Barack Obama and John McCain are the big winners in the Wisconsin primaries. Both men re-tooled their victory speeches--they're no longer talking about their party challengers, they're taking pot shots at each other.
But last night's Wisconsin primary race speeches, in the wake of four mass shootings earlier this month, tell another tale: The real victor in the presidential primaries is the National Rifle Association.
I took aim in my commentary on Tuesday's ebonyjet.com website.
Bullets
and Ballots
The real health care crisis has yet to be addressed
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
By Monroe Anderson
The
tragedy at Northern Illinois University last week where 22 men and women were
shot and six killed was news and no news at all. It was also a test to see
which of the three major presidential contenders, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton
or John McCain, had the political will to tackle one of our nation's greatest
ills -– gun violence.
Nobody
made the grade.
The
campus shooting was the fourth separate mass shooting in the United States in
12 days. In that brief period, six died in a shooting spree at a city council
meeting in Kirkwood, Missouri, a St. Louis suburb; five died after a SWAT
standoff in Los Angeles where a gunman killed three of his relatives and a
police officer before the police killed him; and five women died in a Lane
Bryant store in suburban Chicago after a botched robbery attempt.
In that brief 12-day period, a total of 19 citizens and three police officers were shot to death.
The
first three of this month's four multiple murders were met with a curious code
of silence from this year's leading presidential nomination contenders, but
when a mentally-ill gunman opened fire on a group of innocent students in an
NIU lecture hall on Valentine's Day, remaining mum became a challenge.
Sen.
McCain managed to keep quiet, not even giving his name, rank or serial number
in addressing the spate of mass shootings. The former prisoner of war, however,
had let his actions speak louder than words the day before the NIU slaughter by
voting against the senate bill which would have banned torture, particularly waterboarding.
The
Arizona senator let his convictions cave to pressure from his party's extreme
right. While McCain was the only senator-seeking-the-presidency who was
unwilling to speak up, he wasn't the only one unwilling to take a stand.
Illinois
Senator Obama went both ways, saying that while he respects the Second
Amendment, there is no reason local governments can't initiate gun safety laws
to deal with violence in their communities.
New
York Senator Clinton did too. Like her Democratic challenger, she defended the
right to bear arms while asserting that authorities must keep those arms out of
the hands of "criminals, terrorists, gang member and people with mental
health problems."
There's
only one explanation for why their tongues are tied: the National Rifle
Association.
If
there is one lobbying organization a politician fears, it's the NRA. President
Bill Clinton pushed a ban on assault rifles through Congress back in 1994. The
NRA targeted the well-meaning Democrats. Nineteen of the 24 House members the
NRA targeted lost their seats in 1994. A decade later the ban was allowed to
expire. Any open discussion of gun control had expired long before then.
In
the meantime, every day in America, 32 people are murdered with guns. A fourth
of those daily deaths are black men between the ages of 15 and 24.
Gun
violence is an epidemic in America. If there were eight Mad Cow cases diagnosed
daily, the beef industry would find itself under fire. If 32 Americans died
daily from bird flu, the nation's politicians would be in a panic to pass
legislation that would tamp down the death toll. Thirty-two MRSA cases a day
and there would be an outbreak of congressional hearings -– not silence.
Not
counting the nearly 12,000 homicides in this nation annually, there are another
70,000 or so annual gunshot victims clogging up hospital emergency rooms from
coast-to-coast.
We've
got a national health crisis here.
The
three presidential candidates stay on message as they engage in a debate over a
national health care program. McCain pretends the private sector will take care
of it. Clinton claims her universal health care program is the right
prescription, while Obama argues that we must take care of the children while
letting the adults decide if they want to take care of themselves.
As
this war of words wages on all the way to November's general election between
McCain and the eventual Democratic party nominee, some 52,000 more Americans
will need medical treatment for gunshot wounds and another 9,000 will be shot
dead.
Now
that's a crime.
Monroe
Anderson is an award-winning journalist who penned op-ed columns for both the
Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Sun-Times. Follow his blog at http://www.monroeanderson.typepad.com/