On Virginia Tech
At first, I wasn't going to
comment on the sad crime perpetrated on the campus of Virginia Tech
this week. I figured that everyone, everywhere, was going to do so
(with varying degrees of erudition and insight.) I decided there
wasn't anything I could add. Until...
Listening to the news on the radio, I heard an interview with two
students who said that they were in "the room where he was
shooting." According to these people, students and faculty were
hiding under and behind anything in the room that they felt would
provide them some protection, or flat on the floor in the absence
of same.
It's what they said next that prompted me to comment: as the gunman
shot, he naturally ran out of ammunition, and had to stop to refill
his magazines. After taking the time to refill then reload his
weapon, he continued his unfettered spree.
He was out of ammunition, and had stopped to reload - why didn't
someone, anyone,
in the room take that golden opportunity to tackle the murderer? At
that point the criminal couldn't shoot anyone, and the risk even to
the person who would choose that course of action would have been
relatively minor compared to letting him get his firearm back up
and running.
The answer is as obvious as it is sad: our society has fully
inculcated the victimhood and helplessness mentalities into the
last several generations of people. They didn't do anything because
they have been taught their entire lives to rely on someone -
anyone - else for their safety and well being.
This is what the nanny state has given us. This is what our
Founding Fathers, I think, understood when they listed the natural
right to keep and bear arms in their Constitution: yes, it's about
the ability to resist tyrannical governments. More importantly,
though, is the choice
inherent in the
right.
You see, it's not the exercise of the right in and of itself that
matters; it's the existence of the choice
to exercise the right
that is so very important. Even if one chooses not to exercise the
right, in making the choice one has experienced the
self-actualization that leads to great inner strength and a
heightened sense of self-worth. The very personal decision - no
matter what the decision itself is - is what makes for citizens who
are self reliant, who can think for themselves, and cannot be
corralled like sheep.
When the "transaction cost" of the individual choice is raised -
when the ability to decide for oneself is restricted or controlled
in any manner - the choice is made not by the individual, but by
someone else. The benefits of making the decision are denied the
individual, and he/she learns (bit by bit) how to be a subject
rather than a sovereign individual. Given long enough, an entire
people is conditioned to be subordinate themselves to authority
figures; when the "badge" of "authority" is the firearm, the people
will prostrate themselves to anyone who wields one. Even a crazed
killer.
Milton Friedman was right.
-=[ Grant
]=-