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thedrifter
04-18-07, 07:20 AM
White House Won’t Rise to Calls for Gun Control
by John Gizzi
Posted 04/18/2007 ET

As the President and First Lady prepared to join with families in mourning the tragedy at Virginia Tech today, the White House would not take the bait of calls for new gun control legislation.

With the remarks of Acting Press Secretary Dana Perino and subsequent questions at today’s gaggle (early morning briefing) dealing exclusively with the shootings yesterday, it was only a matter of time before someone would bring up gun control and whether the Administration would now back tougher laws.

Sure enough, Ken Herman of the Austin American-Statesman asked about the need for federal gun control laws.

“Look, we understand that there’s going to be and there has been an ongoing national discussion, conversation and debate about gun control policy,” replied Perino, “Of course, we’re going to be participants in that conversation. Today, however, is a day that is time to focus on the families, the school and the community. Everyone’s been shaken to the core by this event and so I think that what we need to do is focus on support of the victims and their families and then also allow the facts of the case to unfold before we talk anymore about policies.”

Herman was undaunted and asked about the President’s concerns about guns.

“Ken, let me just refer you back to what I said before,” Perino retorted, “I think the facts of this case need to unfold. There has been an ongoing discussion and there will be continued conversation about gun control policy. We will participate in that but today is not the day.”

There was no talk about embattled Administration figures such as Attorney General Alberto Gonzales (whose testimony before Congress about the firing of eight U.S. attorneys was postponed two days because of the tragedy) and World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz or the Administration’s call for funding of US action in Iraq. Speaking for foreign journalists, Tass correspondent Andrei Sitov expressed condolences to Perino.

“This is a tragedy that was felt around the world,” said Perino, as she thanked Sitov. “The President and Mrs. Bush are very grateful for the heads of state and members of governments from around the world who have expressed their sympathies and their support. That is one of those things that is great about humanity -- that it really comes out in such a time of tragedy such as this."

Ellie

thedrifter
04-18-07, 07:33 AM
God Wants Gun Control
By Mark D. Tooley
FrontPageMagazine.com | April 18, 2007


Left-wing religious officials raced to exploit the Virginia Tech murders by resuscitating their favorite slogans about gun control.


Winning the tackiness contest, National Council of Churches chief Bob Edgar issued a news release within hours of the shootings.


“How many more will have to die before we say enough is enough?” Edgar asked. “How many more senseless deaths will have to be counted before we enact meaningful firearms control in this country? How many more of our pastors, rabbis and imams will have to preside over caskets of innocent victims of gun violence because a nation refused to stop the proliferation of these small weapons of mass destruction?”

Revealingly, Edgar’s quick statement barely mentioned “God,” made no mention of Christ, and quoted no Scripture. Although ostensibly the head of the nation’s chief ecumenical organization for Christian churches, Edgar evidently thought neither the Redeemer nor Holy Writ were all that pertinent in the wake of over two dozen murdered young people. Far more urgent was a renewed push for gun control legislation.


From his perch in Geneva, World Council of Churches chief Samuel Kobia offered prayers for the bereaved before launching into his own political fusillade.

“One of the major obstacles to effective global regulation of small arms and light weapons is the pro-gun position adopted by the U.S. administration during years of international negotiations,” Kobia quickly asserted, connecting the Virginia Tech murders to the global depredations of the United States. “The news from Virginia today is little different than the news from Darfur yesterday and the news from Iraq tomorrow,” he asserted. After all, Blacksburg, Virginia, like Darfur and Iraq, has “wanton killings, the indiscriminate use of armed force and the widespread availability of deadly weapons.”

Kobia hoped that the “gun lobby across the USA” will begin to “understand the rising frustration among concerned citizens and governments around the world.” While admitting there are “other factors,” he still insisted that the “U.S. arms manufacturing and arms sales policies have violent consequences abroad as well as in the U.S.”

“We are all Virginians in our sympathy, but many people around the world are also Virginians in their vulnerability to the misuse of unregulated guns,” Kobia concluded. “The globalized trade in small arms and light weapons must come under firm and appropriate controls.”

Like Kobia, Geneva-based World Alliance of Reformed Churches chief Setri Nyomi was also praying for the Virginia Tech victims and for “the United States of America and all nations as they struggle to overcome the temptation to rely on arms and as they work to find true security for all their peoples." Repentance, from Nyomi’s perspective, would undoubtedly include a ban on hand guns, among other state controls.

United Methodist chief lobbyist Jim Winkler also used the Virginia Tech killings to herald his denomination’s official support for a complete ban on handguns. “The presence of guns in U.S. society has not led to greater security but in fact has undermined the general sense of safety,” he declared. “It must be stated that had this ban been in place this shooting might have been prevented since one of the guns used by the assailant was a 9 mm handgun. We once again call on the Congress to ban on all handguns and assault weapons so that our communities will be safer and so that this endless cycle of violence can be ended.”

Not all Religious Left officials exploited the Virginia Tech horrors. The chief officials of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), the Episcopal Church and the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) tactfully refrained from crowing about their denomination’s stances on gun control. Even evangelical left leader Jim Wallis showed restraint, calling for a time of “prayer and silence.”


ELCA Presiding Bishop Mark Hanson actually quoted Scripture in his statement: “We mourn, we pray, and with the Psalmist we plead: “Out of the depths, I cry to you, O Lord. Lord, hear my voice!’ (Psalm 130:1) As family and friends grieve the deaths and injuries of loved ones, we claim the promise of Christ's Resurrection.”


How unique that a prominent mainline church official actually responded to the horrible deaths of countless young people by pointing to the hope of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Why do others of his colleagues not follow his example?


The sin of murder precedes by many millennia the invention of fire arms. It is recorded in the earliest chapters of the Bible, with Cain’s killing his brother Abel, and continues until the final chapters of Revelation. Before the advent of guns, fallen humanity killed each other senselessly by the thousands with spears, with arrows, with hatchets and axes, with rocks, drownings, poisons, arsons, strangulations, starvations and incomprehensible tortures. As Ecclesiastes records, “There is nothing new under the sun.”


Much of the Religious Left, with its absolute faith in statist regulation, and its denial of human fallenness, is confident that murder can be banished by banning its instruments. But human nature is such that murderers will almost always have guns, and even when deprived, will resort to equally lethal weapons.


The state can punish, rarely deter, but it cannot change corrupt human hearts. The social mores that prevent murder are only effectively instilled by religion, which the Religious Left has neglected in favor of political "salvation."

Ellie