Los Angeles Times - 06.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

A10 TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2019 LATIMES.COM/OPINION


OPINION


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A


fter a weekend of numbing
carnage — more than 30 dead
and more than 50 injured in
mass shootings in El Paso and
Dayton, Ohio — President
Trump stepped forward Monday morning
with a tweet calling for a bilateral embrace
of “strong background checks,” whatever
that means, and “perhaps marrying this leg-
islation with desperately needed immigra-
tion reform.”
So in the space of a single tweet the presi-
dent called for laughably light legislative
changes — neither gunman would likely
have been stopped by a background check
— and then turned his message to outra-
geously cynical politics. What does immi-
gration reform have to do with what has be-
come our national pastime, killing one an-
other en masse and often with military-
grade firearms and semiautomatic hand-
guns? Trump infamously sees everything in
terms of a deal, so it shouldn’t surprise us
that he would seek to gain a political advan-
tage in his fight to reduce immigration by
trading on the bodies of the dead.
The truth, though, is that the bloodiest
of the two massacres apparently was pro-
pelled by the shooter’s desire to counter
“the Hispanic invasion of Texas,” as his
“manifesto” phrased it — a theme that ech-
oes the language Trump has used since his
2016 election campaign, which began with a
speech that described Mexican immigrants
as “rapists” and drug smugglers. Since then,
Trump has repeatedly referred to migrants
“infesting” and “invading” the country.
So “marrying” immigration reform to a
background-check bill would reward the al-
leged Texas gunman by using his despicable
act of anti-Latino violence as a lever to
achieve his goal, which just happens to align
with the president’s own animus toward
people from what he infamously described
as “shithole countries.”
Yes, we should have universal back-
ground checks for gun purchasers (al-
though it’s unclear if that’s what Trump was
calling for). Such checks are, politically
speaking, the low-hanging fruit of gun con-
trol. Even a majority of gun owners support
universal background checks, because it is a
basic, common-sense step. Who in their
right mind thinks it’s a good idea to sell guns
to people with a history of violence, addic-
tion or mental illness? Even if we take the
2nd Amendment at its broadest interpreta-
tion, a right to bear arms is not absolute.
Just as the 1st Amendment isn’t absolute —
this newspaper can’t libel people, and no
one can yell “fire” in a crowded theater un-


less there is, indeed, a fire. Those are com-
mon-sense accommodations that still pre-
serve fundamental rights.
Banning private possession of weapons
of war is also common sense. The U.S. needs
to reinstate the federal assault weapons
ban.
But we hear none of that from the White
House. After his morning tweets, in which
he also said the media have “contributed
greatly to the anger and rage that has built
up,” the president addressed the nation
from the White House Diplomatic Room. He
offered condolences to the victims and to
Mexico, whose citizens were among the El
Paso targets, and called for national unity to
“confront white supremacy.”
“Hatred has no place in America,” he
said. All well and good. But then he offered a
checklist of mostly baby steps, such as more
“red flag” laws to remove firearms from peo-
ple whose relatives fear they might strike
out in violence, and stopping the glorifica-
tion of violence in video games. But he also
called for stronger mental health laws in-
cluding “when necessary involuntary incar-
ceration,” and making hate-driven mass
murder a capital offense punished by death
“delivered quickly, decisively, and without
years of delay.” Both of those proposals
raise significant constitutional issues.
Trump said nothing about banning com-
bat-style weapons. And he seems to have
forgotten his support for “strong back-
ground checks” in the time between his
morning tweet routine and his arrival in
front of the cameras.
It’s good, we guess, that Trump felt the
pressure in the aftermath of the attacks to
make some gestures toward rationality, and
to concede publicly that white supremacy is
unacceptable. But frankly, we doubt
whether Trump can serve as an effective
messenger for the idea that Americans need
to come together against violence and rac-
ism. He’s been fanning the flames of division
and fear for too many years now to be the
guy who tells us what to do next, especially if
he’s not willing to take meaningful steps on
gun control.
The nation knows what the problem is,
and while mental illness may be a part of it,
it’s only one part. Mentally ill people without
access to firearms, particularly guns that
can kill scores of people in seconds, tend not
to commit massacres on a large scale. Nei-
ther, for that matter, do sane people without
access to guns. Too many people have too
easy access to too many firearms; that is our
problem. As is a political system that is in
the thrall of the gun lobby and abjectly re-
fuses to respond in a sensible, proactive
manner to preserve the safety of people as
they go about their everyday lives, be it at-
tending a garlic festival in Gilroy, Calif.,
shopping in El Paso, or having a late-night
drink with friends on a hot summer night in
the heart of Ohio.

Trump and the mass shootings


The president’s cynical response to


weekend carnage falls far short of


what’s needed to protect the U.S.


