The Problem Is The Filibuster

It’s been a while since I’ve addressed anything serious in these pages. Maybe that’s why a commenter said of one of my recent weather-related posts, “Ever the flibbertigibbet.” (Yeah, I had to look it up too.) But knowing which way the wind blows is child’s play compared to the thorny issues laid bare by the recent massacre of children in an elementary school classroom in Uvalde, TX. A lot has been said in response to that, perhaps nothing more eloquent than Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr’s comments at a press conference prior to a recent NBA playoff game against Dallas. (I urge you to watch it, here.) And if you doubt Kerr’s bona fides on this subject, I suggest you google “Malcolm Kerr.” Then note that Steve’s dad was kidnapped and murdered by terrorists in Beirut while Steve was still playing college basketball at Arizona.

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All that being said, the underlying problem here – alluded to by Kerr, and spelled out more completely in a recent New Yorker piece called “How to Prevent Gun Massacres” – is the U.S. Senate’s rule on filibusters. (You can read that story here.   I think it’s important enough that I’ve reproduced it in its entirety, below.) “The filibuster?” I hear you say? Yep, the filibuster.

Don’t believe me? That’s okay. Just know this: If we do what we’ve always done, we’ll get what we’ve always gotten. To believe otherwise is the textbook definition of insanity. As for those who don’t learn from the examples of history? Well, they’re doomed to repeat them, of course. And if you wait until it’s YOUR child who gets murdered in a classroom? Or YOUR grandma who’s  gunned down by some nutjob in a grocery store? Well, my guess is, you’ve probably waited too long. Word to the wise. Believe it or don’t. Totally your call.

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How to Prevent Gun Massacres? Look Around the World.

Australia, Britain, Canada, and other countries have enacted reforms that turned mass shootings into rare, aberrational events, rather than everyday occurrences.

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On April 28, 1996, Martin Bryant, a disturbed 28-year-old Australian who had been bullied at school, walked into a café in the city of Port Arthur, a former convict settlement that is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. He pulled a Colt AR-15 rifle from his duffel bag and started shooting. After killing more than 20 people in the café, he reloaded his weapon and roamed around shooting at random. A carjacking and a hostage negotiation followed. By the time he was arrested, he had killed 35 people and wounded another 23.

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Australia, like the United States, is a former British colony that has long styled itself as a rugged, individualistic nation. Hunting and shooting are popular there. Unlike the U.S., though, Australia has a political system that is responsive to popular opinion. Its legislatures do not have filibuster-like rules that allow a minority of lawmakers to block legislation. Within 2 weeks of the Port Arthur massacre, the worst in modern Australian history, governments at the federal and state levels had agreed to ban semi-automatic and pump-action firearms. The federal government also introduced several other measures. These included a buyback scheme to compensate owners of the newly banned firearms, a centralized registry of gun owners, and a public-education campaign about the new laws.

 

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Just over a year ago, Australia marked the 25th anniversary of the transformation brought about by the Port Arthur rampage. In a country of roughly 27 million people, there are still a lot of guns in private hands. In 2020, there were an estimated 3.5 million of them. But the number of mass shootings, defined as attacks in which at least 4 people are killed, has declined precipitously. In the decade before Port Arthur, there had been 11 such incidents. In the quarter century since, there have been 3. The worst of these involved a farmer in Western Australia killing 6 family members.

 

It should be noted that Australia, like the U.S., has a strong gun lobby. Until 1996, that lobby had successfully frustrated efforts to tighten gun laws there. When the conservative Prime Minister at the time, John Howard, pushed through the ban on certain firearms, gun owners were so angry that he wore a bullet-proof vest when he addressed a group of them. But the vast majority of Aussies backed Howard. After Port Arthur, Australia was “united in horror and grief. And there was a very strong level of support for what we had to do,” Howard recalled to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation last year. “The goal was to prohibit possession of automatic and semi-automatic weapons. And that’s been achieved. The country is now a much safer place.”

 

What happened in Australia provides a concrete example of how a healthy democracy can confront powerful interests to introduce rational policies that clearly benefit the country. The Australian success story also reminds us what a dismal outlier the United States remains in terms of gun violence and political will, even in the face of the most gruesome and abhorrent of all mass shootings: the killings of schoolchildren.

 

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The urge to shoot children and other young people gathered in educational settings is certainly not confined to the United States. On March 13, 1996, a 43-year-old former Scout leader, Thomas Hamilton, entered Dunblane Primary School, in Scotland, carrying four legally owned handguns. He shot dead 16 students and a teacher. On December 6, 1989, at Montreal’s École Polytechnique, a women-hating 25-year-old man, Marc Lépine, who was armed with a Ruger Mini-14 semi-automatic rifle, gunned down 14 female students and staff members.

