Sultan Knish blog
First Elliot Rodger murdered his three roommates with a knife, hammer
and machete. Then he shot eight people, three of them fatally, and tried
to run over several others in his car.
After the bodies were taken away, everyone on television agreed that it was the fault of the guns.
Rodger
had been in therapy since he was eight and was seeing therapists every
day in high school. He had a history of making violent threats and the
police had already gotten involved. He was on multiple prescription
medications and had therapists whom he alerted to his plans by sending
them his manifesto.
A therapist reacted by notifying his mother who drove out personally. By then even more people were dead.
In
a country where a little boy with a pop tart chewed in the shape of a
gun triggers immediate action, the professionals who cashed in on the
killer’s wealthy family were in no hurry to call the police. One even
reassured his mother while the shootings were going on that it wasn’t
him.
So it was clearly the fault of the guns. Guns that Elliot
Rodger bought with $5,000 from his family. The BMW he used to commit
some of the attacks was given to him by his mother.
Jenni
Rodger, his British aunt, blamed America and guns for her nephew's
massacre. "What kind of a society allows this? How can this be allowed
to happen? I want to appeal to Americans to do something about this
horrific problem."
Somehow the parenting failure of her brother is now the fault of an entire foreign country.
Rodger's
father issued a statement through his lawyer in support of gun control
and "staunchly against guns." It might have been a bit more useful if
Peter Rodger, instead of opposing a category of manual instruments, had
spent more time dealing with his son's problems.
Guns did not kill six people. His son did.
Maybe
Elliot Rodger's family would not have been able to change anything, but
it's likely that they could have at least prevented the massacre if
they had become more involved instead of delegating the problem that
their son had become to therapists and medications. It's the height of
cynicism for his father and aunt to take refuge in abstractions about
gun control.
When a teenager stabbed twenty people at a
Pittsburgh-area high school there were no easy answers about gun control
to take refuge in. If Rodger had stuck to his knife, hammer and
machete, his relatives who coddled him all these years wouldn't be able
to shift the blame to an abstract policy. They wouldn't be able to
politicize the crime and snip their own involvement out of the picture.
Elliot
Rodger's parents, communicating through a lawyer and a talent agent,
find it convenient to put up another layer of abstraction between
themselves and the actions of their son. And the easiest way to do that
is to transform it into a widespread social problem. The more that the
smiling people on television talk about gun control, the less likely
they are to talk about them.
Even mental illness reduces a
specific crime to the abstraction of a social problem. Expanding an
individual act into a social problem manufactures a collective
responsibility. The scapegoats are people who had nothing to do with
what happened. The killer's family has successfully shifted
responsibility to people who live a thousand miles away and never even
knew their son existed.
Guns have become a convenient cliche. The
new villain is no longer the killer, but the 5 million members of the
NRA who are unwilling to give up their constitutional rights because
Elliot Rodger's family failed at their single most important job.
Why
is a gun owner in North Carolina more responsible for the Isla Vista
killings than Peter Rodger? Does Peter Rodger’s staunch opposition to
guns free him from responsibility while dumping it on the majority of
Americans who believe in the Bill of Rights?
Elliot Rodger was
not a social problem. He was not a gun culture. He was not a national
anything. He was an individual and individuals bear responsibility for
their own actions.
The
left is expert at removing responsibility from individuals and
assigning it to the culture at large. Every murder is a failure of
society. And society fails every murderer, they insist. We are all
murderers because we own guns or didn't vote for the right politicians
who would have allocated more money to mental health treatment, school
counseling or midnight basketball.
And outlawed guns.
The
"You didn't build that" society is also the "You didn't do that"
society. The flip side of Elizabeth Warren and Barack Obama's
collectivist rhetoric is that just as no one invents the airplane,
creates a company or writes the Great American Novel on their own, no
one kills six people on their own. If you killed six people, it's
because of the Second Amendment. If you wanted to kill sorority girls,
it's because of Seth Rogen movies. If you're a half-Asian who beat and
stabbed your Asian roommates to death, it's because of white (or
half-white) supremacism.
