Gun culture
There was a school shooting yesterday. Again. Four dead.
There was a dude firing a gun along Interstate 5 and wounding six people, at least one critically.
Four people were shot dead on a Chicago El train.
Five people were shot at a parade in Brooklyn.
A guy broke into a Birmingham, Alabama, apartment and shot four people playing cards, killing one.
Someone opened fire in a parking lot outside a bar in Nashville and wounded several people.
Two mass shootings in Ohio on the same day, one in Cleveland and one in Dayton.
All this since September first. A span of four days.
And yet nothing will be done about it.
Oh, suspects will be arrested, victims will be treated or eulogized, families will grieve. That stuff will "be done" about it. But nothing will happen to address the causes of this uniquely American problem of gun violence.
I know nothing will be done because nothing has been done. We've been living with this situation for decades—correction, most of us have been living with it, some very much not—and all we get from the people empowered to take action are meaningless "thoughts and prayers" and completely nonsensical, idiotic comments like this one, from Georgia governor Brian Kemp after yesterday's murders: "Today is not the day for politics or policy." Screw you, BK, this is precisely the day for policy. That's, you know, your actual job.
Some people in leadership positions want to do something. Assault weapon bans, stricter background checks, restricting access to firearms in various ways, these have been proposed in legislation but never with any real chance of passage because (a) Republicans, and (b) ingrained gun culture.
We have a real chance at getting something passed in the nearish future if we elect enough Democrats in November and can then bypass (a). So those of us who survive the inevitable shootings to come in the next couple of years or so might see progress. But I'm concerned about (b) being an insurmountable problem, at least for the foreseeable future.
Gun culture is everywhere in this country. It's in our historical touchstones, it's in our entertainment, it's in our language. It's in so many idioms we don't even notice it. We're basically inured to the idea of guns whether we want to be or not.
Just last night, while I was umpiring, I used the phrase "bang-bang play," which is baseball-speak for a super-close safe/out situation or split-second call made by an umpire. I'd never really considered the origins of the phrase until that exchange, which went like this:
Me (umpire): OUT!
Player: I don't know, man, are you sure?
Me: It was bang-bang, they got him.
It was the joining of "got him" with "bang-bang" that clicked it for me, this is a gun metaphor. I know, should have been obvious, but having heard it so many times in the context of a play on the bases it wasn't.
When estimating a timeframe, we say we're "shooting for" a date. We "shoot from the hip" or "shoot our mouths off" or "shoot ourselves in the foot." The passenger seat in a car is for "riding shotgun." We use "bullet points" in memos. If we're confident about the outcome of something, it's a "surefire bet." Someone who's extra gregarious might be called "a real pistol." We implore recipients of bad news, "don't shoot the messenger." If someone is criticized, they've "come under fire." A quickly-fading fad is a "flash in the pan." If we're on a tight deadline we're "under the gun." If you put off a decision or act cautiously in a dilemma, you might be "keeping your powder dry." If you change your expectations or goals you might be "raising/lowering your sights."
And those are just off the top of my head (an idiom which, so far as I know, has no firearm connotations). Even when there are no guns around, there are guns everywhere. I don't know how we get past that.
Of course, making the real guns a whole hell of a lot harder to come by would be a great first step.
Regarding the latest school shooting in Georgia, I leave it to Jeff Tiedrich to lambast the political "leadership" from that state and their useless "thoughts and prayers."
Comments
Posted by Wendy on September 7, 2024 (4 months ago)
Gun culture idioms are something I think about quite a lot, like all my favorite leaders at work, who are real straight shooters, or my hilariously comedic cousin who has a real shoot-from-the-hip style. I try to catch myself and weed out these phrases where possible, but they’ve become so much a part of our language that sometimes, I lose track of the fact that they are gun references at all. “Flash in the pan,” for instance, I had to look up because I’d thought it was a photography reference from those old flash-pan lights they used to use. Who knew? You did.
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