass shooting in American history. The dead were still being identified. Many
of the wounded were still in surgery. And the first wave of American gun
zealots was already looking to score policy points.
There's no denying school violence is a scary epidemic. Parents are
concerned everywhere. We're lucky these on-campus shootings don't happen more
often than they do.
But pistols in the cafeteria? Uzis in the science lab? Shotguns on the quad?
God only knows what arsenals some frat boys would build in their basements
if given a chance!
As the day wore on, investigators gathered more and more detail about their
suspect and his guns.
The shooter bought his first gun, a 22-caliber Walther, in February. In
March he bought his second gun. It was a Glock 9-mm semiautomatic, not so
different from the weapons police carry in departments across America. His
Glock, a model 19, was outfitted with a 15-round magazine plus one in the
chamber.
The purchases appear to be perfectly legal under Virginia law. That state
allows residents, including permanent resident aliens like the Korean-born Cho,
to buy one handgun every month.
But Cho's respect for the law seemingly ended there.
When police finally got to the guns Monday morning at Norris Hall, the
serial numbers had been filed down on both guns, which is illegal. And just
bringing weapons on campus, of course, violated Virginia Tech's gun-free zone.
Pratt and his allies did their best to reverse the gun-free zones.
In 2005, they got a bill introduced in the Virginia state legislature,
allowing the arming of professors, even students so long as they were at least
21 years old. The proposal died, thanks to the outcry from college
administrators from Virginia Tech and other schools.
Guns on campus, they convinced the legislators, would only make matters
worse.
"We believe guns don't belong in the classroom," university spokesman Larry
Hinckman said quite plainly at the time. "In an academic environment, we
believe you should be free from fear."
Sadly, the fear came anyway.
And yesterday, as the post-shooting posturing began, Pratt and the other
gun advocates tried to use Hinckman's words against Virginia Tech. "I think we
can see how well that policy worked out," Pratt sneered.
But the more we learned about the shootings - and the shooter - yesterday
the more one basic fact became clear: Cho had little trouble arming himself
under Virginia's loose gun laws. And nothing would have likely stopped him,
short of keeping those guns out of his hands.
Copyright © 2008, Newsday Inc.
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