Opinions

Highland Park Shooting Shows Why Gun Control is Insane

Distressed Patriotic Flag Unisex T-Shirt - Celebrate Comfort and Country $11.29 USD Get it here>>


Commentary

The Highland Park massacre near Chicago is the latest horrific chapter in a long and evil story. Some want you to believe its a story about why we need gun control. The truth is that its a story about letting the insane out of the asylums—and it suggests that gun control laws, including much-hyped Red Flag provisions, simply dont and will never work.  

Want evidence? In the last 50 years, the percentage of households in the United States owning at least one firearm has gone down. You heard right: Gun ownership dropped from 43 percent in 1972 to 42 percent in 2021. At the same time, the average number of deaths from mass shootings increased 600 percent, from 8 per year in the 1970s to 51 between 2010 to 2019.

Obviously, guns arent the problem. So whats really going on?  

Heres the real story. From 1960 to 1964, there was not a single notable mass shooting in the United States. Then do-gooders decided on deinstitutionalization”that is, to simply release virtually all of the mentally ill into American society. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) spearheaded the campaign, which ultimately led to key ruling by the Supreme Court forbidding states from locking up anyone who is non-dangerous.  

Then, of course, the ACLU decided virtually every mentally ill person in the country was non-dangerous. Since the 1960s, more than nine in 10 mental patients were sprung from asylums, whose capacity dropped from nearly 600,000 patients to less than a tenth of that amount.

As we emptied out Americas insane asylums, mentally ill people began killing Americans en masse. The Secret Service has found that a quarter of mass murderers in 2017 had been hospitalized for psychiatric treatment or prescribed psychiatric medication before their attacks, a third were actually psychotic, and nearly two thirds experienced mental health symptoms prior to their attack. A comprehensive study of mass killers for a century found a quarter of those studied were mentally ill—but after deinstitutionalization, between 2000 and 2015, the proportion rose to 32 percent. Even the left-leaning Mother Jones found that among mass shooters, a majority were mentally ill—and many displayed signs of it before setting out to kill. 

Overall, a summary of mass murder studies reports that in the results we see the full effects of the closing of state mental hospitals and reduction of community psychiatric services.

Note that while these reforms cut short ever-more Americans lives, they arguably short-changed ever-more mental patients lives as well. The closing of those state mental hospitals not only led to gravestones of murder victims, but also to mass homelessness that persists to this day. According to one peer-reviewed study, after the former all-time peak in hobos during the Great Depression, by the 1960s homelessness had declined to the point that researchers predicted its virtual disappearance. Instead, as asylums emptied, homeless shelters filled.  

Not only homeless shelters but also prisons filled as well. In effect, deinstitutionalization achieved the transfer of those who should have been confined for their own safety and that of others to prison—after having committed a crime, up to and including mass murder. Before the turn of the last century, severely mentally ill inmates constituted less than one in 100 of the American prison population, but that rate has increased 10-fold. In particular, one in 10 of all inmates imprisoned for any homicide now has severe mental illness.

Which brings us to Highland Park.  

You decide: In Illinois, a state that already has a so-called Red Flag Law—which didnt work—was there instead sufficient evidence that the alleged killer should have been confined for his safety and that of his fellow Americans?  

There is ample evidence that police were aware of problems in the household before the alleged shooters troubles began. Police were reportedly called to his home at least nine times between 2010 and 2014 in response to alleged domestic disputes, police records say, mostly between the suspect’s parents.

There is even more evidence that the suspect was anything but non-dangerous, to himself or others. One of the alleged shooters friends says she reached out to his father on Facebook around 2015 after he said some concerning things about wanting to overdose. The alleged killer reportedly threatened suicide and allegedly tried to kill himself multiple times as early as 2016. In particular, in April 2019, the suspectattempted to commit suicide by machete and had a history of attempts to kill himself, according to another police report (pdf). Just five months later, in September 2019, the Highland Park Police Department determined the alleged shooter posed a clear and present danger after allegedly threatening to kill everyone in his family. Yet the police simply removed a 24-inch Samurai sword, a dagger, and 16 knives from his room, and even returned those to his father afterward. In the suspects online activity he appeared obsessed with violent imagery, mass shootings, and high-profile murderers. His shocking music videos reportedly included an animation of a gunman being killed by police and another with him in an empty classroom dressed in tactical gear. He reportedly posted a beheading video on a message board he frequented that was devoted to death. Finally, 13 hours before the Highland Park mass shooting, the suspect brought up the 22-year-old Danish man who had shot and killed three people at a mall outside Copenhagen that day.

Again, you tell me: In a home police were well aware had a history of domestic disturbances, there was an individual whom police also knew had a long history of suicidal actions, and whom police also determined at one point posed a clear and present danger to himself and his family—so why, exactly, was he never committed?

The answer is because virtually no one in America can be committed anymore. Police, generally speaking, dont even try.

Its crazy to try to prevent mass shootings by taking away sane peoples guns. The problem is those who dismantled commitment for the mentally ill, as well as those who now refuse to consider rebuilding it—and those crazy enough to believe the lefts lies about gun control

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

Christopher C. Hull

Follow

Christopher C. Hull, Ph.D., is a public affairs executive with extensive real-world expertise running successful local, state, federal, and international policy-shaping and coalition-building issue campaigns, as well as academic-level training in presidential and grassroots politics.



Source link

TruthUSA

I'm TruthUSA, the author behind TruthUSA News Hub located at https://truthusa.us/. With our One Story at a Time," my aim is to provide you with unbiased and comprehensive news coverage. I dive deep into the latest happenings in the US and global events, and bring you objective stories sourced from reputable sources. My goal is to keep you informed and enlightened, ensuring you have access to the truth. Stay tuned to TruthUSA News Hub to discover the reality behind the headlines and gain a well-rounded perspective on the world.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.