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Column

Rush to judgment only perpetuates VT tragedy

By John Bambenek

Posted: 4/30/07 Section: Opinion Columns
"If all Americans want is security they can go to prison. They'll have a roof over their heads and enough to eat." - Dwight Eisenhower

In the wake of the Virginia Tech massacre a predictable cycle began. First, there was the obvious and warranted period of shock and mourning. This period is the shortest of all. Then the blood-letting begins.

Plaintiff lawyers have so successfully enculturated the idea that whenever something "bad" happens someone is to blame and that person owes you millions of dollars, that the finger-pointing has become instinctual. Before the facts were even known, people demanded the firing of the police chief and president of Virginia Tech. They didn't even know the name of the shooter, but somehow they could come to authoritative conclusions about whom to blame.

Next up was the parade of pundits charging over each other to somehow link this tragedy to their issue. The gun control pundits blamed the availability of guns. The gun rights crowd blamed restrictive gun laws. The civil rights crowd started to worry about racial reprisals. The hate America crowd blamed an American society that produces violent killers (never mind the last college massacre was in 1966). The hate Bush crowd obviously blames Bush for everything that ever goes wrong. I had an unsatisfactory bowel movement this morning ... I blame Bush.

Then the last phase is policymakers and political leaders rushing to microphones proposing legislation and policies designed to prevent such tragedies from occurring again. Almost always, such policies are destined to fail.

It is important to note, that at each phase, most often the full picture isn't known, and as time goes on, what really happened becomes increasingly irrelevant.

To see why policy-making done in this way is harmful one only needs to look at the aftermath of the Columbine shootings. Specifically, the scourge of zero tolerance shows the real harm.

One California elementary school brought in the police on a child who was accused of being a terrorist. What unthinkable behavior did he commit? He was playing cops and robbers. Four kindergartners in New Jersey were suspended after the police were called also for playing cops and robbers. Another child was actually charged with terrorism for pointing a paper gun at other students.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

Graduate Architect

Mark Stoner

posted 4/30/07 @ 3:05 PM CST

John,

Your argument is childish, at best. I agree that people are too quick to point fingers (see: OK City bombing, originally blamed on Islamic radicals. (Continued…)

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