T


he city of Los Angelesis con-
stantly wrestling with how to
balance the rights of desperate
homeless people living outdoors
with the rights of the rest of its
residents. One area of conflict has been
what to do about homeless people who live
in their cars or RVs, which many Angelenos
say take up too much space and dump too
much trash in residential neighborhoods.
In February 2017, the city instituted a new
ordinance that banned people from sleeping
in their vehicles in residential neighbor-
hoods from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. — and at all
times within 500 feet of a park, school or day-
care center. That meant the majority of
streets in the city were off-limits.
But while the law banned car-dwelling in
a lot of places, it affirmatively allowed it in
commercial and industrial areas. (There
were even some maps handed out by the
L.A. Police Department showing where peo-
ple could park at night.) Additionally, City
Council members said that parking lots
across the city would be designated “safe
parking” areas where homeless people
could safely park, use a bathroom and work
with outreach workers to get social services.
The council renewed the 2017 ordinance
last week. And if city officials want to bar
homeless people from sleeping in their vehi-
cles in residential neighborhoods and near
schools and parks, that’s their prerogative.
But the law will work — and be humane —
only if the city holds up its end of the com-
promise and provides alternative parking.
And that’s not happening.
Safe parking lots — generally run by non-
profit organizations — take time to locate
and money to set up. There are about 180
safe parking spaces available in various lots
throughout the city, and that number is pre-
dicted to grow to 450 in the next year. But
consider this: According to the official


homeless count, there were more than 9,
people living in about 5,700 vehicles of all
kinds in the city of Los Angeles in 2019. A
mere 450 spaces won’t solve the problem.
True, there are still industrial and com-
mercial areas where people can legally park
and sleep. But since the ordinance first took
effect two and a half years ago, overnight
parking bans have been instituted on hun-
dreds of blocks throughout the city, a signifi-
cant number of them in those neighbor-
hoods.
These parking bans are granted by the
City Council at the request of individual
council members to placate upset property
owners. Some of their complaints are legiti-
mate: Heavy commercial trucks parking on
streets rather than in lots; oversized vehi-
cles on narrow streets where drivers’ sight
lines could be blocked. But most are just de-
signed to keep homeless people away.
How does that solve anything? You can’t
institute an ordinance that narrowly re-
stricts where homeless people can sleep in
their cars and then whittle away at the only
places they’re allowed to sleep legally. That
just leaves homeless people with nowhere to
go; they’ll be rousted from street to street
with no options.
There are already so many more home-
less people than there are available shelter
beds that the city has agreed to allow people
to sleep on sidewalks at night in the city. If
the City Council can’t find more spots for
homeless people to park, they will have little
choice but to get out of their cars and sleep
legally on the sidewalks. Will residents pre-
fer that?
Dealing with homelessness has to in-
volve give and take. The city’s effort to re-
strict people from sleeping in their cars in
residential neighborhoods is unworkable if
it does not offer them alternative places to
park. The city has to make that happen.

Where the homeless may park


When I was a little girl in
the 1950s and ’60s, I never,
ever imagined that I would
be caught up in gunfire
while shopping with my
mom and dad. They didn’t
either.
When does this stop?
Have we lost our soul as a
nation?
This is about so much
that has gone wrong — too
many guns in the wrong
hands, ignorance and
inaction regarding mental
illness, a growing sense of
isolation by many, intoler-
ance of those we disagree
with or who look different
than us, and a sense that
society has lost its way.
My thoughts are with all
the victims of the latest
tragedies and all the simi-
lar tragedies that keep
happening. I remain hope-
ful that we will find our way
and make these terrible
events subside.
Marlene Carney
La Verne

::

Some Democrats pre-
dictably used the recent
tragedies in Texas and
Ohio for political purposes,
unfairly blaming our presi-
dent. The blame for these
mass shootings is entirely
on the killers, and it is
Congress’ responsibility to
legislate logical solutions
to help prevent another
tragedy.
Lawmakers must do so
without violating our 2nd
Amendment, which clearly
gives law-abiding Ameri-
cans the right to own a gun
and protect themselves
from those who ignore our
laws.
Bonnie O’Neil
Newport Beach

::

I thought President
Trump promised us, in his
inaugural speech, that
“this American carnage”
would stop “right here,
right now.”
Maybe if he and his
Republican enablers had
taken even one single step
toward that goal, we would
not have more mass shoot-
ings than days so far in
2 019.
Larry Markes
Los Angeles

The ‘mental


illness’ cop-out


Re “Two massacres, no
answers,” Aug. 5

President Trump men-
tioned mental illness as
one of the main causes of
mass shootings. That
would be fine if true, but
does mental illness show
up on a gun purchaser’s
background check?
I think the president
knows what the problem is.
We must reinstate the
assault weapons ban that
was originally written by
Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.) and enacted into
law in 1994. That law ex-
pired in 2004 and was not
extended. What other

weapons can kill 20 or 30
human beings in one min-
ute?
The president needs to
advocate for the ban with-
out regard for the innocent
citizens who say they need
assault rifles for sport and
hunting.
To do this, he must
break the ties he has with
the National Rifle Assn. by
choosing life over the inter-
ests of politicians. He can
start by returning dona-
tions made by the NRA
and at last be looked upon
as a leader.
Diana Strain
La Mesa

::

