THE PAULA GORDON SHOW |
500,000 |
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Even the main stream media are pointing the NRA's bullying and obstructionism. For example: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution as have other interested groups: Juvenal Justice Information Exchange This is Dr. Rosenberg's testimony before the Congressional Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Youth and Families. And, here's a little background information on Paula Gordon and Bill Russell, the Program co-hosts.
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... and counting. In August, 1996, we originally broadcast this program as a response to the bombing at Centennial Park during the Atlanta Olympic games. Blessedly, the bomber--an anti-gay, anti-abortion nut case--is now serving life sentences for that and other fatal bombings. The program we broadcast was one we had recorded a month earlier with Dr. Mark Rosenberg, then Director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC) at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). NCIPC’s goal was to reduce injuries and deaths by applying the tools of science. Violence and, more specifically, firearms (a leading cause of death and injury in the U.S.) were an important focus of NCIPC’s work ... for a while.
To be clear, Dr. Rosenberg’s work would not have prevented all of those deaths, but it stood a good chance of meaningfully reducing what he calls “preventable deaths”. And, to be equally clear, the half million deaths does not include the wounded who survived, or the suffering, the grief, the families destroy or, more coldly, the economic damage. Dr. Rosenberg told us that NCIPC’s approach was a straight-forward, fact-based approach:
As Dr. Rosenberg said to us: “The test of whether you accept an idea should not be ‘where it comes from’ but ‘whether or not it works’.” Unfortunately, evidence--repeatably demonstrable relationships between well-defined elements--is not always well received. Scientific findings often conflict with our beliefs or prejudices. In that struggle, science too often loses. However, to forclose the possibility that facts might somehow influence policy-making, the NRA’s congressional puppets eliminated the fact-finders. In the current debate about the public health issue of firearm-related injuries and deaths, we are now missing almost two decades of intelligence which should be informing the discussion. The absence of that intelligence is irresponsible, it is appalling and it is stupid. People’s lives depend on it. In its absence, lives are being lost, destroyed, wasted. I have argued previously that the NRA is a marketing and PR front for the munitions industry. In a recent cover story, BusinessWeek makes a compelling case that I had the power relationship reversed: the NRA is in charge. As Smith & Wesson discovered, economic as well as political terrorism are a central part of the NRA’s kit, as is fear-mongering. The NRA has borrowed an imaginary dystopia, lifted from “Mad Max” and less creative spectacles. This dystopian view aligns closely with that now preached by what used to be the Grand Old Party. More evidence of NRA extremism rolls in almost daily. Syria, Iran, North Korea and the NRA oppose the arms treaty regulating the global trade in conventional weapons. Presumably the NRA is concerned about the Taliban’s Second Amendment rights. The NRA also threatened to block ratification of the treaty in the United States Senate. I hadn’t realized that NRA actually exercised formal control of the Senate ... and this brings us to the crux of the matter: had Dr. Rosenberg been allowed to continue his research, it would not matter. If corporation chieftains are allowing themselves to be intimidated (as BusinessWeek states) by the NRA, the asymmetrical power awarded corporations by the Supreme Court in the Citizens Unitedcase will further undermined our tenuous republic. Corporations lack a moral sense. Though more extreme than most, the NRA is not alone among rogues representing tiny constituencies. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the various front organizations funded by the Koch brothers are obvious examples. But the problem runs even more deeply. If, as now appears to be the case, our elected representatives have surrendered their loyalty, their consciences, their brains and their humanity to the NRA and other political thugs, evidence is irrelevant, popular will a mere nuisance. We have come to a de facto acceptance of the notion that our elected representative’s principal function is to be re-elected, that legalized bribery in the form of campaign contributions is perfectly acceptable, that a sinecure as a highly paid lobbyist awaits, that said representative’s career is much more important than the well-being of the public, that life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness applies only to those sell-outs and to their masters. This condition must end. The NRA isn’t the problem. Our representatives are the problem. Apparently we must remind them whom they are obligated to serve ... and insist that they do so. It’s why government was invented. Look no further than the next 500,000 victims.
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