No one does anything good or bad on
their own. The good that men do gets taxed away for the purported
benefit of society and the evil that they do is blamed on society.
In
a collectivist system, everyone is responsible for everything
collectively and not responsible for anything individually. Everyone but
the killer is responsible for his shooting spree. And that means no one
is responsible. The problem is tackled with public awareness hashtags
and legislation that hurts millions of people who didn't do anything
wrong.
America's gun owners, like its machete and hammer owners,
did not kill anyone. Every day the vast majority of gun owners somehow
manage to get through the day without a killing spree. Their tools don't
have minds of their own. The gun culture that liberals talk about does
not sneak in through their windows at night and urge them to shoot up
the neighborhood.
Elliot Rodger did not kill because he had guns.
He bought guns because he wanted to kill. And he wasn't very good at
it, wounding more people than he killed. Like many on the left he
believed that guns would make him invincible. They didn't. And it was
the same good guys with guns the left sneers at who put a stop to his
killing spree.
We aren't rethinking the First Amendment because
of Rodger's YouTube videos and manifesto. Why are we supposed to rethink
the Second Amendment every time some psycho includes guns in his
killing spree? The problem was not with Rodger's computer, his
smartphone, his hammer, his machete or his handguns. They were only the
tools that he used. The problem was with him.
The solution to
horrifying crimes is not collective guilt, but individual
responsibility. Instead of transforming individual acts into a social
problem, we should instead remind ourselves that the keystone of
morality is individual responsibility. Collectives are not moral.
Individuals are.
People don't kill because there is a gun shop around the corner. They kill because they make a choice.
Elliot
Rodger's family doesn't want to deal with their own choices. Elliot
Rodger certainly did not want to deal with his. However if we want a
moral society, we won't get there by pretending that choice doesn't
exist. We won't get there by banning guns. We won't get there through
abstractions.
A moral society recognizes the power and
responsibility of individual choice. A better country doesn't begin with
banning guns, but with holding accountable those who kill. Even while
liberals were puffing out their chests over gun control, the Supreme
Court's liberal justices stepped in to save Freddie Hall who kidnapped,
raped and murdered a pregnant woman and shot a deputy.
That
was in 1978. A decade earlier, he had gone to jail for raping another
woman and gouging out her eyes so she wouldn't be able to identify him.
Like
some of the other monsters on death row, Hall decided to plead
retarded. His IQ scores dropped. After a long series of appeals, the
Supreme Court finally decided that executing him would be
unconstitutional.
"Florida’s law contravenes our Nation’s
commitment to dignity and its duty to teach human decency as the mark of
a civilized world," Justice Kennedy wrote, speaking for the majority.
But America was at its best in dignity and decency when it held men,
including monsters like Freddie Hall, accountable for their actions.
Decency and civilization come from individual choices. Liberals like
Kennedy reject individual choices and seek every possible pretext for
protecting killers from their moral choices.
A society that makes
excuses for monsters becomes an amoral cesspool where no one is
responsible for anything because everyone is responsible for everything.
Instead of offering collectivist excuses and implementing collectivist
overreactions, we can restore dignity and decency by rejecting social
problems and embracing individual responsibility.
Our choice is
not between a safe society without guns and a dangerous society with
guns. It is between a society of individual responsibility where
everyone can be trusted to own a gun and a society of collectivist
irresponsibles where no one can be trusted to own a gun.
1 comment:
I am sure that Elliot's problems was with his family, especially with his father. Elliot was a victim who could not carry on his back his sufferings and negligence from his family. Do you imagine if after death Elliot could hear or read that after his disgrace committing suicide and murdering people your parents said that their are more sorry for other victims than by their own son!!! I hope God can give Elliot the love and understanding that his parents and all society could not give him.Hoping God gives you the MERCY you could not find among humanity.
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