Portrait, George Lakoff. (photo: Bart Nagel)
17 December 12
re we prepared to say that such violence visited on our children year after year after year is somehow the price of our freedom?" -- Barack Obama, Newtown Address, December 16, 2012
That sentence, uttered by President Obama in his
Newtown Address, may turn out to be a turning point in American history.
The president, in one sentence, turned the beautiful faces of the 20
first-grade children murdered brutally by assault weapons into the moral
measure of our nation. Conservatives have argued that guns = freedom,
and that there should be no limit on such freedom. The president trumped
their argument: The price of not protecting the nations' children is
too high. Permitting the mass murder of our children is not freedom.
It comes as a shock at a certain point where you realize no matter how much you love these kids, you can't do it by yourself. That this job of keeping our children safe and teaching them well is something we can only do together, with the help of friends and neighbors, the help of a community, and the help of a nation.
And in that way we come to realize that we bear responsibility for every child, because we're counting on everybody else to help look after ours; that we're all parents; that they are all our children.
This is our first task, caring for our children. It's our first job. If we don't get that right, we don't get anything right. That's how, as a society, we will be judged.
Democracy, as the president has said, begins with the
people taking care of one another responsibly, importantly through
government as an instrument of freedom. That how we get our public
schools, our roads, our sewers, our patent office, our scientific
research, our energy, communication and transportation systems, our food
safety, our protectors, and all the rest that we need to be free in our
private lives. It is a truth: the private depends on the public. We,
all together, constitute the public. Unless we take care of one another
and one another's children, we can't get democracy -- and freedom --
right.
The gun lobby rests on conservative ideology:
Democracy supposedly gives each of us individually the "liberty" to seek
our own self-interests with no responsibility for the interests or
well-being of anyone else. After and Obama's Newtown Address, the whole
idea of such "liberty" makes no sense.
The time is ripe to end the conservative grip over
nearly half of America. That starts with an all-out effort to put in
place responsible gun safety laws. Total registration, just like with
cars. An end to automatic and semi-automatic weapons. And an end to
blaming massacres on crazies. Gun massacres require guns that can
massacre. Eliminate them.
The president set just the right tone. We're in this
together. We bear joint responsibility for one another and all our
children. If you accept this, really accept it, you can't keep
conservative ideology, not just on guns, but on anything.
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