The tragic events in
Gilroy, El Paso and Dayton
have resulted in a lot of
political rhetoric, unfortu-
nately at the wrong mo-
ment, for more gun control.
Some have not wasted any
time in assigning blame on
Trump.
That is regrettable
because it will not do any-
thing for the healing this
nation needs. This is the
same technique used by
right-wing extremists
during the last adminis-
tration when police officers
were killed and President
Obama was accused of
having blood on his hands.
Furthermore, guns
have not been the only
instrument used to com-
mit horrendous crimes,
but they are the only ones
identified as needing to be
banned.
Ammonium nitrate
fertilizer, pressure cookers,
trucks, machetes and
knives have been used in a
number of horrifying mas-
sacres, and we don’t hear
any politician trying to ban
them.
The problem is not the
instrument used to com-
mit those crimes, but peo-
ple who are full of hate.
Raul De Cardenas
Los Angeles

::

The 1st Amendment
establishes the right of the
people to assemble peace-
fully. That statement is
laudable and reassuring
until we read, in the 2nd
Amendment, that “the
right of the people to bear
arms shall not be in-
fringed.”
The devastating massa-
cres have made it clear that
the imbalance created by
the U.S. Supreme Court’s
interpretation of the 2nd
Amendment renders the
assurance of the 1st
Amendment essentially
meaningless.
Rights need to be set in
balance, one against the
other; otherwise we end up
in the chaos and fear where
we now find ourselves. The
obvious solution is to fit
both amendments within
the larger context of the
common good, where no
side has a preponderance
of power and all people can
go about their daily lives
without fear.
Peter A. O’Reilly
Redondo Beach

Gun control will never
stop terrorists. The real
cause is the lack of security.
Paid guards will not risk
their lives to stop the kill-
ers.
The answer, as shown in
Israel, is that only military
men trained to stop armed
attackers and placed wher-
ever crowds congregate
can end the epidemic of
mass shootings.
Call out the military, Mr.
President.
Philip Springer
Pacific Palisades

Just call them


‘the shooters’


Re “Suspect was forthcom-
ing in interrogation,” Aug. 5

I am one of the rapidly
growing number of Ameri-
cans who have lived
through a mass shooting.
These events naturally
garner widespread media
attention, and I urge the
Los Angeles Times to
reconsider how it covers
these events.
Recent research has
examined the relationship
between media coverage
and mass shooting conta-
gion. Similar to the recom-
mendations for reporting
on suicide, reporting on
mass shootings can adopt
research-based recom-
mendations to reduce the
risk of contagion and copy-
cat effects. This includes
minimizing the emphasis
on perpetrators’ names,
photos and motives in
order to reduce notoriety.
The Times’ coverage of
the mass shootings in
Gilroy, El Paso and Dayton
has not adhered to these
recommendations. Along
with necessary policy
change, responsible media
coverage can be part of the
solution to this public
health problem.
Kelly Trumbull
Los Angeles

::

After a gunman killed 51
people earlier this year at a
mosque in Christchurch,
New Zealand, Prime Min-
ister Jacinda Ardern re-
fused to say the shooter’s
name. Mass shooters crave
notoriety, and we give it to
them every time we men-
tion them by name.
What if, when more
mass shootings happen —
and grievously, we know
they will — the media did
not state the shooters’
names, but instead re-
ferred to them only as “the
shooter”?
Let’s not give these
individuals the notoriety
they seek. If this small step
deters even one shooter, it
will be worth it.
Mike Still
Duarte

Impeachment,


no conviction


Re “Why not impeach?”
letters, Aug. 3

I find it interesting to
read letters to the editor
pointing out that the Re-
publicans control the
Senate and they will never
vote to convict and remove
President Trump if the
House impeaches him.
I would like to remind
those letter writers that
the Senate never voted on
President Richard Nixon.
The televised congres-
sional hearings on Water-
gate brought enough testi-
mony, truth and knowl-
edge to the American
people that Sen. Barry
Goldwater and other Re-
publicans told Nixon he
had to resign.
A House impeachment
inquiry of Trump would be
televised and allow the
truth to be told via testi-
mony, tax returns and
other ways that the Trump
administration could not
prevent. The majority of
Americans would see the
blatant corruption in the
highest office in the land.
Therefore, for the sake
of our democracy, let the
impeachment inquiry
begin.
Susan Newell
Palm Desert

American inaction


Re “Democrats tie shootings to Trump rhetoric,” Aug. 5

We Americans tout the U.S. as the greatest country on
Earth. But I have to ask, would the government of such a
country passively accept more than 250 mass shootings
already this year, the latest being in El Paso and Dayton,
Ohio?
Would its Senate ignore a reasonable House-passed
bill ensuring background checks for gun purchases?
Would it condone the unrestricted sale of assault rifles
often used in mass killings? Would it complacently accept
unrelenting racism and hatred spewing from its
president?
A truly great country would in no way tolerate the
regular slaughter of its citizens, would immediately
legislate to keep assault weapons out of the hands of
people who have no business possessing them, and
would demand that its president demonstrate common
decency and compassion for all individuals.
Tom Stapleton
Glendale

Mario TamaGetty Images
A MEMORIAL near the Walmart in El Paso where
a gunman killed at least 22 people Saturday.

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