By Jonah Goldberg
Tuesday, October 06, 2015
President Obama was right. He was right when, just a few
hours after the horrible shooting in Oregon, he decried the fact that such
slaughters have become “routine.” He was even right, in a sense, when he
defended politicizing the tragedy.
“Of course,” Obama said Thursday night, “what’s also
routine is that somebody, somewhere, will comment and say, ‘Obama politicized
this issue.’ Well, this is something we should politicize. It is relevant to
our common life together, to the body politic.”
This was a nice Aristotelian flourish. “Man is a
political animal,” Aristotle said, and it is through politics that we decide
how we should all live together.
But ultimately Obama was just paying lip service to an
ideal he does not live by. He’s not about to try building consensus on gun
policy among people of good faith. He’ll take the same approach he’s taken
throughout his presidency: He’ll delegitimize opponents of his sweeping agenda
as irrational, self-interested enemies of decency and progress.
As the Washington
Examiner’s Byron York recently noted, Obama has a long history of trying to
shut down disagreement by accusing his critics of politicization. He accused
Republicans of trying to politicize abortion, the U.S. relationship with
Israel, the Iran deal, Benghazi, and the scandals at the IRS and the VA. Just
last week he insinuated that Hillary Rodham Clinton’s disagreements with his
Syria policy (or lack thereof) are influenced by the fact that she’s running
for office.
The common denominator in all of these cases is Obama’s
unimpeachable certainty that he has a monopoly on all the good arguments and
all the best motives. Now he even claims the exclusive right to politicize
issues when it suits him.
In his remarks Thursday, he insisted that all he wants
are common-sense reforms that would stop mass shootings, as if the people who
disagree with him are in favor of such slaughter. “And what’s become routine,
of course, is the response of those who oppose any kind of common-sense gun
legislation,” he lamented.
“We know that other countries, in response to one mass
shooting, have been able to craft laws that almost eliminate mass shootings,”
Obama said. “Friends of ours, allies of ours — Great Britain, Australia,
countries like ours. So we know there are ways to prevent it.”
The disingenuousness was breathtaking.
One can forgive the average American, not to mention the
typical White House correspondent, for not knowing how Britain and Australia
dealt with gun violence. But Obama knows. Both countries employed massive
gun-confiscation programs (programs that depend on national gun registries so
the government can find them). The British in effect banned handguns. Obama may
consider that a reasonable, common-sense approach, but he knows full well that
millions of Americans don’t.
Some speculate that it’s all a cynical ploy. A big fight
over guns, with dog-whistle references to gun confiscation, is a better
conversation, politically, than the one about his failures in Syria that this
tragedy interrupted.
But even if one wants to give Obama the benefit of the
doubt, his comments highlight the problem with his approach to politics. He
would rather go for everything he wants and get nothing — but keep the
political issue — than make progress on common ground.
Virtually none of the proposals on his gun-control wish
list — more-comprehensive federal background checks, closing the gun show
“loophole,” etc. — would help bring down the homicide rate. It’s not just a
tautology to note that most gun crimes are committed by criminals — with guns
obtained illegally. Enforcing existing laws or restoring stop-and-frisk
policies in big cities would save more lives than shuttering gun shows.
Nor would his proposals have prevented the deaths at
Umpqua Community College. Typically, mass killers don’t buy guns at gun shows.
And a 2013 CNN analysis found that a comprehensive background-check system
wouldn’t have prevented any of the most heinous mass shootings in recent years,
save one: The Virginia Tech shooter should have failed a background test but
didn’t. That murderer — like the Tucson, Sandy Hook and, most likely, Umpqua
killers — had serious mental health problems.
After the Sandy Hook slaughter, there was a bipartisan
consensus that more needed to be done on the mental-health side. But Obama,
fresh off reelection, rejected a piecemeal approach, largely preferring to go
for a “comprehensive” solution. He ended up with nothing.
That’s because Obama prefers politicizing to actual
politics.
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