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Jadechik here!
I have an issue! Yes, a serious serious issue! No at the moment, it's not
why-pox, and it's definitely not a fungi infection. My issue is with gun
control.
This concern about gun control is not a HUGE problem here in Canada, but it's
still very important. I was first contemplating this idea when I read
Giggler01 's article about the media and the bus accident. I proceeded to make a
posting showing my agreement, while putting a new issue on the table. I referred to
the movie "Bowling for Columbine" (which was incredible, and I
encourage everyone to see it, simply because its disturbing yet informative
content is vital).
Most of you know about the Columbine High School massacre. The
event was so emotionally disturbing. Students brought guns into a high school
and slaughtered people without care or mercy. Bombs, guns. Total chaos and
torture.
I have more questions than I have answers... questions like... "If Americans
have the right to bear arms, what right do they have to use those arms for
murder?" Guns obviously don't have have a "right to take lives" sticker on the
package, which they in my opinion might as well have, the way they're used. Because
having a gun doesn't seem to
be a method of "protection," it's more like "protection of other guns."
Why do people need protection of those guns? Because their stupid "right to bear
arms" is landing us with people without proper licensing getting their
hands on guns like a pack of gum from a convenience store. It's just that easy.
In the movie "Bowling for Columbine," there are STUPID STUPID sales
pitches given to customers. "Get an account, get a free rifle!" This pitch
was given by a BANK. Come on people, a bank giving out guns? And they wonder why
they get robbed? Some people may say, "Hunting guns are for hunting, and hand
guns are strictly for the range!" That may be the idea. That's ethical. But with a gazillion
people in the population, there tends to be some mishaps... right? Right!
Why is it so easy to get a gun in the United States? I feel much safer where I
live; I don't have to go through a metal detector at school because "Chad" came to school
one day, had enough bullying and SHOT every one dead. COME ON! THINK! Sure, it's
nice to have weapons, the shape, the smell, and that loud bang it makes. But the
"right" isn't so right to a person who's dead because his dad's gun was handy in
the night-stand.
I myself have taken many gun safety courses and hunter safety
courses. What I have learned only opens my eyes to a whole world of gun un-safety.
Here, all guns MUST MUST MUST be disarmed or made unable to be used during storage
and transport. However, in the States it seems that a gun is fine to be loaded in a
drawer and waiting. Just because there is the right doesn't mean that it is ok
to be careless about a gun being loaded.
I have seen
with my own eyes the effect guns have on a living thing. It's scary. Yes. It is
frightening. Yes. It is painful. Yes.
I have seen blood shed by an animal
as it nears death. But I had never seen a human die. Thanks to "Bowling for
Columbine," I have, and I hate it. I find myself hating America for its stupid
laws and its stupid president and its stupid everything. I hate how a kid in
grade two took a gun to school one day and shot and killed another girl. I hate
how people massacred others with a tool which has a "right" to be there.
When
people sniper off kids going to school. When people sniper off a woman carrying groceries.
Don't those stubborn people get the messages?
I can't blame everyone.
Just the people who have the power to make a difference. The President. ANYONE
who says they can be there for the people should open their eyes.
When a girl dies by getting hit by a car on a busy street, the message is clear.
Put
in a stop-walk. But HOW many people have been killed by handguns lately? How many?
And still, all that is cared about is a "right." Well, are guns a
RIGHT or a PRIVILEGE? In my opinion, they are only a PRIVILEGE and privileges get taken away
when the people are proved unsuccessful with dealing with that privilege.
When I say I am disappointed with the gun laws, I really am. Come to Canada,
have a beer and a hockey stick! Go to America, have a beer and a hand-gun! (Take
your pick.)
Thank you.
P.S. I realize the intense back-lash on myself that this article may have. But I
feel as if a great weight was lifted from my mind when I finished writing it.
That movie greatly stirred
my soul. I understand my readers may be offended
by some of my material. But what was said was said, and I am open to everyone's
comments, especially people who are willing to make this a dialogue and a debate
instead of a screaming fight. I also realize that I myself am not American. I am just showing my feelings,
the feelings of an observer, about the gun policies in the states. To fully understand my
ideology, it is
best just to get your parent's permission and watch the movie "Bowling for Columbine".
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