 

In terms of sheer cruelty and wantonness, these shootings rival anything seen in the United States. In both cases, though, the British and Canadian political systems responded. Compared with the United States, Britain already had strict gun laws. But it enacted even more controls after the Scotland attack. Within a year, Prime Minister John Major’s Conservative government had banned all handguns except for .22-calibre pistols. Tony Blair’s successive Labor government banned those, as well.

 

Canada’s legislative response to the Montreal massacre wasn’t as immediate or as sweeping. But it did eventually include a 28-day waiting period for the purchase of guns. It also included expanded background checks, a national registration system, and a ban on large-capacity magazines for semi-automatic weapons. In recent years, Canadian governments have further tightened gun laws. In 2020, after a deranged 51-year-old dental technician, Gabriel Wortman, used a Mini-14 to murder 22 people during a shooting rampage in Nova Scotia, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau issued an executive order banning “assault style” weapons. That includes the AR-15 and the Mini-14.

 

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Even Israel, a country that American gun enthusiasts point to as another heavily armed democracy, has much stricter gun-control laws than the United States does. To buy a gun there, you need a government license. The requirements for obtaining this license include satisfying a minimum-age limit (27 years old for anyone who hasn’t served in the military or national service). They also include passing a gun-safety test, and obtaining a letter from a doctor that you are sound of mind and body. Many applicants in Israel are turned down. And even those whose applications get approved are, in most cases, limited to purchasing a single handgun with a limit of 50 bullets. Salvador Ramos, the shooter in Uvalde, Texas, legally purchased two AR-15 rifles and 375 rounds of ammunition just days after his 18th birthday.

 

The evidence couldn’t be more plain. Other countries haven’t entirely eliminated mass shootings. But they have enacted reforms that helped turn them into rare, aberrational events, rather than the everyday occurrences they are in this country. Is it any wonder that much of the rest of the world considers us mad? From afar, the evidence suggests that we are. Up close, however, the real problem isn’t mass insanity. It’s political capture. It’s a system that, aided by the filibuster, entrenches the status quo and prevents desperately needed reforms. Until we tackle these systemic problems, nothing will change.

2 Replies to “The Problem Is The Filibuster”

  1. How do you solve a problem like Maria?
    How do you catch a cloud and pin it down?
    How do you find a word that means Maria?
    A flibbertijibbet! A will-o’-the wisp! A clown!
    =================

    She climbs a tree and scr*pes her knee
    Her dress has got a tear
    She waltzes on her way to Mass
    And whistles on the stair
    And underneath her wimple
    She has curlers in her hair
    I even heard her singing in the abbey
    She’s always late for chapel
    But her penitence is real
    She’s always late for everything
    Except for every meal
    I hate to have to say it
    But I very firmly feel
    Maria’s not an asset to the abbey
    I’d like to say a word in her behalf
    Maria makes me laugh
    How do you solve a problem like Maria?
    How do you catch a cloud and pin it down?
    How do you find a word that means Maria?
    A flibbertijibbet! A will-o’-the wisp! A clown!
    Many a thing you know you’d like to tell her
    Many a thing she ought to understand
    But how do you make her stay
    And listen to all you say
    How do you keep a wave upon the sand
    Oh, how do you solve a problem like Maria?
    How do you hold a moonbeam in your hand?
    When I’m with her I’m confused
    Out of focus and bemused
    And I never know exactly where I am
    Unpredictable as weather
    She’s as flighty as a feather
    She’s a darling! She’s a demon! She’s a lamb!
    She’d outpester any pest
    Drive a hornet from its nest
    She could throw a whirling dervish out of whirl
    She is gentle! She is wild!
    She’s a riddle! She’s a child!
    She’s a headache! She’s an angel!
    She’s a girl!
    How do you solve a problem like Maria?
    How do you catch a cloud and pin it down?
    How do you find a word that means Maria?
    A flibbertijibbet! A will-o’-the wisp! A clown!
    Many a thing you know you’d like to tell her
    Many a thing she ought to understand
    But how do you make her stay
    And listen to all you say
    How do you keep a wave upon the sand
    Oh, how do you solve a problem like Maria?
    How do you hold a moonbeam in your hand?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=45tZGDKhi2Y

    https://www.stlyrics.com/lyrics/thesoundofmusic/maria.htm

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